| Becoming 
              a mother in and of itself was not enough for me to realize how important 
              it was to love myself – as my self. Instead, that epiphany didn’t 
              come to be until I realized that I would be parenting children who 
              happened to be daughters and reflected upon my own development as 
              such.
 As much as we sisters in the black community supposedly revel in 
              being voluptuous, “thick,” curvy, “healthy” and, to take it way 
              back, “stout,” the reality is that some of us grew up battling our 
              bodies and saw our sistren and matriarchs do so as well.
 
 As a child, I witnessed my mother embarking on a series of diets. 
              From the days of Dexatrim to the discipline of the Atkins diet, 
              my mother was on a quest, every few years it seemed, to fit into 
              a former size. In retrospect, I don’t consciously feel as though 
              observing this damaged my psyche or sense of self, but as a girl 
              who was taller and bigger than my peers until I was about 11 or 
              12, perhaps it had some impact.
 
 As a child, I was heavier then my classmates and, often, the tallest 
              in the bunch. I was always in the back rows in class pictures, and 
              typically one of the few girls of that comparatively Amazonian stature. 
              I know I broke the 100-pound barrier sometime in the fourth grade. 
              Moreover, I was wearing bras in third grade and had my period by 
              age 10. I was chubby due to baby fat that had not yet been routed 
              to other areas of my body as the providence of adolescence; I had 
              also reached a level of visible sexual maturity that my friends 
              didn’t see for the next three or four years.
 
 Having 
              to shop in the big girls’ section and being called all sorts of 
              names by my classmates and my brothers probably did a number on 
              me. But as I reached my pre-teens, the weight began to shift; a 
              waistline emerged; hips sprouted; a bust line was defined; and the 
              body that once was the target of insults eventually became one that 
              inspired cat calls, unsolicited booty pats and ogling by the eyes 
              of boys and men alike.
 By the time I’d reached high school, no longer chunky, I’d developed 
              a fat phobia that resulted in all sorts of unhealthy behaviors. 
              I skipped meals, counted calories, restricted my diet, filled up 
              on water, and did cardio most days of the week. I got into single-digit 
              clothes sizes and seriously challenged my genetic predisposition 
              toward curves and muscle. My practices probably resulted in me depriving 
              myself of an extra inch of height.
 
 It 
              wasn’t until I started college that I gradually stamped out those 
              behaviors for good. For one, it was tiring. Secondly, my body was 
              giving up the ghost anyway, and as my 20s took over, so did my thighs 
              and hips. Thirdly, being in an environment in which what I naturally 
              possessed was clearly prized certainly helped. 
 
  When 
              I met my husband at age 20, I was still picking myself apart. I’d 
              criticize my wide hips or bemoan the bigness of my thighs. I would 
              find errors where others saw none. Still, I assumed normative eating 
              patterns. This means I ate real meals, sans pork, fried foods, sodas. 
              It also meant that I became more active and more interested in what 
              my body could do than what it looked like. Perhaps paradoxically, 
              this new emphasis meant that I looked better than before and was 
              better nourished. My husband encouraged me to like and love me, 
              as me. 
 Now as a mother to two little girls, I am proud to say that I’ve 
              never said the word “diet” in front of them or complained about 
              any aspect of how I look while within earshot of them. I speak in 
              terms of health and well-being; they see me going to the gym and 
              mimic weight lifting and floor exercises at home. They talk about 
              “Momma’s muscles” and “being strong like Momma,” even while I down 
              scoopfuls of ice cream with no guilt.
 
 Why is this so important?
 
 The way a mother feels about herself is lined to her children’s 
              self-concept. According to “Moms, Kids and Body Image”:
 
 Your children pay attention 
              to what you say and do about your own body image -- even if it doesn't 
              seem like it sometimes. If you are always complaining about your 
              weight or feel pressure to change your body shape, your children 
              may learn that these are important concerns. If you are attracted 
              to new "miracle" diets, they may learn that restrictive 
              dieting is better than making healthy lifestyle choices. If you 
              tell your daughter that she would be prettier if she lost weight, 
              she will learn that the goals of weight loss are to be attractive 
              and accepted by others.
 
 Moreover, mothers who preoccupy themselves with dieting can foster 
              the same sense of nit pickiness in her daughters, especially. As 
              Jessica Weiner, author of Do 
              I Look Fat in This?, writes of her mother . . 
              .
 
 At 
              the age of nine, she remembers, she was taken to the family doctor 
              for a checkup. The doctor revealed that she was about fifteen pounds 
              overweight. He immediately urged my grandmother to put her on a 
              diet to take off the weight. What the doctor blatantly failed to 
              notice was that my mother had matured early and was in fact going 
              through puberty. So the extra weight gain was normal and would most 
              likely work itself out as she continued to grow up.
 But it was too late. By the 
              time the doctor passed down the declaration for weight loss, my 
              mother was sucked into the shameful and restrictive world of dieting. 
              This pattern of bingeing, restricting, and punishing herself for 
              being overweight — for being “bad,” in her point of view as a child 
              — ended up staying with her for more than fifty years.
 
 According to NOVA Online, “African-American 
              women are generally more satisfied with their bodies, basing their 
              definition of attractiveness on more than simply body size. Instead, 
              they tend to include other factors such as how a woman dresses, 
              carries, and grooms herself. Some have considered this broader definition 
              of beauty and greater body satisfaction at heavier weights a potential 
              protection against eating disorders.”
 However, this is no hedge against disordered dietary behaviors, 
              which may be on the upswing among Black women. It’s also why mothers 
              must muster the will to remain tight-lipped when we feel like tearing 
              ourselves apart. It’s why we must try to model healthy images and 
              behaviors for our daughters.
 
 They are watching and listening, just like I was when I first became 
              aware of my mother’s dieting around age 4 or 5.
 BlackCommentator.com Columnist K. Danielle Edwards - a Black full-time working mother and wife, with a 
              penchant for prose, a heart for poetry, a love of books and culture, 
              a liking of fashion and style, a knack for news and an obsession 
              with facts - beating the odds, defying the statistics. Sister Edwards is a Nashville-based writer, poet and communications 
              professional, seeking to make the world a better place, one decision 
              and one action at a time. To her, parenting is a protest against 
              the odds, and marriage is a living mantra for forward movement. 
              Her work has appeared in BLACK MARRIED MOMMA, 
              Mother Verse Literary 
              Journal, Journal, Parenting Express Magazine, The Black 
              World Today,Africana.com, The Tennessean and other publications. She is the author of Stacey Jones: Memoirs of Girl & Woman, Body & Spirit, 
              Life & Death   (2005) 
              and is the founder and creative director of The Pen: An Exercise in the Cathartic Potential of the Creative 
              Act, a nonprofit creative writing project designed for incarcerated 
              and disadvantaged populations. Click 
              here to contact Ms. Edwards. |