How a Social Worker Tackles Weight Bullying

Judith Matz answers your three biggest questions about body image

Judith Matz, LCSW is a licensed clinical social worker, the director of the Chicago Center for Overcoming Overeating, Inc., and co-author of The Diet Survivors Handbook and Beyond the Shadow of a Diet. Here, she discusses weight in pop culture and answers your biggest questions about body image.

Q. How do therapists like you help clients dealing with body image issues?

On the one hand, it’s important for people to realize that their self-worth is much broader than the number on the scale. At the same time, we live in a culture where being thin is associated with being happy, healthy, and successful, so it’s no wonder that very few people, and especially women, truly feel good about their bodies.

Helping people build a stronger body image takes place at many levels. It means challenging the cultural messages—as Jennifer Livingston did—and understanding factors such as how advertisers actually Photoshop models to appear much thinner than they really are.

It also means learning to take good care of one’s body by practicing sustainable behaviors such as a healthy relationship with food, physical activity, good sleep patterns, managing stress, etc. (and these practices will vary from person to person). We encourage people to make sure they have clothes they like at their current size, and to stop putting life on hold until they lose weight.

But the most powerful tool to help people transform their negative body image into a positive one is to raise their awareness of the critical and harsh statements they tell themselves about their body. If you ask someone struggling with body image to write down their negative body thoughts, it turns out they say things to themselves that they would never say to a friend. We teach that: “If yelling at yourself worked, you’d be thin by now!” Instead, people learn to replace their internal criticism with words of compassion. It takes time, but the payoff is well worth the effort. 

Q. What has brought about this change in public opinion of overweight people? Is it a reaction against extreme skinniness and awareness of eating disorders? A greater public awareness of the effects of bullying?

On the one hand there is greater awareness that the constant focus on thinness in our culture creates body image problems, disordered eating patterns, and eating disorders. At the same time, “anti-obesity” messages have never been stronger, and the discrimination and shame that results also have a negative impact on physical and emotional health. While there is much attention paid to bullying in the media, campaigns have not gone far enough to include the issue of weight as a significant source of bullying for kids and adults.

Understanding that people naturally come in all shapes and sizes, that weight is not as malleable as we like to think, that diets are ineffective for the great majority of people, that weight does not equal health, and that healthful behaviors can be practiced at any size is part of a new paradigm, known as Health At Every Size, that is gaining national recognition.

Q. Given that there is an obesity epidemic in this country, what would you say to someone who chided an overweight person regarding their weight?

Judging a person based on their body size is nothing short of stereotyping. You cannot tell anything about the health status of a person simply by looking at them. There are people who are fat and healthy just as there are people who are fat and unhealthy. Likewise, there are people who are thin and healthy, just as there are people who are thin and unhealthy. As Jennifer Livingston suggested [ed note: the news anchor who spoke out about weight bullying], people are much more than the number on the scale. In fact, it turns out she participates in marathons! I found it ironic that the man who bullied her stated she was a poor role model for young people; I imagine that there are thinner news anchors on TV who engage is unhealthy practices—perhaps skipping meals or purging—to stay thin; yet the assumption is that if they are thin, they must be healthy.

I’m thrilled to see Jennifer Livingston become a role model for all of us. As a society, we no longer tolerate negative comments, discrimination and bullying based on race, ethnicity, religion or sexual preferences. The time has come for us to add weight stereotyping to the list—in fact, it is long overdue. 

Category: Body

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