Top College News Subscribe to the Newsletter

Female body image: Living up to Barbie

Published: Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Updated: Tuesday, February 16, 2010 02:02

My friend Sarah graduated from high school last June. Instead of asking her parents for an expensive car, she wanted them to pay for breast augmentation surgery. Her flat chest that never developed during puberty is now enhanced with Barbie-size breasts. The question that comes to my mind is this: Why do many young women today feel that they need to surgically change their appearance?

Media is extremely influential when it comes to women and their appearance. In a recent article in People Magazine, reality star Heidi Montag, discussed why she underwent ten cosmetic surgeries. Montag is a healthy 23-year-old woman and it is surprising that someone so young felt that she needed so much plastic surgery. Montag's claim was that she wanted to feel "perfect."

According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS), an estimated 12.1 million cosmetic procedures were performed in 2008. By 2015, the ASPS estimates that number will rise significantly to 55 million.

Young women are exposed to thousands of computer-edited photos of stick-size models every day. Women's magazines are full of articles urging women to lose those last fifteen pounds so they'll have it all- the perfect love life, great sex, and a rewarding career.

The American research group Anorexia Nervosa and Related Eating Disorders, Inc. says that one out of every four college-aged women uses unhealthy methods of weight control that include fasting, excessive exercise, skipping meals, laxative abuse, and self-induced vomiting. Young women are constantly weighed down by the unrealistic expectations that the media reinforces.

Researchers from the Media Awareness Network found that women's magazines have ten and one-half times more ads and articles promoting weight loss than men's magazines do. Also over three-quarters of the covers of women's magazines include at least one message about how a woman can change her bodily appearance through diet, exercise, or cosmetic surgery.

Media activist, Jean Kilbourne, believes that the overwhelming presence of media images of painfully thin women mean the bodies of real women have become invisible in the mass media.

Young women need to change the destructive path that the media has created. Young women need to fight against the horrible messages that they receive every day saying that they are too fat, too short, or don't have large enough breasts.

All women are individual and different from one another. Women need to take pride in them selves and start realizing that in order to be the best they can be they need to stop focusing on what they don't have and start focusing on what they do have.

All women are beautiful the way they are and the media is making money off of telling women they are not good enough and need to change. The media is what needs to change. They need to stop discouraging and start encouraging young women to believe in themselves and be confident with the body they have.

Recommended: Articles that may interest you

3 comments

Anonymous
Tue Mar 2 2010 06:28
lknlk
Anonymous
Wed Feb 17 2010 19:00
I think it is important to recognize that all bodies are beautiful. There's even been research done that shows that men would prefer a woman be 10 lbs. overweight than 10 lbs. underweight. "Perfection" is not a means to an end. Plus, it always makes you feel inadequete because someone "more perfect" will always come along. It is a vicious cycle. I do not think that plastic surgery attracts the ideal forms of attention. Being the center of attention because you have bigger boobs is great, but in the end what do most of those younger guys truly want though? Woman need to strive to be comfortable in their own skin and living for themselves, rather than being some guy's trophy. Personality and confidence truly do score big points with men in the long run!
Anonymous
Tue Feb 16 2010 11:19
"Barbies are made not born and after all many spend the rest of their life half naked and alone, only to be someones childhood flavor of the week!"

That's a beautiful article Eve! Its all too true, in essence everyone needs to work on being the perfect person (internally) instead of trying to find the perfect person (externally). *That little word of advice comes complimentary from my current g/f Sydney, who works hard everyday to make herself a little better (internally) than the last.

*On another note, if God has made a person on this earth, for each and everyone of us, how are we supposed to find that person if they are all wrapped up in "plastic"? I am personally not against plastic surgery ( I have 6 fake teeth) myself, I am on the other-hand against all those who take the easy way out. If your overweight and want to change it, do so. If your "flat" and want to change it, do so. Always remember there are so many more dimensions to people than just front to back and side to side. So when you change one without "enhancing" the other, all one gets in return is a lop-sided world! *Try enhancing your mind, attitude and spirit! (I don't think that People Mag. has too much to say about that)

**I am a Senior here at the college and Ill be the first to let all the women out there, in on a little secret. There is nothing more attractive than a splash of confidence, a pinch of uniqueness and BIG heart!**







log out