I posted this on my thread but thought I would share it here too.
It's pretty cool.
http://i.imgur.com/ytzSYFt.jpg
"You are the sculptor of your own body"
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"You are the sculptor of your own body"
Habits are at first cobwebs, then cables.
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Hmm. I'm not that interested in sculpting my body anymore. Most bodies are not going to get "sculpted" with moderate habits. I'm willing to sculpt my habits, and only so far with those, then revel in the improved vitality. Thankfully the body responds pretty well to moderation!
But for anyone who is willing to put in the extra time and effort, go for it!
But for anyone who is willing to put in the extra time and effort, go for it!
Count plates, not calories. 11 years "during"
Age 69
BMI Jan/10-30.8
1/12-26.8 3/13-24.9 +/- 8-lb. 3 yrs
9/17 22.8 (flux) 3/18 22.2
2 yrs flux 6/20 22
1/21-23
There is no S better than Vanilla No S (mods now as a senior citizen)
Age 69
BMI Jan/10-30.8
1/12-26.8 3/13-24.9 +/- 8-lb. 3 yrs
9/17 22.8 (flux) 3/18 22.2
2 yrs flux 6/20 22
1/21-23
There is no S better than Vanilla No S (mods now as a senior citizen)
I find that picture kind of disturbing. She's quite violently attacking herself with a hammer and chisel and I don't think I like that imagery! Also her outer/original body doesn't match to the inner one - it's much bigger overall, not just fatter. It strikes me to be more about a particular feeling of trying to lose weight - of being trapped in a body that isn't really yours, and having to destroy it to get it out (rather than being aspirational). I kind of like the picture but I'm not sure I'm getting the right message from it!
Like Dale, I'm not totally comfortable with the symbolism at work in this piece. It made me think of that Kate Harding piece about the "fantasy of being thin" (from way back in the dark ages of 2007), and the weight industry mythology around a "thin person struggling to get out".
I'm in an interesting place physically at the moment, in that my body is being sculpted / changed by my own hormones and other changes required to bear a child. So, if that sculpture was me, it would be a relatively average woman, chipping away to find a larger, bustier, pregnant woman inside
Art is doing its job if it makes us think and respond, right?
I'm in an interesting place physically at the moment, in that my body is being sculpted / changed by my own hormones and other changes required to bear a child. So, if that sculpture was me, it would be a relatively average woman, chipping away to find a larger, bustier, pregnant woman inside
Art is doing its job if it makes us think and respond, right?