Even I don't wake up looking like Cindy Crawford.

Even I don't wake up looking like Cindy Crawford.

You look how you look

You are not your buttocks.

I have cellulite. So what?

How goodness heightens beauty!

My man prefers meat over the bone.

Fashion is killing women's body image of themselves.

I embrace my body, and I embrace everything about myself.

I've always embraced my curves since I was a teenie-bopper.

A woman's body image is absolutely paramount to her health.

Honestly, among my acquaintances there is no woman wearing XS.

Health and a positive body image are part of my personal values.

Body image has a lot to do with where you're coming from personally.

I know that I am more than my personality, my body, and my body image.

It's incredibly difficult to keep a healthy body image in this business.

I try not to be neurotic; I try to create and present healthy body image.

To ask women to become unnaturally thin is to ask them to relinquish their sexuality.

Healthy body image is not something that you're going to learn from fashion magazines.

I've long struggled with my body image and have worked hard to achieve a healthy weight.

Whether straight, gay, bi, trans... body image and identity can be a struggle for us all.

I am pretty honest about a lot of things that young girls question, like their body image.

Self esteem and a healthy body image for people with disabilities are so often hard-fought.

I remember everyone asking, 'What did you do to get so thin? You looked great.' I looked emaciated.

Black women don't have the same body image problems as white women. They are proud of their bodies.

Boys and boys' body image and clothes have become just as important an issue for boys as for girls.

Because I have been bullied and attacked about my body, body image has always been an issue for me.

I gained weight, and that started a 32-year struggle with weight and exercise and body image problems.

I absolutely get more comfortable in my body and my skin as I get older, more than when I was in my 20s.

Girls are so in their head about their body image. It doesn't matter how confident you are - it's hormones!

Body image is something that girls struggle with every day, and it's something that I struggle with every day.

I had had my own trials and tribulations with body image. I had gone through a lot starting from my teenage years.

In the United States, workouts tend to focus on body image and how you look. For me, it's really all about the brain.

For a woman, body image is always a palpable thing. Weirdly, for me, the only time I don't care is when I'm in character.

I've gone through literally over 30 years of struggle with weight and food and body image... and I'm like, 'Wait a minute.'

I suffer from an amazing amount of insecurities, and I'm grateful that my body image, it's normally not something I pay attention to.

It's hard being a girl. There are a lot of body image issues that come up and I think the best thing we can do for our kids is lead by example.

If you ask men about their body image, they will tell you they look better than they do. And if you ask a woman, she'll tell you she looks worse.

Taking a walk here and there and eating healthy is great. But I also feel like confidence and body image have a lot to do with how you feel on the inside.

Body image - what we're supposed to look like - is made so unattainable that all girls are put in this position of feeling inferior. That's a horrible thing.

I think there's so much emphasis on body image and results and outcome, but really what you should be after is to be healthy and to feel good about yourself.

I've always struggled a ton with my body image, and I wanted to help other people not feel so ashamed about themselves. It's a completely unnecessary part of everyday life.

Perfectionism is really a challenge for me, and it causes me to be super-critical of myself in so many ways: about body image constantly; about parenting; about being a mother.

I try to look after myself, but I don't think it's a good thing to be obsessed with body image. I wouldn't want a son or daughter of mine to feel manipulated by that; it's the wrong message.

Are you ready to stop colluding with a culture that makes so many of us feel physically inadequate? Say goodbye to your inner critic, and take this pledge to be kinder to yourself and others.

Girls' inner critics are starting to reveal themselves at a younger and younger age. And body image issues are an aspect of their lives which is causing them low self esteem and day-to-day suffering.

'Nimona' is about identity and if who you are is defined by what you look like. It's not a book about body image at all, but I would be lying if I said that wasn't in there even at the conception of it.

When we're on stage doing a song about positive body image or another about female empowerment, everyone out there is super into it and right there with us. It's been awesome. I feel like we fit right in.

I think valuing what your body can do over how your body looks is the No. 1 advice I would give to young women about how to have healthy body image. It's not, 'Do these pants fit?' It's 'Can I do a split?'

There's this tradition of women's magazines - which have been my bread and butter as a freelancer - where the paradigm is that the writing is about relationships, body image, lessons, and it's always redemptive.

Aim high and don't sell yourself short. Know that you're capable. Understand that a lot of people battle with a lot of things - depression, body image or whatever else - so know that it's not just you. You're not alone.

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