All Articles by truth

Theresa Ruth Howard Dancer/Writer/Teacher Theresa Ruth Howard began her professional dance career with the Philadelphia Civic Ballet Company at the age of twelve. Later she joined the Dance Theatre of Harlem where she had the opportunity to travel extensively throughout the United States, Europe and Africa. She has worked with choreographer Donald Byrd as a soloist in his staging of New York City Opera's Carmina Burana, his critically acclaimed Harlem Nutcracker, as well as the controversial domestic violence work The Beast. She was invited to be a guest artist with Complexions: A Concept in their 10th anniversary season. In 2004 she became a founding member of Armitage Gone! Dance. As a writer Ms. Howard has contributed to Russell Simmons’ One World magazine (art), and The Source (social politics), as well as Pointe and Dance Magazine. While teaching in Italy for the International Dance Association she was asked to become a contributor for the premiere Italian dance magazine Expressions. Her engaging, no nonsense writing style caught the eye of both the readers of Dance Magazine and its Editor in Chief who not only made her a contributing editor and has collaborated with Ms. Howard in See and Say Web-reviews. Her articles about body image prompted her to develop a workshop for young adult (dancers and non-dancers) My Body My Image that addresses their perceptions both positive and negative about their bodies and endeavoring to bring them closer to a place of Acceptance and Appreciation. She recently launched a blog by the same name to reach a broader audience (mybodymyimage.com) As a teacher Ms. Howard has been an Artist in Residence at Hollins University in and New Haven University in addition to teaching at Sarah Lawrence College, Marymount, Shenandoah, and Radford Universities, and the historical American Dance Festival. As a result of her work at ADF Ms. Howard was invited to Sochi, Russia to adjudicate the arts competition Expectations of Europe and teach master classes, and in Burundi, Africa where she coached and taught the Burundi Dance Company. Currently she on faculty at The Ailey School but also extensively throughout Italy and Canada. Ms. Howard's belief in the development, and nurturing of children lead her to work with at risk youth. At the Jacob Riis Settlement House in Queensbridge New York, she founded S.I.S.T.A (Socially Intelligent Sisters Taking Action) a mentoring program for teen-age girls where she worked to empower them to become the creators of their destinies. In addition she developed a dance program, which lead to an exchange with the Dance Theatre of Harlem. Through her teaching and travels Ms. Howard began to observe a universal disenchantment and disconnection in teenagers that disturbed her, thus she set out to address it. Combining her philosophies of life and teaching, with the skills she garnered through outreach programs with diverse communities, she developed the personal development workshop Principles of Engagement: Connecting Youth to the Infinite Possibilities Within which gives teens a set of workable tools to increase their levels of success at tasks, and goals not only in dance, and all aspect of their lives. Theresa Ruth Howard is certainly diverse and multifaceted as an artist, and is moved to both write and create work; however she sees every student she encounters as a work in progress, and the potential to change the world one person at a time. The only was to make this world a better place it to be better people in it!

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When a Bad Body Image and Low Self-Esteem can be DEADLY

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Paige Winslow known as “The Black Madame”  is standing trial in Philadelphia for the death of a woman who came to her for butt injections. Winslow (who is not a licensed doctor) Injected the woman in a hotel bathroom in a South Philadelphia hotel. She claimed to be helping women who suffer from low self esteem. She calls herself “The Fairy God Mother”

She claim that Kanye West brought his then girl friend Amber Rose to her for injections which put her on the celebrity scene. She also claims that Nikki Minaj was going to come in for a “correction”.

I have to ask, is it worth it? not just the low end (and clearly deadly) two grand, but the risking of one’s life to have a bigger booty? I take the stance of not judging those who decide to undergo such procedures but if you are, then make certain that you are going to a licensed doctor, and someone who does not use CRAZY GLUE as sutures!! Also a clue that your doctor is a hack…or not a doctor at all, having a procedure in a hotel room, and seeing things like cement mix and fix-a flat in their black bag.

Ladies,  like the saying goes, a mind is a terrible thing to waste so is a life, a healthy body and a future. A bigger butt, breast, lips or flatter tummy is not worth your life!! Learning to love yourself might take a bit longer to master, but it is healthier, lasts longer and only has positive side effects!!

In this case the Black Madame was more a Black Widow….

Dance Class Etiquette Essentials from danceadvantage.net!


The Basics of Dance Class Etiquette(Common Sense)1)Dress appropriately and come prepared.

2) Don’t chew gum or bring food and drinks (a closed water bottle is okay) into the studio.
3)    Never wear dance shoes outside the studio or wear street shoes in the studio.
Don’t wear dangling or sharp-edged jewelry.
4) Come to class showered with brushed teeth or freshened breath.
5) Leave your stuff in a dressing room or locker (unless one is not available). Put any sanctioned personal belongings at the back or sides of unused studio walls (never the front).
6) Don’t come late and if you do, enter very quietly.
7)  Don’t leave early. If it is a must, talk to the teacher before class. If you need to exit in an emergency (it better be good), exit as quickly and discreetly as possible.
8) Don’t talk while the teacher is talking. Not even whispering to the person next to you.
9) Completely silence and stow your cell phone. Even vibration is often audible.
10) Listen first, then ask relevant questions.
11) Respect the personal space of others.
12) Watch your language, even when you mess up!
13) Don’t “hang” or slouch on the barre or anywhere else, for that matter. Be attentive at all times, especially when waiting for your turn. And never sit down unless you are asked to.Dance Etiquette Next Steps(Habit for Most Dancers)

1) If you are late, don’t apologize until after class. Just wait for the okay from your teacher to enter the dance floor.

Once permission is granted, find an easily accessible or inconspicuous place to warm up or participate.
2) If you are sitting, or sitting out, sit tall. Never lie down.
3) Develop spatial awareness and demonstrate it.
4) Give the instructor space, but not too much space.
5) Avoid the front unless you really know the combination.
6)  Refrain from correcting others (that’s the teacher’s job).
7) Don’t quit in the middle… of the room, of the combination, or of the class. Go with the flow if you’re lost or confused. Never stop traffic.
8) Part like the Red Sea when exiting. Don’t cross center or the paths of other dancers.
9) It’s okay to mark combinations while you wait for your turn if you are out of the way.
10) Do not repeatedly leave and then come back in without permission.
11) If you find you have too many questions about something, save them for after class.
12) At the end of class, applaud or thank the instructor and musician (as part of the group)
13 )Don’t visibly yawn or show boredom. You may get away with it in a lecture hall, but not dance class.Etiquette “Deep Cuts” for Dancers(Good to know)

1) Bring a towel to wipe your sweat and germs off the floor or barre.

2) Don’t take a class way above your skill level. If this mistake is already made, do your best, but stay out of the way of other dancers.
3) Never walk out of a class or go sit down because it’s too hard or you feel frustrated. This is considered rude and you are branding yourself as a quitter. I can’t is not in your vocabulary.
4) Applaud for demonstrators.
5) Once you’ve claimed a space in the center or in a group, it’s generally yours for better or worse. But don’t be pushy or try to reclaim a spot if yours gets taken.
6)  At the end of class, it’s especially courteous to say thanks to the instructor and musician (one to one).
7) Restrain movement in a crowded class until broken into groups. If you bump into someone, quietly apologize. Don’t make it a big deal.
8) Never give your 2¢ on choreography to a teacher or choreographer unless your opinions have been requested.
9) If you want help with something that will take more than a minute or two, do some research on your own and/or schedule a private lesson with your teacher.
10) Don’t record or photograph anything without permission.
For more great info go to danceadvantage.net!!

My Sound off about the Guiliana Rancic Controversy…

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Here is the comment that started the bruhaha:

Here is Zendaya’s response:

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Whoopi Goldberg’s response Day1:

Whoopi’s response Day 2:

Here is Zendaya’s beautifully eloquent, mature and thoughtful response to Rancic’s apology:
“Studies have shown that even though we try to act without prejudice, sometimes it’s just hidden inside us due to our past or surroundings. That hidden prejudice is often influential in our actions. It’s our job to spot these issues within others and ourselves and destroy them before they become hurtful. I have so many people looking up to me, that I couldn’t be scared, wait it out, nor could I just stand up for me; I had to do it for WE. It is important in this journey to remember that just because someone has inflicted hurt upon us, it does not give us the right to do the same. Body shaming and other hurtful tactics will never get the job done. As hard as it was to stop MYSELF from being ignorant and from posting the first mean words that came to my mind because I was hurt, I had to think about the bigger picture. Instead I sat for two hours on my phone, doing my research and formulating an educated response. Giuliana, I appreciate your apology and I’m glad it was a learning experience for you and for the network. I hope that others negatively affected by her words can also find it in their hearts to accept her apology as well. From a quote we all know by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. ‘Darkness cannot drive our darkness, only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.’ Let’s be that light and spread that love. — Zendaya Coleman”

Refresh your Face! Try My Oatmeal, Milk and honey Face Mask! Plus more Beauty tips for Winter Skin

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Well If you are anything like me Winter is taking it’s toll on your skin. This morning I took matter into my own hands and made a great (easy and cheap) face mask that restored my glow and since sharing is caring, I decided to bring it to you!

Here is what you will need

Dry oatmeal (about a cup, you’ll have plenty for several uses)

Powdered Milk (1 packet)

Honey (about a tablespoon)

a food processor or hand blender

Water (about 1/4 cup you can decide on the consistency you like)

WATCH the video for instructions!

I also share my favorite skin natural skin products:

Neem Oil (you can find it in the Indian Grocery, WholeFoods or online)

Nature’s Bounty Hair Skin and Nails supplement

AND of course my Green Drink!!
3 Stalks of Celery

Hand full of Kale

Hand full of Spinach

1 Small Beet

3-4 Small Carrots

1 Cucumber

2 thick slices of Cabbage

3-4 Radishes

A bit of Parsley
And if you want to spice up your life add some Turmeric!!!!

Makes about 2 1/2 cups of Juice

Remember, Beauty starts within so if you put great stuff in you’ll see it on the outside!!!

Treat your body with Appreciation, Acceptance and Respect!

Let me know how you like it!

Modcloth live up to it’s motto “Real is Beautiful” by featuring Employees in New Swimwear AD

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Real Is Beautiful! The online retailer goes one step further then not photoshopping their ads by featuring several employees with diverse body types in their new swimsuit campaign. The six women (of different races and body types) model six different styles of swimwear and look fabulously authentic doing it. The campaign will run  on the website, appear on its blog and will also be featured in Modcloth’s style stories. This illustrates the company’s philosophy to represent a more realistic image of women, and speak directly to their customers who no doubt look more like their actual employees than any “average model. They are not the first retailer to pluck employees from their various stations to be the faces (and bodies) of their brand, American Apparel featured employees as well, albeit their scantily clad (often pubic hair baring) Lolita types made most viewers feel skeeved out dirty for looking. It was hard to see the clothing through the  pedophilic innuendo. Modcloth gets it right, in these women we not only see ourselves, we see our sister, aunts, best friends and daughters. It feels like a celebration of femininity and womanliness, not a vulnerable, victimized representation of barely legal girls.

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“Being on the larger side of plus-size, I was really excited about this opportunity. I’m an apple shape, which is not something I see everyday in the media. I know it takes a lot of courage to get in front of a camera in general, but to get in front of one knowing that not a lot of people have represented your body before is really exciting,”

says Ingrid Taller an employee turned covergirl.Allison Franks was pregnant at the time of the shoot she remarked:

“It was definitely hard for me to make the decision as the pregnant one. My shy self immediately said, ‘No, I can’t do this.’ But Modcloth supports its customers for who they are, and I’m proud to represent that,”

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What if find refreshing about seeing these women in the ad is that as a woman you no longer have to engage in mental gymnastics of the imagination to see if you would look good in a style, as you might see your body type be it apple, pear or peanut (hour glass) right in front of you. The retro inspired suits are fun, flirty and sexy while offering (to those who desire it) coverage over what some might consider “problem” areas.

 

My motto is, support things, that support you! Modcloth supports the “real beauty” of women, without changing who we are or what we look like. It is a brand that is acknowledging and celebrating the wonderful diversity that is found within us. It tells us that we are enough, and we are perfect as we are!!! Thank you…

o-MODCLOTH-570In this record breaking winter season we are enduring on the east coast this year, take some time to dream of the summer to come, peruse Modcloth and get a jump on summer.

Salma Hayak on Heroines via Net-a Porter

One of My Body My Image’s favorites spoke to Net-a Porter.com about what make a woman a heroine. She speaks of the strength that women have, especially the often unsung heroes that head households and raise children.o-SALMA-HAYEK-570

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It was so touching to here that she feels her daughter Valentina has the attributes of a heroine in the making…

The stunningly powerful and elegant 48 year old mogul and mother told Net-A-Porter’s The Edit this about her body and her image:

“I never exercised my whole life, but now I do yoga. I was always borderline chubby, because I like my food and, frankly, I like my wine. I have to say, I’m pushing 50 but I feel great. I looked worse in my youth! I’m in good shape right now.”

 

Haha, I knew I liked her for a reason, I loves my wine!!! and my food!!! I also have to personally concur and say that now in my 40’s I feel like I have never felt better. 40 doesn’t have to be “the new 30) for women (and men) the permission to feel fabulous, 40 is just 40, and it’s fabulous, and like wine it only gets better if you treat yourself with Appreciation, Acceptance and Respect. It’s nice to see that the concept of aging for women in America is slowly beginning to shift. It is no longer seen as a a slow painful death, a diminishing of a woman’s light, but we are beginning to see that our lights can burn more brightly and the wisdom and knowledge that we have culled through our experiences on this planet can be an asset, it can also make us even more sexy and appealing. Salma Hayak is one example of that!!!

Hoe is the New Bitch

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By Theresa Ruth Howard

“Bitch” used to be the go to insult towards a woman. The hurling of that word could plummet a woman from the height of heights to the darkest depths, however women (and bitch callers male and female) all knew that somewhere within the utterance they were in a way conceding the fact that the object of the insult possessed a certain power, an unapologetic sense of self, a refusal to back down, an inability to be intimidated. In certain situations when called a ‘Bitch’ a woman knew she had her adversary on the ropes, in our heads minds we would say, “Oh, is that the best you’ve got? What’s next, are you going to ask if I’m on my period?”. Where word ‘Bitch’ is meant to be reduction, most women have made antibodies to combat it, and are now more or less impervious to its effects.

Alas, as with everything these days ‘Bitch’ has gotten an upgrade, or would that be a downgrade? (I suppose it depends which side you are on). Today, if you want to wound a woman, or her reputation you call her a ‘Whore’, or the urban back clip, ‘Hoe’. Where most women can shake off the odd ‘Bitch’ calling ‘Hoe’ is a term that lands in a very different place mainly because it goes to the heart of the antiquated patriarchal concept of what women should be under that paradigm. It states that women should not sexually liberated or free to “behave like a man”. Whether true or not, calling someone ‘Hoe’ will smart far more then the all too common ‘Bitch’.

The latest Hoe-down has come in the form of Amber Rose (Kanye’s ex, and most recently Wiz Kalifah’s estranged wife) trading hoes jabs with the Khloe Kardashian. If you are not up to date, Rose was on the Breakfast Club radio show and was asked about rapper Tyga dating 17 year old Kylie Jenner.( * a little back story Tyga was with former stripper Blac China, who is now good friends with Rose). She basically said that the 25 year old rapper should be “ashamed of himself” for dating the underage Jenner saying that she’s “A baby, and needs to go to bed at 7”. Khloe K. fired back on twitter calling Rose out for being stripper at 15. Then the first hoe salvo was fired :

“@khloekardashian I’ll be that lil whore to support my family like ur older sister is a whore 2 support hers. We’re even Kiss mark #MuvaGivesFacts”

After a few back and forth Khloe tweets:
“@DaRealAmberRose lol #DontPanic well damn, I didn’t realize I called you a whore… But at the end of the day”
And later again:
“@DaRealAmberRose I guess people love to call us all whores. Easiest jab to throw. It is what it is. We still livin though.”

Today this type discourse is par for the course, a by-product of gossip blogs, social media and reality television that has bled over to everyday women and high school Facebookers. Let’s talk about reality television for a moment since most of this is generated by the personality begotten form the genre. Whether it’s on their shows, social media, or TMZ video snippets, cast members trade jabs and drop, ‘bitches’ and ‘hoes’ like Bush’s Shock and Awe campaign, and that’s how it leaves us, shocked and awed! One of most disgusting comments of late came from Atlanta’s Real Housewife Nene Leakes, in a fight with newbie Claudia Jordan, she slung this gem:
“You’ve been f—–d by everybody in Hollywood. They done wore that out,” NeNe says. “What you got, this half-breed s–t? That’s not in Atlanta. They ain’t looking for you. You’re a whore, you done slept with everybody. Your clit has left your body!”….

I ask you who talks like that? If that curdled your stomach I’ll spare you the goings on the likes of Love and Hip Hop, Mob Wives, and even Little Women of LA. are tossing ‘whores’ back and forth like ping pong balls. Perhaps this is all orchestrated for dram and rating but is is quickly treating a culture. A culture that says, “Its ok for you to call a woman a whore, whether its’ true or not”What is so amazing is that the criteria for being labeled a ‘Hoe’ has little to do with ACTUALLY being a Hoe.

Before we go further let’s take a look at the actual definition of the word:

Whore:
noun
1.
a woman who engages in promiscuous sexual intercourse, usually for money; prostitute; harlot; strumpet.
verb (used without object), whored, whoring.
2.
to act as a whore.
3.
to consort with whores.
verb (used with object), whored, whoring.
4.
Obsolete. to make a whore of; corrupt; debauch.

Today the concept ‘Whore’ the noun, (one who has sex for money) has become elasticized stretching into the verb ‘Whoring’ which includes (but is not limited to) doing things of a sexual nature (for money). Ostensibly this includes dressing provocatively, posting provocative photos or videos, partying, or being photographed with numerous males (while dressed provocatively at a club is a double whammy) these actions can earn you the scarlet letter. What is really disturbing is that. it likely won’t be men labeling you (hey they love a sexy pic on Instagram), no, it’s other women, the fairer sex is the biggest offenders of such speech, both where ‘bitch’ and ‘whore/hoe’ are concerned. In fact when it come to ‘bitch’ women have in effect co-opted the word ‘bitch’ turning the once insult into an intimacy i.e. “My Bitches” as in “my girls”, much the way some African American’s say they have flipped the script on the “N” word. Women are also using “Bitches” as a passive aggressive, razor wrapped silk, a now socially acceptable way to say, “I like you but I don’t trust you as far as I can throw you” insert side eye-here.

The usage and meaning of ‘Whore’ is less ambiguous in it’s meaning. When someone is calling you a whore, they are unmistakably saying that you sleep around, or (and here comes that elasticity) you look like a person who sleeps around. Let’s make this clear, a stripper does not necessarily a whore make. One could post ass pics, twerk online, and dress as provocatively as one wants and still not be a whore. Just because you dance naked in a club for tips doesn’t mean that you are in the champagne room delivering sexual favors ( because we ALL know, there is no sex in the champagne room), even making a sex tape with your boyfriend and that somehow gets leaked and you (Or your mother) negotiate the rights to make money from it that does not a bonafide whore make, though some could argue that it could make you a whore by default as there is sex and money exchanged, but it seems as though we are splitting hairs (certainly not pubic as it seems no one has them anymore).

The real question is why does the word Whore have the power that Bitch never did? I suspect it might have something to do with the sexual double standard historically present in our patriarchal society. The idea that women are supposed to be pure and chaste, the “Madonna” and anything that falls short could be called the ‘Whore’. Women have endured, we have gone through suffrage, burnt their bras, and made it through the age of Aquarius and “free love”. The Women’s Movement fought for equality both in the boardroom and the bedroom, and won, for the most part… Yes today Women are making wages closer but not always equal to that of men, and now hold positions of power in companies, organizations, corporations, and government, however what the Movement could not do is change how people feel about women doing these things. Today women in business, who “handle their business” with most assuredly be branded ‘Bitches’ because they are ball-busters just like their male counterparts. Today women have the power post provocative pics, and twerking videos, dress scantily, and exercise their right to sexual freedom, albeit unfortunately they might well be branded ‘Hoes’, not because they are getting it as good as their make stud counterparts, no, they will be labeled because they are *women doing this things.

What interests me is why it it’s the aspersion De Jour, why does being called a ‘Whore’ land in a different place then ‘Bitch’?

Even in our modernity, in our liberated state somewhere down deep we as women still carry the shame and stigma of acting on our sexual liberation even though it was fairly fought for and won. On a cellular level we have not fully embraced the reality that we it’s okay for us to have a healthy sexual libido and act on it, like men, that we can take a lover and not want relationships, like men, we find it hard to own, because in our heart of hearts we know that double standard will creep up and bite us in our over exposed ass. Even when we ourselves find nothing shameful in our behavior, the fact that someone can call us out always lurks just below the surface. There are women who count their sexual partners, and try to keep their “number” low, often resulting in what I call “sleeping backwards” with men we have broken with, rather than find someone new and raise our ‘number’. The basis for this behavior is that since we know the ex, and we know what the sex is like, we would rather booty call him then add another notch on our bed post). Women don’t function like men, notches don’t necessarily give us s sense of prowess, often they can serve to make us feel shamed. It can make us feel like….A Whore.

Though on the surface we have been “allowed” our sexual freedoms, but because of that double standard, once we exercise them, we open ourselves up to judgment by both men and women. Television host Wendy Williams will at once love a Rhianna or Miley for their sexually provocative “bad girl” antics, but then will say “But you wouldn’t want to take her home to mama”. Yes it might well be true, but how can you tell a girl to “Rah Rah Rah, if you’ve got it, flaunt it, you’re young!!!” and then when she leaves the room say, “ Ugh just a mess, no good man is going to want her?”. Why is it that men are allowed, even encouraged to sew their oats but women must either feast and be a hoe, or endure a self imposed famine waiting for the man who will make an honest women of her? Why are all the female pop icons encouraged and celebrated for baring all in videos,magazine covers and sexy pictures on Instagram then subsequently taken to task for doing so? And heaven forbid you become a mother, then all bets are off. We live in a world with a split personality, where the female body and hyper sexualization of it is one of the largest commodities to be cashed in on through multiple mediums, and yet when a young woman takes advantage she is stigmatized while being hailed.Yes, Society giveth and it taketh away…

‘Bitch’ has been sublimated to a badge of honor, but the words ‘Whore’ and ‘Hoe’ land in a place where women have been rubbed raw from the tug of war around this subject. It lands in a place that is tender for trying to grow into a space we have been told has been prepared for us, yet is still stifled and forbidden. It falls on a place where even though those words may not be true, we as women, in the privacy of our own thoughts, question ourselves… Am a I whorish because I wore that? I said this? I slept with him? Internally, we fret and struggle, worried that we at times have lost our footing on the very thin, slippery, difficult to discern line of what makes us a “good girl”. We at times wonder, “Does that make me a whore?” so when someone calls us one, our uncertainty makes us vulnerable to that particular lance, in a way that we never were to the word ‘Bitch’. The closest I can come to an analogy would be to say that it is akin to calling someone a bad mother. Even though in your heart of hearts you know you are a great mother, you always carry some doubt that you are not doing it right,so when someone makes that charge you are sensitive to your own insecurity, that is what ‘Whore’ calls up in women, the fear, the insecurity that somehow we might just be one, because we have all done things that in the light of day we might not want to claim….

This type of social psychosis has us in a moral crisis. Women, young girls are confused as to who, what and how they should be, and where they fit in the larger scheme of things. Everyday we see the female image exposed, legs spread, bent over, on all fours, she is the object of the desire and concomitantly one of disdain. Men and women alike do not know how to feel about her image. We raise her up, then tear her down.There is attraction and repudiation mixed in one. People have achieved great fame and wealth for little more then literally showing their asses, and understandably young girls seek to emulate them in the hope of attaining the same level of success. The internet, with social media has become the great equalizer, over night a disenfranchised individual with a cell phone can be the IT Girl (or Guy) and live in the lap of luxury in a matter of months, and yet what they become known for…there is something inherently icky about it.

Personally I have strong feelings about some of the behavior of women and young girls these days, I truly think that we have to reexamine who we are as women and more importantly who we want to be, and how we want to get there. I see some of these images of women, and some of the behavior and though not a prude it does leave me shaking my head. I wonder how I live in a world that can give us Hillary Clinton, Oprah Winfrey, Condoleezza Rice and at the same time beget the likes of Kim Kardashian, and Amber Rose? Of the latter though I find some of their antics despicable, and at times desperate, I would have to hesitate in calling them Hoes, I would say they have some hoeish tendencies…is that wrong? I myself am torn, I support their right to be able to do what they choose with their bodies and their images, but knowing that double standard exists, you have to be prepared for what you wrought. Yes, women are the possessors of their bodies “My body My choice” however, there is still that pesky thing called reality and not the television kind. I see the issue of “A Right to Bare Ass” as tantamount to the parameters of the First Amendment which protects your right as a citizen to say whatever you want without fear of persecution from the government, but it does not protect your from people’s reactions to what you say. You as a citizen have to bare the full brunt of the responsibility of your words and in this case actions. I think exercising your sexual freedom in certain ways has the same results, you have a right to do it, but knowing the contradictory world we live in, there will be a price to pay. I’m not saying I agree, but I’m saying that is real talk because I don’t think the double standard of Stud/Whore is going anywhere anytime soon. I do think that we as women don’t have to help it strengthen its roots by participating. To me the answer is quite simple, if we are going to keep shaming through an old paradigm then we can solve the problem through one, and women can just start acting like ladies.

My Road Trip Left me With Road RUMP!!!

AHH I have never been so BLOATED!!!

After a 10 city work road trip, eating that truck stop junk, put some JUNK in my trunk and if we ever got a flat I could have provided the spare tire!!!! check out my story!

Here are some tips so that you don’t have to fall victim to The Plump Rump!!

Please, my dancer touring folks, and anyone who is always on the road if you have any tips please share!!

So Un-retouched Cindy Crawford looks like a woman who has had 2 children….And?

cindymarieclaireunphotoshoppedSo Cindy Crawford’s un-photoshop Picture “leaked” onto the Web the other day and without doctoring she looks like a 48 year old mother of two who keeps herself in shape. Is this shocking? Perhaps just the idea that all physical evidence of the natural results of child birth have not been smoothed away with technology is in today’s world is shocking.

I find it refreshing, I just hope she does….

I hope this was not a shaming action by whomever leaked the photo, because in all t’ruth , any 48 (hell 38) year old mother of 2 would have not problem looking like this. The photo is speculated to have come from a photo shoot the Supermodel did for Mexican Marie Claire back in 2013, some speculate that the leak was purposeful, orchestrated to promote Crawford’s documentary, “Hospital in the Sky,” about body image and confidence.

Crawford spoke to Marie Claire at the movie’s premiere:

I really think — at any age — it’s learning to be comfortable in your own skin. …If women would treat themselves with the same kind of love they give to their friends, that would be such a great gift we could give ourselves. …What makes you the most attractive is self-confidence. That’s what people see.

British News anchor Charlene White who tweeted an un-retouched photo of Cindy Crawford says, “it is real, it is honest, and it is gorgeous.”

White says that motivation for sharing the photo was to celebrate true beauty, telling CNN:

“Women come in all sorts of different shapes and sizes, I think it’s important to see all sorts of body shapes on our screens and in our magazines so that people have a true reflection of what people look like.”

I couldn’t agree more, and that seems to the the overall public sentiment regarding the picture, so my real question is: IF that is truly the case then why aren’t we seeing more natural photos in magazines? Or on billboards? If we as consumers are craving a little reality in our intake, IF it were available to us,  would we support (when I say support I mean buy) those magazines or brands, or would we pinch our faces and say how shitty the model looked, and point out dark circles under eyes, pooches in bellies or smile lines? Is seeing our own flaws in advertising TOO much for us? After all how many of us filter our own photos for Instagram? Are we now so programmed to see technology manufactured perfection that we have an aversion to our own humanity?

Marie Claire put an unretouched Jessica Simpson on its cover in April 2010, 2011666914

She looks great. However if EVERY cover looked like this would we be inclined to buy?

I think that we as consumers like the fantasy, we need it crave it…we secretly like to be made to feel that we are slightly inadequate, that the models in the ads ARE indeed better then us, likewise we get a perverse thrill out of seeing those idols stripped of everything that makes them shiny and desirable. This is precisely why those Sans Fard (without make-up) shots of celebrities looking painfully common, or haggard are so popular. Yes the industry is the problem, but we support the perpetuation. It’s a sad but true reality one that makes billions annually….

sigh….

Get of the habitrail