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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The What’s Underneath Project: Jacky O’Shaughnessy

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StylelikeU.com has created a wonderfully revealing series entitled The What’s Underneath Project where while sitting on a stool in front of a camera, women share their stories. Stories of what it feels like to be them, to be in their bodies, their quirks, irks. They share their relationship the their bodies  in the world surrounding them. There are some very authentic and touching stories, some poignant moments where they share their frustrations of not being ideal, and the constant struggle to reach that unobtainable ideal. But here is the twist, as they share, they take items of clothing off  eventually they are left in their skivvies… Now physically as well as emotionally exposed.

I came across Jacky O’Shaughnessy’s interview on Facebook and became intrigued first by Jacky (the 62 year old American Apparel model) who shares both her heart breaking story of dating a younger man for 6 years while  in LA, and the evening he told her that she was too old to be seen with in public, and  how she was discovered by a woman at American Apparel. In O’Shaughnessy’s story we can easily see ourselves, when she talks about that decision to stop dying her hair!!! when she says “I’m done!” I get it, I get her, she is me she might well be you too. Her surrender is palpable, it is admirable. She is the woman we all hope we can grow up to be, even as she informs us that she just got there ! Which, makes us love her more!

check out her interview

As I perused the stylelikeuyoutube station and watched more, I found that I had to agree with some of the comments on the pages that took note of the fact that the majority of the participants are thin, and very attractive, and white. There are a few minorities that I found, also a transgendered woman and a full figured one as well, but I have to agree that the ratio was off. Where I have to give them kudos for the sentiment of the project, not having more cultural and physical diversity might well move against task. It could be read as once again ,only people who are closer to the commercial ideal should be seen naked, or are asked to take their clothes off. Conversely it could say that even people who seem to fit the ideal have body issues and insecurities too… Which I agree with and support wholeheartedly, and have shared my personal thoughts on

It’s a toss up. personally as a woman of color I like to be included, I mean not just represented by one or two, but I enough to create a spectrum of the diversity that is present within my race. There are Asian, and Latina women who have stories to share and those stories need to be heard so that women who look like them know that they are not alone. That having been said, it’s a start. Check out their page here

 

Too Pretty to Play…Volleyball player Beautiful to distraction

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This is 17 year old Sabina Altynbekova, the Kazakhstanian volleyball player who has garnered thousands of fans but not for her powerful serve ,or spike…but for her pulchritudinousness. She is a looker and the idea that fans have noticed has created some issues for the team says Nurlan Sadikov, the coach of the nation’s under-19 team. “”It is impossible to work like this. The crowd behaves like there is only one player at the championship.” Apparently the fact that Taiwanese fans were holding Kazakhstan flags and arriving an hour early just to get a glimpse of Altynbekova at the 17 Asian women’s U19 volleyball championship in Taipei this past July left a bad taste in  Sadikov’s mouth. Altnbekova’s twitter account follower has risen to a an astounding 22,000 followers

Is this REALLY a PROBLEM?

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Championship in Taipei this month
Championship in Taipei this month

 

 

 

I am calling a flag on the play. Let’s just break it down for a moment.  I get how in a team sport having a stand out, or “star” player can be a distraction  the other team members however I challenge you to name a sport where someone’s skill or their physique hasn’t made them a media star. My mind goes to David Beckham, who not only wowed the crowd with his skills but also with his washboard abs and tatted up guns, and Disney Prince good looks… There was a movie based on his curved kick. I know his teammates at times had to have felt like chopped liver getting off of the team bus, but the visibility he brought to the sport was priceless, some would say that he single handedly boosted America’s interest in “football”, mainly because he is so fine, and his pop star wife didn’t hurt either. Cristiano Ronaldo is having the same effect on the sport, with his shiny hair, chiseled cheekbones and sculpted eyebrows, oh he has a mean dribble too. I don’t hear his coach saying that this is a “distraction”.  Granted these are two men are also at the top of their sports, much like a Michael Jordan, or Emmit Smith. But in all the the reporting no one has ever listed Altynbekova’s stats. I have to believe that she is good enough to be on the team, and the team is good enough to make it to the championships so what is the problem? Is she not pulling her weight?

But this is about her beauty…not her game, well then what about the male athletes who have become sensations not so much for there skills but for other things? Take Tim Tebow, who was the hot ticket quarterback for a hot second, but his religion and his virginity were a bigger deal then his touchdown passes. How can we forget the Linsaity of Jeremy Lin, he can play ball, but he also came out of nowhere and he is the only Asian in the League now. Why are these male athletes fame considered “good” for the game? It has surely been said that they bring awareness, and new demographics to their sports.

Who the hell was thinking about women’s volleyball before this young woman’s videos and pictures started to go viral? Seriously I think there is a clear double standard here at play when it comes to how the coach is dealing with Altynbekova’s growing popularity. it’s not as if she has encouraged or even promoted it, that twitter account is not even hers, the only social media outlets she participates in are Instagram and VK a social network popular in Europe, Russia and her native Kazakhstan. She is not remotely interested in being the next media sensation  she recently entered Kazakh University for Humanities and Law. her mother wanted her to pursue Law she chose sports, and her parents are against her taking advantage of any modeling opportunities. She is a young woman who has now been pushed (by the internet and media) into the spotlight and all she wanted to do was Serve…and not face.

 

 

a European

Championship in Taipei this month

Championship in Taipei this month

Championship in Taipei this month
Championship in Taipei this month
17th Asian Women’s U19 Volleyball Championship in Taipei this month. – See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/more-lifestyle-stories/story/legs-volleyball-babe-sabina-altynbekova-spikes-media-interest#sthash.NT3WLALk.dpuf
17th Asian Women’s U19 Volleyball Championship in Taipei this month. – See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/more-lifestyle-stories/story/legs-volleyball-babe-sabina-altynbekova-spikes-media-interest#sthash.NT3WLALk.dpuf
17th Asian Women’s U19 Volleyball Championship in Taipei this month – See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/more-lifestyle-stories/story/legs-volleyball-babe-sabina-altynbekova-spikes-media-interest#sthash.NT3WLALk.dpuf
17th Asian Women’s U19 Volleyball Championship in Taipei this month – See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/more-lifestyle-stories/story/legs-volleyball-babe-sabina-altynbekova-spikes-media-interest#sthash.NT3WLALk.dpuf
17th Asian Women’s U19 Volleyball Championship in Taipei this month – See more at: http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/more-lifestyle-stories/story/legs-volleyball-babe-sabina-altynbekova-spikes-media-interest#sthash.NT3WLALk.dpuf

UK Bans American Apparel School Days Advert…

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Seriously?…..

Thank God there is a country that is willing to stand up for what is so clearly right. The fact that this company with it’s suspect advertizing campaigns has the word “American” in it is a disgrace to our country.

 

So this is the ad that American Apparel  posted to advertise it’s Fall, or “School Days” line. It is clearly a female bent over showing not just her panties, but her crotch. They will tell you that since the model is 30, therefor it could not be, and is in now way suggestive of pedophilia at all . What I will tell you (but you probably already know) that it is suggestive of the young girl who doesn’t realize how short her skirt is, and innocently bends over to pick something up. It is suggestive of the “Barely Legal” 18 year old in the pron movie who dons, a Catholic school kilt, knee socks and pigtails, who with a finger in her mouth looks back and bends over showing her white “little” girl panties as she waggles her bottom at you. It is suggestive of the violation of an Up Skirt shot…What it is, is flat out inappropriate for all of these reasons and primarily because their demographic is preteen and  teen aged girls. This is NOT how you sell a 14year old a pleated skirt. This is NOT the skirt you want your 14 year old to WANT to buy….

This imagery is an insult,  and an assault on young girls and women, it is reductive, but not just to the female sex but to boys and men alike as it tells and teaches them that this portrayal, this concept of woman is okay, it is acceptable , it is just the thing that makes a young punk hack people’s phone’s and leak their private and intimate photos…

Frankly I am sick and disgusted at what is going on in the world, in this country of late, from 8 year old girls being taught how to fire Uzis and killing the instructor, to everything that is happening in Ferguson Missouri , and all over this country with the police’s abuse of power and the systematic targeting of Black men even the leaking of celebrities personal and private intimate photos…. These are sad and desperate times for this country and this world. And though you might want to stop reading now because you feel like I am about to go off onto one of my tangents, (I might) one that is someone how unrelated to the topic of insinuating the sexualization of young girls I be to differ. I think that the afore mentioned things have a lack of moral compass, there is a lack of  humanity, there is a lack of empathy in these acts. There is something wrong, wrong, wrong, and though I do not know what to “do” about it I know that  like in AA the first step is to admit that you have a problem.

 

America— We have a problem….

Here is  what Jezebel.com reported:

That’s according to the Guardian.The ASA has been on a tear against AA, banning specific ads six times in the last two and a half years. The latest dust-up comes over two pics that ran on the AA site and Instagram account, which showed a woman in a plaid skirt bending over, underwear exposed. (Similar to this ad. The Daily Mail has the images, of course.) They might as well have pegged it to a “jailbait” discount code. ASA did not approve one bit:

The images, which the advertising watchdog said were linked to the brand’s “School Days” and “Back to School” ranges, were edited so “the focus was on her buttocks and groin rather than on the skirt being modelled”. ASA said the ads imitated voyeuristic “up-skirt” photographs taken without the subject’s consent.

“We considered the ads had the effect of inappropriately sexualising school-age girls and were therefore offensive and irresponsible,” said the ASA ruling (which you can read for yourself here).

American Apparel insisted the images weren’t technically part of a “Back to School” promotion and that the model was 30. Come on, guys, don’t insult our intelligence on top of everything else.

Photogapher Lucy Hilmer’s “Birthday Suit” Portraits… 40 years document her life and body changes

 

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If we are lucky, age and aging comes to all of us. We relish our lives and want to live long healthy ones, yet in our youth crazed society we simultaneously crave longevity yet fear what age does to us both physically and mentally. Given what we have learned about the body through the advancement of science, medicine and nutrition, we now have the capacity to live longer then our predecessors ever dreamed of. We have not only extended our lifespan, but we are able to have a better quality of that longer life. There are nonagenarians who are vital, both mentally and physically and live very full and independent lives. This is one of the blessings of modern medicine and science. The flips side of that is, we also have the technology to erase the evidence of a great life lived. Botox, fillers, and plastic surgery can hold the aging body in a bizarre stasis, a place where people can look to be 30 years old perpetually. Their faces never quite change, their breasts don’t sag, hair lost can be replaced or re-grown, and it may not even grey, but through the magic of a colorist they get blonder and blonder. In today’s society it is getting harder and harder to say what a specific “age” looks like. “She doesn’t look* 45”, no she may not, but her mother does…

 

That is not to say that everyone who looks great has “support”, but this phenomenon of perpetual youth does greatly effect how we have come to feel about our aging selves. When we see pregnant women give birth and then dons in a bikini a week later looking as if she never carried a small mammal in her belly…it can be daunting. When her breast sag she has the option of a lift, or implants, and when her belly does not shrink she can tuck it. So what does a “mother’s body look like? Whether by genetic blessings or by professional intervention, people are living longer and looking better, and younger while doing it. To date it is almost societally shunned to “look” your age, or look like you have had a baby, or to be all right wearing the history of your collective life experience on your face.

 

This is why I think that Lucy Hilmer’s photo series “Birthday Suits” is so prolific in it’s simplicity. She not only documents her life and the development of it (we see her fall in love, have a child, we see that child grow) but she documents her body as it morphs due to those life experiences. Personally the changes in her breasts are what captivated me first and then it was her legs. Hilmer’s breasts are pert and perky at 33 when she took that unassuming picture of her self, almost as a fluke. At 36 they are a bit fuller but you can see that gravity has taken hold, at 43 she is breastfeeding her daughter. Her breast are functioning for their intended purpose…at 52 we see the result of that purpose fulfilled and age give greater weight to them, we also start to see a change in her legs. At a certain age the legs especially around the knees begin to show age, it often matters little how “fit” you are, they just start to change, it’s natural… At 56 as she stands with her daughter (no doubt the one she was nursing) she is a bit heavier in the waist, probably the result of menopause, but she looks very much unchanged and even at 60 and 67 she is still looks very much like her 33 year old self, it’s actually quite remarkable. There is a grace to her aging, a grace that most, if we allow it, and embraced it would no doubt have. I see a great beauty and honor in it. I see her go from girl to woman. I see strength, and confidence in her, never is there a sense of shame, or regret as she wears those white bloomers year after year, and certainly as she took those photos, the changes in her body were highlighted. It might have been quite humbling year after year to see where you breast started the year and where they ended it, albeit you would never get that from the energy of the photos.

 

For any woman who fears what age can do to your body, your beauty, your sensuality, or sexuality, they should take a look at these photos, hopefully they will be able to recognize that where age and life may change you, you are always most assuredly yourself. The human body, like its spirit is incredibly resilient and self-healing at times. The thing that I love most about these portraits is the fact that Ms. Hilmer looks so happy in all of them. At the start she wanted to document her 29th birthday as “the last good year she had left” but instead she documented that every year you have, is good, sometimes better then good, sometimes not but it is always a blessing either way.

hosted by Huffington Post

Every Year Since 1974, This Artist Has Photographed Herself In Nothing But Her ‘Birthday Suit’

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photographer Lucy Hilmer has spent the last 40 years bringing new, poetic meaning to the phrase “Birthday Suit.” Since 1974, the San Francisco-based artist has snapped a self-portrait of herself wearing nothing but a pair of shoes, socks and her signature white “Lolly Pop” drawers.

In the series, she’s pictured topless, assuming positions as ambiguous as staring into the sprawling ocean or pointedly powerful as gazing into the camera with a child feeding from her breasts. In total, she’s created a visual history of her own life filled with equal parts vulnerability and pride, mystery and revelation.

“Birthday Suits” began as a singular self-portrait, with no intention of becoming a life-long series. “I had just started studying photography in San Francisco, and went to Zabriskie Point in Death Valley, CA on a lark, and as a kind of homage to [Michelangelo] Antonioni and his film about the counter culture,” Hilmer explained to HuffPost. “I set out to make a picture of myself in my ‘birthday suit’ because in those days the saying was you couldn’t trust anyone over 30. In 1974, when I turned 29, I figured I’d immortalize myself on the last good year I had left.”

Hilmer took several photographs that day, but the one that stood out was an image in her underpants. “I recognized that person more than the skin-deep girl posing in the other frames of film,” she recalled. “That girl in her underpants was vulnerable, open, awkward — she was me.”

Birthday Suit #36b

So every birthday after that, she reenacted the pose. She was, in her own words, obsessed with time and the notion that we’re all “slip-sliding away, becoming different versions of ourselves before we know it.” In the process, she found herself shedding the identity of a “girl child” of the 1950s, winding her own way into the narrative of a blossoming feminist movement.

“I came of age before women’s lib, and wanted to buck the stereotypes of a culture that branded me a pretty girl, thin enough
to be a fashion model and not much more,” she proclaimed. “Armed with my camera and tripod, I found a way to define myself on my own terms in the most authentic way I could.”

 

 

Continue at HuffingtonPost.com

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Birthday Suit #52 Birthday Suit #56 Birthday Suit #60

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Carleigh O’Connell is a body Hero- When Body Shamed she stuck back with clASS

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When 14-year-old Carleigh O’Connell heard that a gibe about her body had been spray-painted on a cement block for her whole town to see, she responded in the unlikeliest, but most awesome of ways: She snapped a photo while posing proudly with the graffiti. She then shared the image on social media and told her mom, Daryl, to do the same. She wanted the image to go viral. She wanted to turn the story around. “[Carleigh] decided that she was going to be stronger than hurtful words on the concrete and that she was going to be proud of her figure,” the teen’s mom wrote in a Sunday Facebook post. “She also told me that she feels complete sympathy for the teenagers across the country who face this everyday. She understands and wants all of them to find strength inside to rise above the nastiness and be empowered by who you are, how you are made and what is in your heart.” Carleigh had heard from kids at her school that someone had graffitied a cement barrier in her hometown of Wall, New Jersey, and labelled it “Carleigh’s ass.” The teen was initially “upset,” her mom said, but she was determined to “make something good out of it.” Based on the speed with which Carleigh’s body-positive photo has made its rounds on the Web this week, it seems the teen has achieved what she set out to do. Carleigh’s Mom’s response:

“What an inspiration to others,” wrote one Facebooker in response to Carleigh’s picture.

“Rise above!! Don’t give them the power! You rock!!” wrote another.

Carleigh told TODAY that the experience with the graffiti has been an “empowering” one, adding that she hopes her message will inspire others.

“I didn’t know I could look something in the face like that and conquer it,” she told the news outlet. “The biggest message I want to get across is just to be strong, and that anyone who is experiencing bullying and anything like that, that they’re not alone and there’s people there for them — and I’m one of them.”

 

via Huffington Post

Sexism in the News: Different Standards for Female Journalists’ Appearance–uh Duh!!

Babara Walters, Diane Sawyer, Katie Couric, what do they have in common, They are all powerful and history making journalist, AND they are all attractive women .

Both local and national news anchors, and weather people come into our homes daily, they surreptitiously become a part of our daily lives telling us to take an umbrella or warning us that downtown will be a mess due to a water main break. After watching, or listening to these people for years you suddenly look up and realize that, seemingly over night they have aged. The men have graying temples or have lost their hair, and the women, well the women oddly stay relatively the same, there are fluctuations in weight due to pregnancy but for the most part women in news exist in a sort of stasis. Sure there are those men who dye their hair and get a Botox and fillers but it is the woman who are “required” to “keep up appearances” .We all know why, it’s no big secret, we want, expect lovely looking women to tell us that the world is going to hell in a hand basket, after all it’s are more soothing to be told that the world is coming to an end by a petite blonde woman with an inviting smile, a sort of stewardess of the the news.

I jest, but only slightly when you here what happened to this female BBC morning show host you’ll see it’s not so far off!

This is Susanna Reid.

susanna reid

Reid is a very successful television journalist in the UK. She is so successful, in fact, that she was poached from the BBC’s very popular morning show to front a new show over at rival station ITV.

Unfortunately, the new show, “Good Morning Britain,” isn’t doing so well in the ratings. In fact, it’s getting comprehensively trounced by “BBC Breakfast,” the show Reid used to host.

Now, this is nothing new. “Good Morning Britain” is the third show in a row that ITV has tried to put up opposite “BBC Breakfast” — all without success.

So, what are ITV executives doing to prop up their sagging show? The answer, it would seem, is “microscopically analyze every aspect of Susanna Reid’s body.”

From the Daily Mirror:

An ITV source said: “Helen is putting effort into training the presenters, who aren’t focus-testing too well. Susanna has been told to nod more, look more sympathetic and engage. Even her dresses are analysed to the nth degree. Her skirt length is checked and the colours now need to be brighter and lighter. A lot of people think she’s too harsh and intense. There was a discussion about lightening her hair. Most of their big-hitting presenters have been blonde – Anthea Turner, Kate Garraway, Fiona Phillips. Holly Willoughby is held up as the perfect nodder during interviews and she’s as opposite to Susanna as you can get. It’s a serious business getting GMB and Susanna Reid back on track.”

This follows an earlier “controversy” over how much leg Reid should be showing on air.

From the way Reid’s every move is talked about, you wouldn’t know that there are actually three other people hosting “Good Morning Britain” alongside her. Reid’s primary male counterpart, Ben Shepherd, does not appear to have received the same kind of micromanagement. His nodding abilities, it would seem, are just fine.

Of course, this kind of thing is nothing new for women in television, who find their every gesture scrutinized to an unbelievable extent. Reid’s predicament is strikingly reminiscent of that of Ann Curry, who found that she could do nothing right on “Today” and was summarily forced out.

PartII

  Former CNN anchor Kiran Chetry and PBS’ Judy Woodruff spoke out on Sunday’s “Reliable Sources” about the way women in television are scrutinized over their appearance. The discussion came after recent reports that executives at Britain’s ITV have criticized host Susanna Reid over her dresses, hair and nodding in an attempt to boost ratings. On Sunday, Chetry seemed to be able to relate to the story as she listed some of the feedback she’s received about her looks during her career in television. The former anchor, who previously worked in local news and for Fox News and CNN, said she has been told to: — buy a wig — not wear bare arms — not wear taupe — dye her hair blond — wear shorter skirts — wear longer skirts — get Botox

SEE the Video on CNN

Here is what we have to remember, in spite of it all We, as Women Strive, Survive and Thrive

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Photogapher Diana Adi- Khalil— In Her Words- and Images…

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Diana Adi-Khalil is a woman who looks at the world from a different perspective. Once I went to an art exhibit with her, and entered a room that was an installation, the church like pews in side were built in the round, and the room had no ceiling. You were meant to simply look up and …experience. Everyone entered the room with a quiet reverence and took a seat on a bench, and commenced to looking at the night sky. My best friend April and I followed suit, however Diana a matter of factly laid on the floor… It had never occurred to any one to do what seemed to be the most logical thing, given the fact that the point was to look “heavenward”. As others entered the room, seeing this petite, woman with a mane of wild curls wrapped in a haphazard topknot lying on the floor, they instinctively stretched themselves out on the carpeted floor. Diana Adi-Khalil literally sees the world from a different perspective…

58269_557656355403_1093132969_nPerhaps it’s her eclectic background, she is of Lebanese parentage, but raised primarily in Paris, she has unpretentious, purely authentic, bohemian laisseze a faire sense of being and style that one would associate with the 1920’s or 30’s. She is an artist, is the same sense. Art is not what she does; it is who she is. She lives her live artfully; she is constantly in creation, whether it is deciding what to wear, drawing a little doodle, or taking pictures. Her speech she is colorful and animated in her descriptions of the most simple of things. (I have experienced her in her third tongue English but am told that in French she is the same). She came to New York to study at New York University and has been here for 5 years. I asked her to share some of her thoughts and her work on the subject of health, beauty and body image. And in true fashion she crafted something unlike any other. She is truly singular, and original, and has made some keen observations relative to the American culture, our relationship to food, lifestyle, and yoga…

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MADLYBACKWARDS- Diana Abi Khalil- Digital photo reworked on Photoshop Photo taken by Diana at Anton Kern Gallery featuring work by artist David Shringley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New york style.

 

These two words resonate in my head because they are pretty much everywhere on the streets of NYC:

“Yoga” and “Organic”

I get overwhelmed… by a “good” cause

These two words are use these are used as something to denominate “goodness” in so many people’s conversations that it is hauntingly overwhelming

Who else sees the “good” in ingurgitating the dose of orange you are supposed to eat in a year, in a little powdered pill?

Vitamin Pills

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A Chewable Strawberry Vitamin C from Sunkist is “All Natural” they provide 500 mg each. What is natural about a pill that provides “833% of your daily value per tablet”?

Hmmm I am not sure it is very natural to ingest 800 % more than the doctor recommended dosage of vitamin C…in the name of “goodness”.

Is it “natural” to drink your exhaustion away in a juicy cup containing the vitamin and iron of an entire organic farm?

As a Lebanese woman I was raised on the gourmet food, I praise it, and gain satisfaction by feeding others and myself.

 

EAT & CRAM ‘TIL YOU BURST– In Lebanese homes. My aunt almost cries if we do not try every single dish she serves. She stuffs me with her delicious food.

 

ABUNDANCE.

Full bellies, nourished and contentment.

 

As a French woman, I do* eat McDonald’s and squeeze my fries in my double cheese. Yes! Inside the burger, that is my ultimate pleasure! But that is not so French it is actually a remix of Lebanese Shawarma sandwiches:

 

 

Shawarma-Sandwich

 

 

 

 

 

 

This proves that I am a product of both cultures equally.

I smoke like a fireman till my teeth turn green, and smuggle tons of cheese,

Saucisson, and quiche paste in my luggage direction NYC. Enough stereotypes!

(Although all of above is true) as we say in French, “Plaisirs Gourmands”=Gourmet Pleasures

I do not deprive myself of anything, and should surely moderate myself. Hmm

Whatever, I am a Libertine, it courses through my veins.

 

One thing that I have clearly gotten out of my New York experience is having a sense of my body, the FEEL of MY BODY.I have always lived through excess and ate, as I wanted, without thinking of my Health; but I now I feel that I am not immune anymore. When I eat too many bagels I feel down, (and the NYC tip to scoop them out did not help my body feel better.) I feel tired and lazy when I eat badly. My body is pulling the emergency alarm. This never happened to me in Lebanon or France I realized it is not because of way* of eating but because of the food itself.

davidshringleyatAntonKernGallery-feb2013
NEVERENOUGH- Diana Abi Khalil- Digital photo reworked on Photoshop Photo taken by Diana at Anton Kern Gallery featuring work by artist David Shringley

Why that? How come I never sensed that before? There might be a reason. Maybe it’s because most of the meat in the States has hormones and steroids in it, or that all the non-organic stuff are MGO or who knows what it is that makes chicken taste the same as the beef? Or maybe because most of the people eat at their desk, or that the deli around my corner is open 24-hour and was still open during hurricane sandy, or for the 4th July, I can go on and on about the American lifestyle …Life in NYC is INSANE!

loosingsenseofself(1)
SENSEOFSELF- Diana Abi Khalil- Digital photo reworked on Photoshop. Photo taken in Bushwick

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In NYC, not only I feel overwhelmed by the pressure to be “good”, but also I feel tempted to the extreme. And he who has extreme temptation has extreme reaction. So here I am reacting to the fast hormones antibiotics, bad oily products, MGO vegetables blahblahblah… I could hear this little voice telling me to run to the other extreme and eat vegan NO gluten NO meat NO fat NO oil no….

NO NO NO!

This extreme revolution, whether it is for pros or cons seems no good for me.

SOULBURST
SOULBURST- Diana Abi Khalil- Digital photo reworked on Photoshop- Photo taken at Printed Matters NYC, showing artwork by Rikrit Tiravanija FEARS EATS THE SOUL

 

 

 

5 Ways To Keep Thigh Sweat From Soaking Your Summer Dresses

OMG if they could tell me how to quell butt sweat!! but this is a start…

Huff Post tells us

Even though we’ve found the perfect summer dresses that won’t land us in hot water with human resources, rising temps have created another issue: inner thigh sweat.

We become miserable the very second we start to feel our thighs sticking together from all the heat and humidity. Next thing you know, our pretty floral frocks and bright cropped pants are soaked in sweat, creating an embarrassing stain.

If you’re fed up with sweaty, moist skin ruining your outfits, try these five methods to stop thigh sweat in its tracks.

baby powder

1. Baby powder. Our mothers swear by this stuff not only to soak up extra moisture, but to keep their bodies feeling soft and smelling fresh when on the move. $3.99, Target.com

dove deodorant

2. Deodorant.Yes, deodorant. Smooth on this cucumber-scented antiperspirant along your thighs, wait a few minutes before getting dressed and leave your home with a thin layer of protection against thigh sweat. $4.99, Drugstore.com

bodyglide

3. Anti-chafing gel. Fitness buffs namedrop this product all the time. This non-greasy balm helps to minimize friction and its aloe vera and vitamin E formula moisturizes dry and inflamed skin. $10, REI.com

cooling body cloths

4. Cooling wipes. The editors at HuffPost Style can’t get enough of these handbag-friendly body cloths, which immediately cools down our clammy skin and leaves behind a silky, powdery finish. $2.97, Walmart.com

nike runner shorts

5. Runner shorts. This probably seems like a no-brainer — they are made specifically to keep you dry — but when you’re used to wearing too-stuffy Spanx, then prepare to sweat way less. $25, Nike.com

 

I think that this briefs might not be brief enough for underneath summer dresses, so maybe some wicking underwear might be the way to go… or botox in the bum, that’s right, botox is also used to prevent excess sweating under the arms, hands and feet….

Burn Survivor Turia Pitt is a cover Girl~ Women’s Weekly Australia

turia pitt

26 year olf Turia Pitt is a lot of things, a burn survivor is merely one of them, although it was probably the thing the most effected her life to date by altering the very course of her life. Ironically she was running an ultra marathon course in Australia when she was caught in a brush fire and severely burned over 65 percent of her body. Her strength of both mind and body were already evidenced by her taking on the challenge of the 100km race in WA’s Kimberley region in September 2011, but were truly tested when she had to endure over 100 surgeries and spent more than 864 days in the hospital fighting for her life.  She won that race and has been honored as the July  cover woman for Women’s Weekly magazine.

Huffington Post:

Today, the mining engineer is a motivational speaker and author. She is also a member of Women’s Weekly judging panel for the annual Women of the Future scholarship awards. After Pitt was photographed as part of the panel, Women’s Weekly editor decided to put her on the cover.

“When Turia was photographed as part of our Women of the Future judging panel among a group of similarly impressive Australian women, it was clear from the moment she sat in front of the camera that the July cover had to belong to her,” Editor-in-Chief Helen McCabe said, according to Australia’s Women’s Weekly. “Any attempt to describe the magic and beauty of Turia seems to get lost in platitudes or clichés. Yet I have never met a more remarkable person.”

Pitts says of the honor:

“Being on the cover of the Australian Women’s Weekly is a huge honor. I feel very humbled. For me, it sends the message that confidence equals beauty. There are a lot of women out there who are so beautiful but don’t have the confidence, and that’s what gets you over the line.”

 

I think this is great and  we should be seeing more of this. Not just women who are survivors of physical trauma, but women who are strong, and successful but may not look like your average cover models (I like the irony of the statement…) This is what we as the readers should expect, after all the magazine is WOMEN’S Weekly not “Beautiful Women’s Weekly” not “Thin Women’s Weekly”, it is a magazine that seeks to represent or speak to Women- all sizes, shapes, colors, religions, and social strata…This cover- or having a “full figure’ woman on the are things that as readers we should not only expect but demand, as equal representation of our gender… Let’s hope that this shows them that we desire more of this, which means that this issue must sell—out sell the others in order for them to do it again, and make it a mission!!!