Hello and Welcome!
Today I’m going to be continuing the topic of my last blog: body judgments and body image. š«£ My last blog was about personal tips I’ve used to challenge body judgements, and today we’re diving into the nuanced world of “body image” versus “embodied living.” Join me!
What is āBody Image?ā š¤·
From a therapy/psychology standpoint, ābody imageā is a shortcut phrase we use to describe how we view ourselves. In therapy practices, there are 4 Aspects of Body Image:Ā
- Perceptual – how one perceives oneās body, your sensory experiences in the body
- Affective – how one feels about oneās body, your feelings/emotions your mind identifiesĀ
- Cognitive – how one thinks about oneās body, the core beliefs (pos/neg) about your body
- Behavioral – how one behaves toward oneās body, the things you do/donāt do relative to your body
Obviously there is going to be some overlap amongst these categories, because we know that our thoughts, feelings, and actions are tri-directional. What we often fail to check in with is the Perceptual Aspect.Ā
Iād like to introduce you to the idea that ābody imageā isnāt actually about how we perceive our true self, our worth, confidence, or āfeeling good about ourselves.ā It’s still based on our physical image.
Body Image is Dissociative š«„
In the technical sense, 3 of those aspects of ābody imageā are actually a dissociated way of being. Thoughts, feelings, and behaviors can be distanced or detached from our internal (Perceptual) experience.Ā
Using the phrase or experience of ābody imageā might be well-intended; however, it reduces our sense of self to the foundation of image, of what we look like, or even worse, what we think others think we look like. It dissociates or detaches us from our own internal experiencing and āmakes usā rely on external feedback. It removes us from connecting to our truest self, our essence.Ā
Donāt misunderstand, some level of external feedback in our lives is absolutely okay and in some cases, really quite necessary. The type of external feedback Iām referring to here is outsourcing our worth to that feedback. And that, my dear ones, is a dangerous path.Ā
Embodied Living & Felt Sense š
Instead of speaking, thinking, and behaving in ways of ābody image,ā I offer shifting this to āembodied living.ā The focus here is on ābeing a body,ā so if any one of the above 4 Aspects is relevant here, itās the Perceptual Aspect.Ā
It means I get to experience and perceive the FULL expansiveness of my bodyās felt senseā¦all the way to the edges or boundaries of my body.Ā So, instead of trying to disconnect, ignore, be small, contained, controlled/manipulated, or suppressed, being embodied means I get to be present.Ā
Itās the gift of feeling what itās like to exist – from my BODYāS point of view, not my mindās belief about my image or my emotions, or the behaviors. š§
This might look like noticing what the body feels like when standing up straight, breathing fully, feeling my skin/edges, resting, sitting, eating, laughing, connecting. When do I feel tired, enthused, energized, rested? Are there aches and pains, ease and peace? When do I feel warm, cold, or neutral? How do I feel supported in my body as Iām sitting, lying down, walking? Whatās my posture like? Do I tune into stress, tension and tightness; illness or dis-ease?Ā
The key is doing this from the BODYāS perspective, not from the MIND. Sensory information, body sensations, or āfelt sense.āĀ
Let Me Know
Iāve developed these skills as a therapist for well over a decade, and Iāve had to REALLY put these into practice based on what I shared in the previous email. Given that, Iām well positioned to provide support, encouragement, and validation for others going through this.Ā
If you or someone you know could use support, please forward this email to them, or better yet, have them email me at shannan@sbmftservices.com so they can get on my Content Updates list.Ā
My deepest hope is that this helps others along their healing path.Ā
In Health & Wholeness ā¤ļøāš©¹
Shannan