Sarah sells health and fitness products, advertising herself to be an authority in both, so it is reasonable to judge her composition. Just like we comment on her crazy lips when she labels herself holistic and toxin free. She mostly only does frantic circuit or HIIT workouts because she has a disordered view of training. She doesn't count exercise as a workout unless she is pushing her heart rate and sweating and it shows in her body. Which is fine but the unrealistic photos she posts of herself contorting her body with collar bone popping and flamingo legs only perpetuates unrealistic body ideals to her young audience. It's a horrible place to be, I fell into it myself in my 20s, like someone said above trying to out-train your food, fixation on cardio etc and it wasn't until I followed correct programming that I saw progress in my upper body and work outs I could actually stick to without getting burnt out. The sad thing is she promotes her restrictive eating and unqualified fitness advice to impressionable young women who think if they do the same things they will look like the false image Sarah posts on IG.I would like to emphasise that there is no right or wrong way that a body should look!
stating a fact, such as that she has abs and she has little no definition in her legs is a bit different then saying that her body does not “match”.
I have more defined calves and little to no definition in my thighs or glutes.
we are already apart of a society which perpetuates so much negativity about how women look and now we also need to worry about whether one body part “matches” the other.
I mean generally people consider whether their handbag matches their clothes not whether their body parts match.
Not really the issue though! It’s not about whether that’s a fact or not. It’s about determining whether body parts match.
just as you can compare *cough* judge people freely on tattle, we can also put our opinion forth when we don’t agree with you comparing (or masking judgment)
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