| Size matters
Jo Walker is comfortable with her weight, but still finds clothes shopping a traumatic experience. Hi, my name is Jo and Im a size 18. Apparently saying it out loud (or in print) is the first step to solving a problem. Except I dont think I have a problem. In fact Im almost completely happy with the way I am. But its that almost that concerns me. Im not talking about a self-image issue, but more of a logistical nuisance brought on by my size the frustration of clothes shopping. About a month ago I set out to buy an outfit for a friends wedding. I wanted nothing too particular, just something flattering, and feminine that I would want to wear again. First I went to John Lewis and found not one item in my size that didnt look like a tent. At Selfridges it was the same story that continued through the many landmarks that validate a shopping experience in London (Marks & Spencer, Next, Dickens and Jones and River Island). No luck in any of them. After three days of breathing in, squeezing in, shedding tears and uttering colourful language, I finally found something suitable. I came away from the sorry experience with a very expensive top from Ghost, a pair of trousers from Rogers and Rogers, an outsize high street store, and a hang-up about future clothes shopping. The traumatic process set me thinking. If that experience can upset someone as happy with herself as I am, how does it affect people who are far less content with their bodies? We hear daily how the health and self-esteem of children and adults are ground down by media images of slim, beautiful people but I believe personal experience can do far more damage. Think back to being a teenager again. Youre already self-conscious, not as slim/beautiful/wealthy as your friends, and all you want to do is be like them. One weekend everyone is invited to a party, and you decide to buy a new outfit that will dazzle them all. You set out with a smile on your face, and then you cant find anything that fits. You end up with the usual fat girls clothes an absolutely heartbreaking feeling. Or perhaps you dont have to imagine this scenario at all. Maybe this is how you feel every time you go shopping. After my shopping trip, it crossed my mind to shed the weight, although Im not usually driven to do it. I wonder whether everyday occurrences like this can be a contributing factor to the development of eating disorders and negative body image. After all, what most people want whatever their size is to look good, feel good and fit in, and clothes go an enormous way towards helping us feel this way. The problem could be partially solved if manufacturers and designers actually made clothes for all sizes (gasp, horror!). And, if even couture artists dont want to go this route, why cant the high street and department stores stock them? After all, 47% of women in this country are apparently size 16 and over so why isnt this reflected in any mainstream consumer clothing choices? Countries like the US and Australia now think outside the proverbial size box, so why shouldnt the UK follow? Great though shops such as Rogers and Rogers and Evans are, the fact that they are separate entities alone screams rejection. Shouldnt all clothing shops provide clothes for all sizes? Since Im a realist I know this issue wont be resolved overnight, so the next time I go shopping I plan to go armed with exactly what I need to get me through a long, exhausting afternoon of rack rage: a cream cake and some comfortable shoes. Do you have something to say about body image and self esteem? Tell us about it on the Body Talk message board. Are you big and happy with your size? Talk to other like-minded women on our Big & Happy message board or take a look at the live discussions taking place there now:
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