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Translator: Ellen Maloney Reviewer: Denise RQ
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Let me start by ask you to close your eyes.
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Please close your eyes for a few seconds,
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and think about \"the perfect body\".
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Just for a few seconds, picture \"the perfect body\" in your mind.
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Now open your eyes.
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By a show of hands,
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how many of you pictured your own body as the perfect body?
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Look around, look what do you see?
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By another show of hands,
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how many of you have ever heard someone say
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or have heard yourself say,
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\"I wish I had a different body?\"
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\"I'm ugly,\" or \"I'm fat,\" \"I wish I had different sized body parts.\"
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Now what do you see?
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I think we see an opportunity to change our future.
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A very large opportunity to change our future.
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I think we see an opportunity to change the future
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for our generations of girls and boys and let me tell you why:
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the most common factor in the development of eating disorders, anorexia, and bulimia
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is body dissatisfaction, or unhappiness with your body.
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This is an important message
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because every aspect of our lives
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is bombarded with messages of body image and body self-confidence.
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We see it everywhere:
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TVs, movies, magazines, social media, the clothing industry.
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Every encounter we have with the external environment
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is filled with messages about body image and body self-confidence.
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So are these messages negative or positive?
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You can probably answer this question.
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How do they affect us?
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Here's some information:
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69% of school-aged girls who read magazines
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say that the pictures influence the way they feel about body shape.
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50% of those girls say that the pictures make them want to lose weight.
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Over 50% of teenage girls, and almost one third of teenage boys,
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use unhealthy behaviors to lose weight.
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They starve, they vomit, they skip meals,
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they use laxatives.
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20 million women and 10 million men in the United States
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will suffer from an eating disorder at some point in their lives.
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Look at those numbers; think about that for a moment.
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Eating disorders have the highest mortality rate
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of any psychological condition.
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If we think about clothing,
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when did we start accepting size 0 and size 000
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as actual sizes of real live human beings?
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Human people.
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Zero?
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The average fashion model is 5, 11\",
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weighs 117 pounds, and wears a size 0, 2, or 4.
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The average woman is 5, 4\",
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weighs 140 pounds and wears a size 12, 14, or 16.
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A little difference there!
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50% of women wear size 14 and up,
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but our clothing industry caters to size 14 and under.
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The average body mass index of Miss America winners is 16.9.
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The World Health Organization says the average body mass index is 21.7.
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Another big difference; almost 5 points.
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So let's ask ourselves, how did this happen?
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Why don't we picture our own body as the perfect body?
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Why do we think our own body is so imperfect?
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And why are girls and boys so unhappy with their bodies?
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I think I have a potential explanation, so bear with me.
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We, as a society, have become boiled frogs.
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How many people have heard of the parable of the boiled frog?
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The parable's been around for a long time.
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It explains that if you place a frog in a pot of boiling water,
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- Don't get nervous, we aren't going to do it! -
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he'll immediately jump out to try to save himself.
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But if you place a frog in a warm pot of water,
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he stays put.
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As you gradually turn up the heat,
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he acclimates to the temperature in the pot and falls asleep.
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And then it's too late.
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I hope PETA doesn't call me. We have not boiled a frog!
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The image is gruesome, I know.
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But the message is clear.
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We are the frog, society is the frog.
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We have been boiled by the clothing industry,
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by the media, by the entertainment industry.
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We have been bombarded by negative messages
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about body image and body self-confidence
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every day, for years and years and years,
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and it continues to happen.
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75% of TV female sitcom characters are underweight.
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A sports magazine recently was recognised
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for placing the first \"plus-sized\" model on its cover.
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Guess what size she is?
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Did anybody see that in the news?
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Size 12.
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Plus sized.
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So when did we start accepting size 12 as plus-size?
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I think it was around the same time we started accepting size 0 or 000
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as actual sizes of real human beings.
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Can you pinpoint when it happened?
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So all of this information is important.
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What does it tell us?
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It's time for a change.
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It's time for a movement towards self-acceptance.
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It's time for a movement that will disempower eating disorders;
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remember we said the most common factor to the development of eating disorders
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is body dissatisfaction.
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So let's go back.
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What can we do to lead this movement?
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What can we do to change the boiling pot?
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Can we change the clothing industry?
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Can we change the media?
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Can we change the entertainment industry?
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Well, Viktor Frankl said, and I paraphrase,
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if you can no longer change your situation, you must change yourself.
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That's something we can do. We can change ourselves.
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We can change ourselves,
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we can change the future by changing ourselves.
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I think we can do that.
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We can teach our children to jump out of the pot of boiling water
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before it's too late.
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And we can serve as role models for self-acceptance.
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We have a responsibility as educators,
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as community members, as parents, as human beings.
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We have a responsibility to start a movement towards self-acceptance
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that can lead us to disempower eating disorders.
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So how? They are just words until we put them into action.
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How do we lead the movement?
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How do we change?
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How do we move forward?
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Here's how:
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Serve as a role model for self-acceptance.
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Accept yourself!
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There's no reason not to.
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Stop negative body talk, the talk we talked about in the beginning.
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No more negative talk about yourself or anyone else.
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Appreciate the beauty of different physicalities
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- we should do that everyday -
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stop buying into the industries that promote self-judgment.
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Challenge the pot of judgment by not judging ourselves.
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We can do this.
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Every body is the perfect body.
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Make sure you read that one.
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Every body is the perfect body.
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We begin to picture our own body as the perfect body, we start today, now.
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We teach our children to picture their own body as the perfect body.
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We lead by example and engage in healthy behaviors.
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So I think we can do this.
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Are you with me?
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We can change our future.
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We can lead the way towards self-acceptance.
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I believe that we can do this.
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We can teach our future generations to jump out of the existing pot
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before it's too late.
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We can disempower eating disorders.
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I hope you will join me in this movement.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)