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  • Okay hello lovely people! Did I do it right? Are you watching? Are you watching?

  • Oh, but first canI rehearse it please? Wait...once... Hello lovely people

  • Nope messed it up! Down and then across because that's people who have stubble

  • on their chin and people who don't

  • Okay I'm gonna write it down. Hello lovely people! Rght, everyone, this is the

  • lovely Annie who I am absolutely delighted that I get to meet in person.

  • You're one of my favourite people on the Internet! You're my favorite person on the internet!

  • We're so cute, love it!

  • So, tell the people what you do

  • Alrighty, so I have a channel called Annie Elainey and on it I do similar to you

  • I guess where I talk to y'all about my disability stuff and basically

  • share my life with y'all. Delightful! Today we are gonna talk about, since

  • we're both lovely disabled people, what it's like trying to have a positive

  • body image when you have disabilities which can be complex, very very

  • complex and we're currently at VidCon if you're wondering why I'm with an American

  • You just did a panel about body image gender. Yeah, body image, gender,

  • presentation video

  • One of the things you talked about was the hashtag

  • love my disability which to some people can seem

  • like a very strange concept. How could you love a disability? How could you love

  • something that's so terrible and awful and yes having a disability isn't

  • necessarily the greatest thing in the world

  • No. But also it's just if this is the body that I am in I feel very powerfully

  • about my body that I must make a conscious decision to always love it no

  • matter what and my body ,due to my

  • disabilities we both have connective tissue disorders and I also have a nerve

  • condition as well, my body has changed a lot. It went through a period where I was

  • really really thin I was eighty eight pounds

  • six stone. I am 5'9 and I was incredibly thin and one thing that

  • people kept telling me they kept reminding me was that I looked terrible

  • and nobody believed that I could have a positive body image. They thought it was

  • a terrible thing for me to say "no I love my body" and I did and I bought dresses

  • that fitted me I got some new stuff that had the same style it went in at the

  • waist and it had a big skirt but now my waist was tiny and I had to buy

  • children's clothes. Daily, from my family, from wider family, from friends, from

  • strangers: they felt they had to remind me that my body was horrible "but you

  • don't like it do you? You don't like it? I mean because you're too thin and it's

  • just sticky out here and..." No! Screw you! This is my body, I love it I don't care

  • what you think! How did you go about that? How did you? Because like that was a huge

  • journey for me to like find body peace that way

  • So like I'm assuming it was probably like eating eating disorder recovery I'm

  • assuming. I didn't have an eating disorder.

  • No? Just because it was for me

  • cuz I was like that's why I make the assumptions we both have connective

  • tissue disorders but I when I was from age 12 to 21 had non disability related

  • like eating disorder body dysmorphic disorder and body

  • dysmorphic disorder is when you look in the mirror and you see something that

  • isn't there like a hallucination, so I would look in the mirror and see

  • like a monster I would see something like a 600 pound rhinoceros thing

  • my brain, my mental illness, told me everybody who looked at me was nauseous

  • at the sight of me they would say and that

  • every one that I passed inside their heads were thinking she doesn't deserve

  • to be here I wish she wasn't here I don't want to see her I'm gonna vomit

  • and so it very much made me feel like I was not deserving of taking up space

  • I was not deserving of existing I was not deserving of being seen but

  • long story short there it wasn't until I was 21 and someone was like "Are you

  • okay? Something's wrong with your brain." and so when I got confronted for the

  • first time about possibly being mentally ill that's when I decided to really

  • proactively do self therapy and recover and this happened before I started

  • losing abilities so through recovery process I found this euphoria of

  • like "I'm here, I'm alive and I deserve to love myself, I deserve to love my body no

  • matter what state it's in." So that's what I found through that I found "You

  • know what, body? I love you and no matter what you do, no matter what you look like

  • and no matter what you experience or go through I'm gonna love you anyway ."

  • and so then when finally losing abilities came along I had that foundation.

  • I have a similar thing in a way but having from a very young age I wasn't diagnosed until

  • I was 17 even though I had masses of symptoms my whole life, I wasn't

  • born right let's be honest. They told my mother in the hospital I was not okay.

  • They didn't know what was wrong with me but I was just not okay. my grandfather

  • was a doctor he looked at me and he was like something wrong with that baby

  • mother's like yeah so everyone keeps saying and so I knew my whole life like

  • that is not okay with my body but when I was being told from the outside from my

  • teachers and so um was that I wasn't doing enough I wasn't trying hard enough

  • I wasn't good enough I think also because I've always been quite I've

  • never struggled with a mental health issue so I guess the stuff that works

  • for me doesn't work for other people necessarily but for me having been told

  • that over and over and over mentally made me stronger because I was

  • like well screw you or you're gonna see

  • you know I mean she's not gonna do well in these hats issues I was like well I'm

  • gonna race them now oh my god and they talk about me in aids

  • that's like that's what's in you like I never meant on these like family hikes

  • and it was like okay I mean I struggle to walk like a hundred meters but all right

  • and I'd be like 7 at the back dragging myself along and I

  • was like you know what body good on you good job you've made it this far

  • I knew that my body was putting in a hundred percent effort all the time

  • always here always trying I knew that I was always trying I matter what anyone

  • else said to me and then even when I got ill and they were very much like oh you

  • don't need to take your a levels anymore it doesn't matter like what because my

  • life is stopped what do you think is gonna happen I have to continue across

  • this point after spending two years in a dark room because I can I can sit up

  • without vomiting or passing out and I can have light sound or touch because it

  • gave me immense pain I say you know what I'm going to take my a-levels god damn

  • it so I lay in a dark room dictating and a lady wrote down my exam results and

  • everyone told me I couldn't do it you know what I got a hundred percent.

  • so it's just defiance my father my positive body image is because yes you said I

  • can't so I'm gonna prove to you that I will you said I can't love this so I

  • will goddamn love it every morning when I get dressed I have to get dressed in

  • front of the mirror I can't feel most of my body so like if I'm putting on tights

  • or something I have to be in front of a full-length mirror so I can see them

  • getting out my legs and do I'm doing and every morning and look at myself in the

  • mirror and I pick what I think looks really great today and I just stone it

  • for a while yeah it's terrible I go to the loo and

  • okay give it and then I'm like my chauffeurs today Jessica looking good and its

  • truly it's like a daily affirmation yeah positive affirmations whenever I am

  • in front of a mirror I look at myself I find the part of myself I like the most

  • in this moment well that is my hair or my nose mm-hmm

  • or just I look great in this dress and I look at it and I go that's a good point

  • I've liked what people should be practicing to try and like start like

  • really what's the word I was used to use retraining your brain because I think

  • disability by default has a lot of people immediately hating their bodies

  • which if you hate your body you have the right to but I always think that it's

  • just better for oneself to like try and like you know evolve from that place

  • because I don't think that hate is a healthy feeling for like anybody to feel

  • especially in regards to themselves so one of the ways to combat it is to practice

  • loving yourself practice looking at yourself in the mirror and even if you

  • have to fake it like and even if you're lying to yourself you're gonna give

  • yourself a compliment Just the days when I look awful

  • and I look at myself in the mirror and I'm like you look horrific

  • but that is a great eye color I mean that beautiful Jessica what I'm blessed

  • and I I think it is the outside world comes and they tell us you should want

  • to look like this you should want to have this body you should want to be

  • this weight you should want to have that hair color bla bla bla bla you should

  • feel bad about your disability you should feel bad about the way your body

  • looks and I'm just like no thanks I don't really want to

  • doesn't sound very fun to hate myself but

  • thanks for the advice right but then if we want to talk about like bad hair days

  • that cuts me I mean it does I have like dysphoria with like a bunch of different

  • parts of my body and I think like there's that intersection of like gender

  • and which we talked about on Annies channel yes gender scription so I'll

  • have problems with like my hips and like that all the bumps of my body and I

  • will have problems with it sometimes and it depends on the day some days I'm like

  • okay I can work this Beyonce it up and then a lot of the times just no a lot of

  • times it just does make me feel very uncomfortable and it doesn't feel like I

  • feel like I'm living in a body that doesn't represent what's inside I I have

  • to just work through it I have to figure out a way to continue going on my day

  • because it can get so bad like anxiety mental illness that you're like I don't

  • want anybody to see me I just want to stay alone and not move on with my life

  • and not not go on with my day that's when you know you have to kind of be

  • your own parent yeah be your own partner yeah if you you got to think of yourself

  • like if you were not you if you saw your friend thinking the way you think about

  • yourself what will you say to them and it would

  • be encouraging it would be supportive you got to be able to treat yourself

  • like yeah like you're in a relationship with our side which you are outside of

  • your body and I really feel very protective of my body like when I'm

  • saying when I was really skinny and everyone was being so rude I would take

  • that but I would almost like disassociated from my body and I'd be

  • like I'm not gonna let this mean comment filter through to the part of my brain

  • that handles how I feel about my body I'm just gonna take it I'm just going to put it in a little box

  • and I'm just going to put it on a shelf somewhere in

  • my mind there is like a little room full of boxes of horrific things people have

  • said to me and I'm just like I'm just going to lock that room then leave that be. and never deal with it don't need to

  • go and deal with that I think that's fine sounds like you got it under control I trust

  • you sounds like you have it on lockdown of like locking bad things away

  • I think you just literally let it yeah let it let it fly off it's like time

  • they you know they dissolve with time okay I hope it doesn't catch up with you

  • one day someone unlocks the box oh wow this is a positive note to end this on isn't it

  • so thank you very much for watching this potentially rambling video about body

  • image and disability I hope that you connected with some of it that you could

  • kind of recognize where we're going with this but I really want to know what your

  • coping strategies are what are the things that you do to make you feel

  • great about yourself me curling my hair and red lipstick me positive

  • affirmations wearing clothes that make me feel good and do practicing being

  • proactive and continuing to live my life even if I don't feel entirely

  • comfortable with my body at the time I'm gonna wear what makes me happy no

  • matter how much other people might be right we're today Jessica thats a bit of a odd

  • I mean there are maybe too many bows on that it's eight bows too much is it no

  • no it's never too much hi Rachel good to see ya

  • you can find her as well gonna put her channel down in the description you can go leave her some

  • comments like HI RACHEL also please go and check out Annie and the video we

  • made for our channel which had more of an LGBTQ+ stanch so goodbye my darlings

  • we shall see you next time

Okay hello lovely people! Did I do it right? Are you watching? Are you watching?

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積極的に人の間違いを証明する!アニー・エレーニーと一緒に[CC] (Positively Proving People Wrong!!! With Annie Elainey [CC])

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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