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  • Only 4% of women would call themselves beautiful

  • and that’s a stunningly small statistic.

  • So basically, if this entire room was somehow magically transformed into women

  • that would mean then less than two of you

  • would say that you thought you were beautiful if you were asked.

  • Young girls are more afraid of being fat

  • than they are of getting cancer, nuclear war

  • or of losing both their parents.

  • And there are so many statistics that support all of these things.

  • A recent study in the UK said that 6 out of 10 girls thought

  • they would be happier if they were skinnier.

  • A study of 455 college women said… 80% of them said that

  • they had been told negative things about their body from ––

  • not their friends or society –– but from their parents and siblings.

  • Low self esteem is a major problem and especially through women.

  • Women with low self esteem are more likely to stay in abusive relationships.

  • They are less likely to start their own businesses.

  • They are more introverted and they also earn less money

  • than their more confident counterparts.

  • I believe in the power of women.

  • I think women are so amazing.

  • I think they are sacred neon-pink sparkly amazing. (Laughter)

  • They are subversive and wild, they are fierce and strong.

  • We can really do anything that we want to do but so few of us do it.

  • We all feel like we're been held back by an invisible hand

  • but the truth is that we're the only ones holding ourselves back.

  • Even though we're told all kind of things by society and by the media,

  • once you realize that all of that is total nonsense

  • and most savvy women realize this by the time they are about 14 years old.

  • Once you realize that, youre really free to do whatever you want to do.

  • I mean, okay, so they are quite beautiful but there's no diversity ––

  • even the women who are not white are extremely pale.

  • They all have the same waist size, they're all the same height,

  • they're all gussied up to be sexy for a man

  • and I mean, that’s not really all there is to it.

  • So all of this stuff kind of converged and came to a head for me

  • on Valentine’s Day in 2010.

  • So, I’ve been writing online for about 5 years ––

  • and actually I have been writing online for about 13 years,

  • but let’s forget about that. (Laughter)

  • So I’ve had my blog for 5 years

  • and I started off writing about fashion and style

  • but as I kept writing I realized that what women really wanted wasn’t like,

  • What’s the perfect dress for my body type?”

  • They really wanted to know how to be happy in themselves

  • If a woman would write to me and say,

  • Well, what should I wear to disguise my chubby thighs?”,

  • I don’t think the answer is, “A 350 dollar pair of jeans.”

  • I think the answer is, “You need a major dose of self-love

  • and you need to focus on your assets and not obsess over your flaws.”

  • So, Valentine’s Day is this ridiculous anomaly

  • where all women no matter how brilliant or genius, become these blubbering messes

  • because some dude didn’t spend all his money on an overpriced bouquet of flowers.

  • It’s like, this is the only thing that matters, “You have no value in our society

  • if someone didn’t buy you some chocolates on the 14th February.”

  • And it’s so tragic.

  • And I would see these incredibly brilliant genius women on Facebook,

  • complaining, like, “My life has no meaning.” (Laughter)

  • And it’s like, “Come on, you have to get over it.”

  • So, I decided that on Valentine’s Day, I was gonna start this movement.

  • The thing with Valentine’s Day is –– even if you have a partner

  • and youre desperately in love, it doesn’t necessarily make your life any better

  • and it doesn’t necessarily make you any happier.

  • If you don’t feel comfortable within yourself

  • your relationships are gonna turn to custard

  • because youre not comfortable saying who you are and what you want.

  • You probably won’t be able to tell your lover what you want in bed

  • and, you know, it’s just not gonna go very well.

  • There is an amazing quote by RuPaul.

  • At the end of every episode of RuPaul’s drag race she says,

  • If you can’t love yourself, how in the hell are you gonna love anybody else?”

  • And it’s totally true.

  • We need to stop looking for validation, acceptance, outside of ourselves

  • and realize that it’s all within us.

  • And, by the way, isn’t that so amazing, it’s an assemblage art piece

  • and you can see, like, there is a bottle of Nair in there.

  • I love it, I think it’s so brilliant.

  • There is another brilliant quote by Buddha and he said,

  • You can search throughout the entire universe for someone

  • who is more deserving of your love and affection than you are yourself,

  • and that person is not to be found anywhere.

  • You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe deserve your love and affection.”

  • And again, it all comes from within.

  • If you don’t have that, then life becomes very difficult.

  • So, I decided in February of 2010 to start this radical self-love movement

  • and I figured that I would start writing about my journey

  • in loving myself and getting comfortable with who I am.

  • And I put it online.

  • And if women want to join in, then, that would be fantastic.

  • And I hope that they would learn something from my mistakes.

  • And radical self-love has been this amazing thing.

  • It’s still going. It’s brilliant.

  • Women have used it. And theyve emailed me

  • and through their own discoveries they have left abusive relationships.

  • Theyve started their own businesses.

  • Theyve traveled the world. Theyve gotten over eating disorders.

  • And most of all, theyve learnt to be really comfortable with who they are

  • and I think that’s the most important thing.

  • It’s all I ever really wanted.

  • My story is not a really pretty one, actually.

  • The reason I feel like I can talk about radical self-love

  • because I’d been on the other side of the coin,

  • which I like to callradical self-loathing.”

  • Although it’s not that radical, mostly, it just sucks. (Laughter)

  • So, I grew up in New Zealand, hence, the accent

  • and I had a pretty idyllic childhood.

  • I was very lucky, but of course, you don’t realize that until much, much later.

  • Andbut somehow when I became a teenager,

  • it was like I transformed over night and I became this horrible person.

  • I was really, really miserable.

  • But mostly I was just really angry.

  • And I didn’t really know what I was angry at, I just knew I was really angry.

  • And I didn’t know how to deal with it at all.

  • And I was a teenage goth, it’s true.

  • I would wear like all black, and I bought this dog collar from the supermarket

  • with spikes on it, and I would wear like every day.

  • Stripey stockings and combat boots, and it was like the whole thing.

  • And even though, I make kind of fun of that now, I think a lot of that was

  • because I was looking for people who were outsiders as well.

  • I always felt very different to everyone

  • and I was looking for people who could kind of empathize with that.

  • So, my rage was really bad and I just felt...

  • I kind of felt like I was on the verge of a mental breakdown all the time,

  • and I didn’t know how to deal with it.

  • So, I’m not really sure where I got the idea

  • but I started self-mutilating when I was 13 years old.

  • And it was the only way that I knew to deal with my emotions.

  • And after I had done it, I would feel calm and I would feel peaceful again.

  • And it wasit felt like something that was worth doing

  • even though I knew it was really weird and kind of wrong.

  • So, I did that for about 5 years, and when I was 18, I had a bit of an accident.

  • I was doing my usual thing and I didn’t realize how sharp the blade I was using was

  • and I cut myself really deeply, and it bled a lot

  • and I thought that I could've done myself some real damage.

  • So, that kind of stops everything, but somehow I didn’t realize like,

  • Oh, this is really stupid, you should do something else.”

  • So I stopped doing that but 6 months later

  • I moved away from my parentshome, and was living by myself,

  • and I swiftly developed an eating disorder.

  • Really fun. Awesome. Don’t recommend.

  • I would basically subsist on a coffee and a little piece of sushi every day

  • and I was really miserable.

  • And the thing with being miserable and being depressed which I clearly was,

  • is when youre not eating it’s even more difficult to feel any better like this.

  • There is absolutely no hope. Depression is bad enough.

  • Depression and starvation is absolutely catastrophic.

  • And I just... I felt like my life was pretty much over,

  • and it was really terrible.

  • So, I was very lucky when I met a man who wouldn’t take any of my nonsense

  • and basically said, “If were gonna be together, you have to get over all this crap.”

  • So he was into a lot of alternative healing modalities,

  • and I used this thing calledEFT”, which stands forEmotional Freedom Technique.”

  • It’s basically like acupuncture but no needles.

  • And I used that to get rid of my eating disorder

  • and it basically left my system over night, which is amazing.

  • And these days I can eat like a whole box of donuts and I’m so happy.

  • (Laughter)

  • So, that isthat is my story.

  • So, I have a lot of people come to me on my blog and online and they say,

  • “I want to get into this radical self-love thing. Where do I begin? What should I do?”

  • So, behind me you can see, these are a selection of radical self-love bibles.

  • So, when people want to start, I say that they should get a big blank book or a journal

  • and fill it with everything that’s good about themselves.

  • So, you have a thing that you can look at when youre feeling stinky or ugly

  • or youre having a bad day and you can immediately feel better.

  • So, these are some of the books that people have made that read my site.

  • And theyre all super cute and really different.

  • So, that’s the first thing that I recommend.

  • The second thing I recommend is that you basically write down every compliment

  • that you receive over the next like, I don’t know, five years.

  • And the reason for this is that it is so easy to focus on the terrible things

  • people have said to us or about us, and forget the positive things, like I face it to you

  • what’s the last awful thing someone said to you, you could probably recall it.

  • But if you were asked about the most recent compliment you were given,

  • you might not be so sure.

  • So having a list of these compliments is a great way

  • to just remember that youre actually pretty rad.

  • The other thing that has been really instrumental for me in radical self-love,

  • and just in keeping myself positive in general, is the practice of gratitude.

  • So, I started doing this thing on my blog, like five years ago,

  • calledThings I love Thursdaysand basically every Thursday

  • I’d write a list of things that were making me really happy,

  • and it could be anything from, like, sparkly nail polish to rescuing a dog, or whatever it is.

  • And that has really spread through the internet like wildfire.

  • There are hundreds of women who do this every week.

  • They make their own lists. They make their own...

  • This is a collage that somebody made on Flickr

  • and these were all just pictures that made her really happy that week.

  • And even if you can come up with a small section of things,

  • it’s so much better than sitting around and dwelling on the things that suck about our lives,

  • because it’s really important to count our blessings and not our problems.

  • So, the other thing that I really recommend is

  • that you stop reading tabloids and gossip websites.

  • (Laughter)

  • Just from looking at that, you can’t really deduce anything positive from it.

  • It all looks pretty bleak.

  • So, I think that tabloids are really destructive,

  • theyre very negative, they encourage being judgmental and critical.

  • And when youre judging Angelina Jolie

  • who is probably one of the most stereotypically beautiful women in our society,

  • you can’t possibly feel like you're going to measure up positively against her.

  • It’s never gonna happen.

  • So, stopping looking at tabloids and reading gossip websites has been huge for me

  • and makes me feel so much better about my life.

  • And it’s not that celebrities are bad people

  • it’s just that tabloids really bring out the worst in people.

  • It’s very competitive, it’s very judgmental.

  • And leaving those behind has been quite amazing for me.

  • And these days when I see, like, anUs Weeklyor whatever in the supermarket

  • it looks like it came from another planet.

  • It’s so weird to me. I can barely even comprehend it.

  • The other thing that I recommend is that we really need to start

  • coming up with our own visions of what beauty looks like,

  • what success looks like, what a relationship looks like.

  • And coming up with those and really putting them into play in our own lives.

  • I think that wevery often inherit those values from our parents or our friends or our family,

  • and theyre not necessarily true, you know, your parents might be biased

  • against people from another culture or they might think that

  • success is only what’s in your wallet.

  • And the truth is that the world is a lot bigger than that.

  • And as we start to research these things

  • we can really expand our vision of what life could be like

  • and it makes us more well-rounded, diverse and certainly more happy.

  • I’m gonna finish by reading you the Radical Self Love Manifesto,

  • which is something I wrote last year.

  • I was in New Zealand on a press trip and I was with all these other journalists

  • we were having an amazing time, I mean, it’s the most beautiful country on earth, clearly.

  • (Laughter)

  • We were all having a great time, but even so, a lot of them were complaining and they were unhappy

  • and they had grizzles about this or that and it kind of made me crazy.

  • I started writing this in my head as I was walking around with them.

  • So this is what I said, “Strive to always be thankful and optimistic.

  • Focus your gaze on what is good and positive; never dwell on the negative.

  • Do not allow life to make you cynical or closed off.

  • Remaining open and true to yourself is a lifelong adventure,

  • and the only one worth having.

  • Choose to see the best in people. Strike up conversations with strangers.

  • Never be afraid to ask for what you really, really want

  • (that’s a big one, by the way)

  • To love, purely and fiercely, without agenda, is the most terrifying and rewarding thing youll ever do.

  • Travel is essential to the spirit.

  • A pair of great shoes means nothing if you have an ugly heart.

  • Try your hardest not to judge anyone else; it never leads anywhere good.

  • Always avoid tabloids and gossip; they destroy the soul.

  • Be kind and loyal.

  • Many things in this world are more important than money.

  • Always trust your intuition, always.

  • Rescue animals, it will strengthen your heart.

  • Never delight in anyone else’s misery.

  • Trust in others. You are your own best investment.

  • Believe in the magic of a new day and a fresh start.

  • Follow your bliss. Do more of what you love.

  • Always do the best you can.

  • Create your own family and care for them ferociously.

  • When people offer you opportunities that scare you, say yes: it’s the very best way to grow.

  • You are never as stuck as you think.

  • Stay eager. Love yourself.

  • And say yes to the adventure of life.”

  • Thanks very much.

  • [Slide: Smile, youre beautiful.] (Applause)

Only 4% of women would call themselves beautiful

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TEDx】ラジカルな自己愛。TEDxCMU 2012でのガラ・ダーリン (【TEDx】Radical Self Love: Gala Darling at TEDxCMU 2012)

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    Hhart Budha に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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