WHAT WE'RE ABOUT

RBI focuses on using expressive writing, design-oriented work, photography, media, research, and community input to fuel fat positive, body acceptance, discussion, and outreach. Our goal is to redefine the way we view and think about body image, size, fat, discrimination, health, fitness, wellness, mental/chronic illness, stigma, and other related topics.

We are constantly redefining our own perspectives, and therefore tend to write a lot about our personal experiences. Many followers and contributors are living with anorexia, bulimia, body dysmorphic disorder, depression, and a variety of other body image disorders or mental illnesses, so please be respectful and remember that health applies differently to everyone. Any and all potentially triggering content will be prefaced with a trigger warning.

RBI supports all races, genders, classes, and sizes. We try our best to make this a safe space for everyone. If we are not doing our job or checking our privilege, we invite you to please inform us.

Some of the artwork you see here has been created by our founder or moderators, some sourced when applicable. Please be kind enough to source this blog whenever you share it's content.

We are not health professionals. Any and all advice provided on this blog is supported only by our own research, studies, and personal experiences; nothing more.

This blog is part of the Safe Space Network.

YOU GUISE THIS BRIDAL SHOP WAS BRILLIANT

Anyone in the Detroit area looking for wedding dresses in fat sizes, definitely check out Bombshell Bridal in St. Clair Shores. The sisters who run the shop are so lovely and I felt like a glamazon queen all afternoon.

I don’t know how I’ll ever decide! This shit is hard work.

image

1 k 134

haleycue:

#cosmic babe outfit! #me #dominodollhouse #galaxy #dress

[Side note: I am now a contributing writer for xoJane! This is the first article I’ve had published. Check it out on the website, here!]

My family is filled with boisterous, big-breasted, sassy ladies with hearty laughs and bottomless hearts. Among these women was my Great-Grandma Dorothy, whom I adored and admired for over 18 years of my life. She passed away my first year at college and I still feel her absence in my life and her presence in my heart every single day.

A jet-setting social butterfly who frequented Vegas every year with her gal-pals (even well into her 80s), she was the kind of woman who did not take well to the idea of being a wallflower. 

She was big, loud, and unashamed to be anything but what she truly was: uniquely Dorothy.

Her everyday wardrobe consisted of heavily beaded gem sweaters and cardigans, every inch of fabric drowning in sequins or loud, colorful prints. Her ears, neck, wrists and fingers dripped with costume jewelry, and she was always adamant about getting her hair done every weekend. 

She was forever stunning.

image

[Mom and Grandma Dorothy, circa 1988, guessing by my mother’s perm…]

Above all else, her warmth was infectious; a hug from Grandma Dorothy was like coming home. She’d wrap you up in her arms, press you to her breast and happily swing you around as if incapable of containing her love, refusing to acknowledge your inability to breathe.

“I love you, a bushel and a peck. A bushel and a peck and a hug around the neck!” she’d crow lovingly, always singing a song or releasing peals of uninhibited laughter. Her spirit had no restrictions and she’d set a room alight when she entered in full force, super radiant and full of life.

Over the years, she had acquired an impressive collection of costume jewelry that my sister and I would use to play dress-up during our weekend visits together. We’d watch black-and-white Mickey Mouse cartoons on VHS while inspecting trinkets and sifting through old photos, while gaudy clip-on earrings dangled from our lobes. On these nights, I hoped that I might hear a story or two about the faces I could hardly recognize as family in the stacks of stolen moments in time.

Among the hundreds of faded pictures were snapshots of my grandma Dorothy at different stages in her life. In one of my favorites, she stands with my great-grandfather (who passed soon after I was born), holding hands across a rose bush. She is tall and curvy with a girlish smile on her face, wearing simple capri pants and sneakers — the adoration on their faces palpable through the yellowing image.

image

Looking at this photo, and many others of her, serves as a constant reminder to myself that true happiness and love is meant to be captured, embraced and continued — that confidence in oneself is a better alternative than letting trivial, meaningless things overtake you and that now is always the time to treat your body, and yourself, like a fucking queen. Because you are one. 

Reflecting back on her influence, I realize now how very much I owe her. She taught me how to love myself more than anyone else I know, simply by living an honest life embellished with fervor and contentment. Despite the hardships she had faced over the years (she faced plenty), she remained fat and fabulous well into her 90s, and she is always smiling at me in my mind.

Over the past 4-5 years, I have noticed a change in myself that has recently manifested into a desire to wear clothing that I wouldn’t normally wear — or even allow myself to consider the pleasure of wearing. Learning how to wear what I want has been one of the biggest milestones for me on my path to body acceptance and was the slowest to come because in the process of dressing my fat body, I also make it much more visible, more vulnerable and open to ridicule.

I have had to unlearn all the typical “fat girl fashion rules” in favor of telling “flattering” (or potentially “slimming”) clothing to go fuck itself (I’ll wear what I like no matter how much it accentuates my fat rolls, thank you very much).

I’ve reclaimed horizontal stripes, embraced bright patterns, and banished fat-pinching, roll-smoothing Spanx from my wardrobe. 

I’ve learned to breathe again.

Throughout this process, I am constantly reminded of my grandmother — especially now, as I enter a phase in my life where I feel like I can finally overcome my own unwillingness to stand out in a crowd. She always seemed so unafraid of the perceptions that other people had of her, and I feel like now, more than ever, I am capable of tapping into that “give no fucks” attitude she has passed down to me.

image

[Sometimes I buy items of clothing with my grandmother in mind.]

I have to wonder — where would I be now without her influence, without having found the world of fat acceptance and positivity?

I have gone from hating my body, punishing it with disordered eating habits, shame, and disappointment in weight that never shed itself, to learning that embracing everything my skin contains is an actual possibility. 

Slowly but surely I have been erasing (ignoring, challenging, picking apart) all the negative visual stimuli in the world around me that I thought was so inescapable. I’ve been replacing it with positive discussion, coupled with empowering images of my own selection. 

I seek to reverse all the shit that has ever made me second guess myself until there is nothing left but the goodness and beauty shared between myself and others. As I reject more sources of negativity from my life, I find it easier to harbor a boundless desire to maintain a hold on positivity — even when I’m at my lowest.

I so look forward to the possibility of being for someone else what my grandmother was to me — a fashion icon, a role model, a confident heroine. If I have a daughter someday who inherits my frame, I will try my best to lead by the examples instilled in me by all of the strong women I’ve come to look up to in my lifetime.

My pseudo-future-daughter may be compelled to imitate a prescriptive and unattainable beauty ideal but she will, I hope, know that her body — although different from that narrow ideal — is no less stunning, no less worthy of decoration and expression than any other. 

That there is no reason for fat, or fear of fat, to hold her back. 

That she is forever stunning.

image

image

The more I work towards owning my body (which is, let’s face it, a lifelong work-in-progress), the more I realize how all of my effort goes toward defining and sticking to my own rules. Defining what health means to me, what my body means to me, what fitness means to me and why, then promptly rejecting outside forces and opinions. It is in these moments that I recognize how total selfishness can be so utterly essential.

Letting go of external thoughts and opinions about my body - something that is completely MINE yet is so vulnerable and open to the harsh elements of the world - is an immensely difficult feat to accomplish. But through therapy and a lot of self reflection I’ve come to take refuge in self care, allowing myself complete and utter self-centered indulgence. Whether it’s through yoga, meditation, or a date night with myself - any act that allows me to focus on who I truly am is an act of defiance against body negativity.

Loving and taking care of myself is not a constant or effortless thing. It is super fucking hard work to ignore that internal voice putting myself down, screaming at me to stop putting myself first - especially because that voice has had such a constant presence in my life from a young age.

But the more I tell myself that I deserve it, that what I want for myself is what is best for myself, because I know me better than anyone else ever will - the more I start to believe it.

I sometimes resort to chanting those words like a mantra. It brings me strength and helps bring perspective during those moments when I need it most. 

This isn’t to say I don’t have bad days, weeks, or even months/years. There is no such thing as eradicating self-doubt or loathing completely, especially if (like me) you’re living with mental illness.

image

Just recently I spent nearly three days in or around my bed, completely dismal, unable to escape the cloud of depressive doom descending upon my head. But there were moments where I came up for air: spending hours painting and decorating my nails, enjoying that small sense of accomplishment, and even applying lipstick at one point despite existing in my underwear whilst wrapped in a dingy quilt. I snapped photos of my body and looked at them, admiring myself for brief moments. These things were small, and they were fleeting, but they were for me.

I mean, if I can remember to be kind to myself even when lost in a pit of soul-sucking depression, perhaps my approach is finally working. While I realize it’s impossible to erase the very existence of my mental fuckery, I can at least put in place ways of diminishing its effect on my quality of life and the way I treat myself.

In my experience, self contentment and love comes with eradicating that fear of focusing on myself and knowing that nothing worth having comes without effort. It comes with holding my own standards above all others as often as possible, finding those things that help me attain self-empowerment and clinging to them, and spoiling myself as often as possible to make up for all those years I spent in self-destructive hell.

These are where my efforts lie and others’ efforts may involve different acts - whether it’s through exercise regimens, dieting or weight loss goals (most of which I’ve defined for myself as destructive and counterproductive to my personal wellbeing, but would never begrudge those who find it beneficial) - we all have systems put in place to help us through our own existence.

And that is where the magic lies: As we are all different, our rules for ourselves are different. But no matter where we are and how we define our own body-positive efforts, I truly believe we all owe it to ourselves to be unafraid of self indulgence.

A couple of weeks ago I was approached by a writer from LOOK Magazine UK looking to do a feature on body image bloggers. She asked me a few questions, I rambled on for paragraphs, and she whittled it down to something palatable. 

MY NAKED BACK HAS BEEN PRINTED IN A MAGAZINE why is this so amusing to me?

1 k 10

Check out my debut as a Fabulous Fat at Bring More Yarn

1 k 28

I turned 24 today. Nothing like a birthday to inspire the kind of deep, retrospective reflection on life that can’t be articulated.

1 k 395

ellipsesprojectdaily:

Redefining Body Image: An Interview With Haley Querro

By Elise Nagy

Last weekend I had the chance to sit down for a cup of tea and a (Facebook) chat with the babeliest of babes, Detroit-based graphic designer and body positive activist Haley Querro.

She’s the brains, heart and soul behind Redefining Body Image. We talked about the goals of Redefining Body Image and how it’s grown, how online body positive spaces act as a sanctuary for people to share ideas and engage in self-discovery, how all of this translates to our in-person communities, and what some of the most pressing questions and problems facing body positivity as a movement are today…

View Post

shared via WordPress.com

Reblogging from the correct source this time.

Thank you Elise for the lovely exchange of words. This was a ton of fun!

I’ve just rediscovered some collage work I did a while ago with a scanner and found objects.

Asked vifvie

image

does this answer your question?

(but for real, how about “no-shave whenever”? i do what i want.)

1 k 6

I am an absolute red hot mess today, but I am owning it for once.

1 k 249

When my love is not here, especially now as we’re planning our wedding from across an ocean, I find myself flipping through all of our photos over and over again and realizing new things each time. Things about the two of us together and things about myself that I wouldn’t recognize had I not looked at my thought processes retrospectively.

image

I bought that black lace top from Torrid knowing full well that it would probably make me feel uncomfortable about my arms and upper body via exposure. My shoulders are broad and strong, my upper arms substantial. I spent much of my youth covering them and they have come to be one of the hardest parts of me to learn how to accept.

But today, I recognize things in my own facade and embrace rather than reject.

I accept that for me, fatness is a family trait. I inherited my full bosom, round belly, thick thighs, and meaty arms. They are signifiers of strength.

I see the strong women in my family reflected in my appearance. I am constantly empowered by the echo of their bodies in my own.

I look forward to expressing all of the above to our children someday. I can not wait to be a proud, unapologetic, loving fat mother. Maybe one day I’ll have a daughter who inherits my thick arms and doesn’t know what to make of them and I’ll say “Look, I have them too. Your grandmother, and great grandmother, and all these other brilliant women in our family have them. They have been passed down to you because they are strong, and so are you.”

1 k 38

This is just a reminder to myself and to anyone else really that even if all you did was eat Thai food, watch a ton of sci-fi whilst lounging in your robe, put on some red lipstick and decorate your nails - you’ve accomplished something today. Because you made yourself smile and you deserve it.

^