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💋 Can We Blame Barbie?

  • Feb 18, 2020
  • 3 min read

💋 Can We Blame Barbie?


Body Image, Media Illusions & Learning to Like Ourselves Again


There was a time when Barbie was just… Barbie.

She had outfits.

She had shoes that never stayed on.

And if you had a dog, you were probably missing at least one heel.

Marsha Brady brushed her hair like it was a full-time job.

Twiggy was impossibly thin — which, at the time, felt familiar.

I was called a “bean pole,” and honestly… I leaned into that one.


Meanwhile?


Farrah Fawcett and Cheryl Tiegs were on every boy’s wall.


That was normal.


Or at least, it felt normal.


📺 The Media Mirror We Didn’t Question


Back then, we didn’t call it toxic.

We didn’t call it unrealistic.

We just called it… what we were supposed to look like.


Magazines.

Later, the internet.


All showing women who were:

• flawless

• polished

• airbrushed

• edited beyond recognition


And somehow, that became the standard.





🪞 When “Average” Doesn’t Exist Anymore

I didn’t really think about self-esteem until my twenties.


That’s when I realized something uncomfortable:


👉 I needed validation.

Not a little — a lot.


I became what I now call a compliment junkie.


Looking for:

• “You look good”

• “You’re pretty”

• “You’re doing okay”


Because somewhere along the way, I decided:


average wasn’t good enough anymore.


And the problem?


“Average” had already been redefined by perfection.


🍟 The “Why Bother” Phase


There’s a point where comparison doesn’t motivate you anymore.

It just exhausts you.

And that’s when the thought creeps in:


“Why bother?”


Why try when you’ll never look like that?

Why care when the standard isn’t even real?

That mindset doesn’t look dramatic from the outside.


It looks like:

• comfy clothes all the time

• low energy

• not really trying

• quiet self-criticism


Not laziness.


Loss of hope.


🤔 So… Who’s to Blame?


We could blame the media.

We could blame the industries that profit off insecurity.

We could blame the fantasy that’s been sold to us for decades.

And yes — they all played a role.

But the harder truth?

We absorbed it.

We didn’t question it.

Because we didn’t know we were supposed to.


🧠 This Was Conditioning — Not Vanity


Let’s be clear:

This was never about being shallow.

It was about being shaped.

We were taught:

• what beauty looks like

• what “good enough” means

• what gets attention• what gets approval


And when you don’t match it?


You feel like you’re falling short — even when you’re not.


🪞 Raising Daughters in a Filtered World


When I had my daughters, the question changed.


It wasn’t just:

“How do I feel about myself?”


It became:

How do I protect them from this?


How do you explain:

• filters

• unrealistic bodies

• edited perfection


Without sounding bitter?


How do you tell them:

👉 you still struggle with it too?


Because that’s the truth.


💭 The Mind Game of Body Image


Here’s what I’ve learned:

Body image isn’t just about what you see.

It’s about how you’ve been trained to see it.


You can be:

• confident

• strong

• attractive

• fully capable


…and still feel “less than.”


That’s not your body.

That’s the lens.


✨ Can We Undo It?

Maybe we don’t erase it.

Maybe we outgrow it.


Maybe the answer is:

• more real bodies

• more real stories

• more honest conversations

• less perfection, more presence


Maybe the shift happens when we stop asking:

👉 “Do I measure up?”


And start asking:

👉 “Do I feel like myself?”


❤️ The Amber Takeaway

For a long time, I let those images live in my head.

Rent-free.

I didn’t protect my confidence.

I didn’t challenge the narrative.

I just believed it.

But now?

I know better.

And when you know better, you start to shift things.


💋 Final Thought


I’m not blaming Barbie anymore.

She’s plastic.

I’m real.


And real?

That’s what I’ve been trying to find all along.

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