Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Don't Let Swimsuit Anxiety Suck The Fun Out Of Summer

IANS, 31 May, 2017 12:13 PM
    NEW YORK — Farewell spring and hello bathing suit season, for some an anxious time that sucks the fun out of summer.
     
    Not everybody frets over their beach bodies, celebrating instead. For others, it's a struggle, one that Heidi Wicker in suburban Dallas knows well. But the 41-year-old mother of two has come up with emotional workarounds.
     
    "I really hated the way I look in a swimsuit. We have a pool and enjoy having friends and neighbours over during the summer," Wicker said. "In Texas, that's May through September."
     
    She chooses the "most functional" swimsuit possible and consciously counts her blessings.
     
    "Bottom line is my kids aren't going to remember how awful I looked in a swimsuit in 2017, but they will remember the fun times we had playing in the pool," Wicker said. "This year I have a pair of swim shorts and a halter-style top that is super secure."
     
    While Wicker said she could stand to lose 10 or 15 pounds, bathing suit stress isn't reserved for those of us with curves or bulges we consider trouble spots.
     
     
    Actress and former pageant queen Priyanka Chopra dodged the "Baywatch" bathing suit bullet as the villain in the film version of the old lifeguard TV show, "but in real life," she said recently, "we're human beings. Our bodies change and it's OK."
     
    A thoughtful swimsuit fit with plenty of support can go a long way in calming beach anxiety, especially for bikini wearers. Tops should feel as comfortable as your favourite bra, said longtime friends Emma-Jane Hughes and Ashleigh Hill.
     
    They created an affordable line of swimwear last year, Lilly & Lime, specifically for women who wear D cups and up, ranging from 28D to 38HH, though bottoms size up to just 14. People with fit problems might do well to seek out pieces that can be purchased separately such as those at Lillie & Lime. Numerous options along those lines are available.
     
    "When choosing a bikini or swimsuit it's most important that you have the right size, especially when you are bigger busted," Hughes said. "To find the right size we recommend you get fitted as you would for a bra and choose the bra size and bottom size you would normally wear from a brand that offers tops in cup sizes."
     
    The two also recommend taking into account what you plan to do in a bathing suit.
     
     
    "If you're going to be lounging and want to avoid tan lines then go for a bandeau or a balconette (shelf) style," Hill said. "If you plan to be active or are running after little ones at the beach then a halter with underwire is best for extra support and security."
     
    As for colour, Wicker goes for darker hues. Hughes and Hill don't buy into the black-is-best mentality for women looking to hide.
     
    "Choose a colour that makes you happy and suits your skin tone," Hughes said. "Bold colours keep the focus on fun and away from the bits of our body we don't love to be exposed."
     
    For girls and young women, much of the issue relates directly to the body shaming that bubbles up on social media, intensifying during beach season. Three years ago, the millennial-focused women's site Refinery29 launched a campaign, "Take Back the Beach," to fight back.
     
    "We and our readers were really fed up with the messages that young women were receiving when it came to beach season, the idea that you have to look a certain way or take some kind of action to achieve a bikini body, when going to the beach and wearing a swimsuit should just be things that you do to have fun and relax," said Anna Maltby, deputy editor for health and wellness at Refinery29. "We wanted to ditch all the ideals that tell us we have to look a certain way."
     
    This year, the campaign focuses on the idea of "body talk," challenging the way people talk about their own bodies but also other people's. As for dealing with beach season, focusing on "what your body can do as opposed to what it looks like can make you feel so much better, whether it's running a race or giving birth," Maltby said.
     
     
    Practically speaking, trying on bathing suits takes a lot of time and energy, she said, so be mindful of who you bring along for a second opinion, or take advantage of free returns available online and go it alone.
     
    "We tend to put ourselves in boxes in terms of our 'body types,' or what works for us or what doesn't, or what we're allowed to wear or not allowed to wear. Trying to break out of those boxes and trying on a huge variety of styles and colours and patterns and things you wouldn't think would work for you is a great way to discover something new that you may feel great in," Maltby said.
     
    Dale Noelle spent 20 years working as a "fit" model, helping major fashion brands work out sizing. She also did swimsuit work for catalogues. The work came after she battled anorexia as a tween. After recovery around age 13, her self-consciousness carried through to her 30s.
     
    "The more I did it the more comfortable I became," said Noelle, now the mother of a young girl and founder of her own model management agency in New York. "I had a lot of positive people around me. It helped with being comfortable in my own skin."

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    New Cookbook Tells You Everything You Wanted to Know about Cooking a Chicken

    New Cookbook Tells You Everything You Wanted to Know about Cooking a Chicken
    CHICKEN packs all the know-how that cooks need to make irresistible chicken dishes for everyday and special occasions.

    New Cookbook Tells You Everything You Wanted to Know about Cooking a Chicken

    Students: Become a global citizen by interning abroad

    Students: Become a global citizen by interning abroad
    Projects Abroad encourages university students to seize the opportunity to challenge themselves as interns in developing countries

    Students: Become a global citizen by interning abroad

    Get Your Pup Geared Up for the Holiday

    Get Your Pup Geared Up for the Holiday
    For dog lovers, by dog lovers, Charlie and Spike is a brand you can trust to deliver the highest quality material. 

    Get Your Pup Geared Up for the Holiday

    BC Students Call for More Housing

    BC Students Call for More Housing
    The report, which details the process for universities to build on-campus housing, demonstrates that the student housing would be able to alleviate part of the housing crisis, building much needed rental housing, while also improving the quality of British Columbia’s universities.

    BC Students Call for More Housing

    KPU signs history-making MOU with Beijing University of Chinese Medicine

    KPU signs history-making MOU with Beijing University of Chinese Medicine
    This will be the first transfer agreement between BUCM and a North American public post-secondary institution.

    KPU signs history-making MOU with Beijing University of Chinese Medicine

    Script about Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women Receives Continued Support

    Script about Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women Receives Continued Support
    The script, centred on missing and murdered Aboriginal women, struck a chord with LEAP Program Leader Shawn Macdonald and Arts Club Education Coordinator Kevan Ellis, who continued to seek ways to support its development.

    Script about Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women Receives Continued Support