Fashion Model Has a Message for America About Her 162-pound 12-Yr-Old Daughter

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Strong is the new sexy. Confidence is the new skinny. Weve all heard these mottos swimming around, but do you ever feel like the new #goals are just as impossible to reach as the age-old ones?

Author, mom, fashion model and fitness guru Gabrielle Reece took to her blog lately to share an important, and rather backwards, conversation that took place between her and her daughter about this growing trend, and what it means for all women.


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In her video post, Gabby openly shares her stature( 63) and weight( 175) with viewers. She then goes on to talk about how she lately had knee surgery and as a result has lost 15 pounds because her absence of training ability has caused her to lose muscle.

Working up the motivation to actually get to the gym, let alone complete an effective workout is a daily struggle for me. So when I heard that Gabby lost 15 pounds without barely exerting, I definitely seemed a trigger of jealousy. Losing weight without exerting could possibly be one of the greatest things on the planet. But Gabby reassures viewers that her weight loss is only the opposite.

She introduces her daughter, Reece, and together they have a dialogue about their numbers. Where Gabby is 63 and weighs 160 pounds, her 12 -year age-old daughter is 510 and weighs 162 pounds.


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As they were talking about their numbers, I immediately had flashbacks to the dozens of days Ive been at the gym with friends, and weve get on the scale together. I think about the nervousnes that Ive experienced while the numbers flop around and start to land on a final answer. Then I think about the many times that Ive been alleviated when my scale number is smaller than the girl next to me.

But why? If I weigh 120 pounds and my friend weighs 135, what does that mean to me? To her? Yes, my number is lower, but what does a lower number liken to when it comes to me as a person? If were being honest, even if my weight turns out to be lower than the girl next to me, I dont feel victorious, or even confident. I immediately jump-start to the number purpose that I hope to be, or size up the body features that my friend has that I wish I could have.

Gabby and Reece go on to talk about how proud Reece was to weigh more than her mom after shestepped on the scalenot the reaction I was expecting.


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Their viral message has now been viewed over 2 million times.

Conversation “were in” having in our home, which ever reminds me to be focused on being healthy and on your individual health. . . Never mind the scale!

Posted by Gabrielle Reece on Wednesday, June 15, 2016

The mother-daughter duo have an important message for all women: We give so much to the scale when truly we should be focused on: how do we seem, are we giving it our own personal best, and not worry about comparing or worrying about the scale. Its empowering to read a mom build her daughter up in an area that culture continues to knock us down.

Their encouragement to females induced me reflect on my own self-image, and that of so many girls who can associate. I hope you will give more weight to how you move, to your strengths and to your value than you do to what you think you should look like or weigh.

Read more here: http :// www.faithit.com