Ballerina Lashes Out at Lack of Body Positivity in the Dance World
One ballerina is working to change the rigid ideal of a “dancer’s body.” Colleen Werner, a professional ballerina in New York City, just posted a rallying cry for anyone whose body has made them feel out of place in the industry.
Posing by the water in her leotard and pointe shoes, Werner shared a lengthy story on Instagram about the body issues she’s encountered in her years as a dancer. “The dance world is FAR from body positive, and I want to help change that,” she wrote.
Werner goes on to detail how dancing impacted her body image. “I was socialized through the dance world to believe that my body had to look a certain way in order to succeed and be a ‘real dancer.’ As I got older, I was convinced that my body was wrong for dance. I saw photos of dancers in magazines and dancers in performances that all didn’t look like me,” she wrote. The lack of representation took its toll, and Werner writes that she turned to disordered eating to look more like the “ballerina body” ideal.
She’s called out for other dancers in the body positive community to unite under the hashtag #BopoBallerina. The manifesto? Ditch societal standards and embrace what’s natural and healthy. “There is no wrong way to have a dancers body,” she writes. “It’s dangerous to only represent one body type in dance companies, dance brands, and dance ads. Dancers come in all shapes, sizes, ages, and ethnicities, all dancers deserve to love their bodies, and it’s time that we start bringing body positivity to the dance community.”
Werner tells Yahoo Beauty that her social following inspired her to be more open about her journey to self-acceptance. “Now that I have a platform on social media, I’ve been inspired to use it to help change the narrative that the dance community has about bodies and encourage body positivity in the dance world, because I think dance is an incredibly beautiful art, and everyone should be able to experience it, regardless of body type,” she says. “I’m determined to help change the message the dance community has surrounding bodies so that it can be a more welcoming, inclusive, healthy place for all.”
Werner has already gotten dozens of comments — not to mention hundreds of likes — responding to her call. One former professional ballerina has already joined with her own #BopoBallerina story of self-acceptance.
Earlier this year, dancer Lizzy Howell caught the Internet’s attention for a video of her perfect technical turns. Howell and her contagious enthusiasm quickly became a role model for the body positive movement, with thousands of fans writing in to share how the video touched their own feelings toward dancing at any shape. “I never expected this all to happen on a video I posted last November. All the support is amazing, but I’m not sure why it’s such a big deal, as I’ve been [dancing] my whole life,” Howell told People at the time.
turning monday? #ballet#turn#balletdancer#dancer#foutte
A post shared by Lizzy ???????? (@lizzy.dances) on Nov 21, 2016 at 4:02pm PST
As the body positive community grows, it makes sense to tackle specific fields that are in desperate need of a body image update. The #BopoBallerina movement is surely only going to get bigger.
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