Showing posts with label Self Esteem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Self Esteem. Show all posts

16 July 2008

Study finds rape-in-marriage horror

By Adrian Lowe via The Age
The author of a report which has revealed shocking details of rape within marriage in Victoria's north-east says she believes the problem is more widespread.

The report was launched today in Benalla and author Deb Parkinson told The Age she had been surprised at what the interviewed women had been through and the brutality some had endured.

Researchers from Women's Health Goulburn North East and the local Centre Against Sexual Assault, interviewed almost 80 people over a two-year period from across the region, including victims, community workers and police.

"We had suspected that partner rape happened from some previous research we'd done but the extent of it really quite shocked us,'' Ms Parkinson said. "I think that the community doesn't recognise that partner rape exists in that way.




"I don't think there's anything particular about here that's any different. There's certainly issues about rurality but I think a lot of the findings relate equally well to women in cities, like the effects on women - why women won't seek help, why they don't want to report. What's particular about rurality is that conservativeness that often comes with it.''

Researchers interviewed one woman whose back was broken while being anally raped and another whose husband hit her around the head and then held a pillow over her face while he raped her. A third raped his wife of six weeks.

One victim told researchers she reported her rape case to her church minister, who told her to pray about it.

"It wasn't just the rape, it was hitting and verbal abuse and theft and drugs. It was a text book abusive marriage. I said to them, 'What if he kills me first?' They said, `At least you'll go to heaven','' the victim said in her interview.

The interviewed women were uneasy about the research and questioned where the line was drawn between rape and "just getting it over and done with''. They also suggested "it's just part of the compromise'' and that "you don't feel like it, but you do it for him''.

Ms Parkinson said many women were not aware they had been raped until after the event, or when they were told that their partner's actions constituted rape.

During interviews, police said many men believed they had a right to have sex within their marriage and would not describe their actions as rape. "If they had to be 100% honest they'd say, 'I did take advantage of her, but stuff it, she's my wife, it's Saturday night','' one officer surveyed for the report said.

Ms Parkinson said rape within marriage was not recognised as a problem in the community because its attitudes had not caught up with the law.

"The law was changed in 1985 to say that rape in marriage is a crime, and it's a serious crime, but as a community we're still hung up on a sense of conjugal rights that a man has - his entitlement to sex from a wife and I think that across the community that people think you can't really have rape in marriage.''

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Our 5th major campaign to Break the Silence on Domestic Violence launches on Monday, and not a moment too soon. I hope we can educate our customers that any form of rape is a crime and any form of sexual abuse including partners pressuring, manipulating, tricking, forcing or blackmailing is an inexcusable violation of human rights and unacceptable in our community. We want friends of people in abusive relationships to do a lot better than the priest mentioned in this article!

~ Adam

14 July 2008

beyondblue, depression and a little bit of AFL

By Amanda Young - The Body Shop, Melbourne Central.

One in five people experience depression at some stage in their lives. That statistic comes from beyondblue. It's a sobering thought; there is a high likelihood that you, or somebody that you know, has suffered, or will suffer, at least one episode of a depressive illness. It is one of the most common mental heath problems, yet there can be such a lack of awareness of the issue that sufferers have no choice but to face stigma, or to suffer silently.

I have recently been through a debilitating bout of depression which lead me to a month-long stay in a psychiatric hospital. I was fortunate enough to have a wonderful friend who voiced his concerns to me over the change in my demeanour, encouraged me to seek help, and was always a shoulder for me to cry on. My family and I are so grateful to him for being there, when some people reacted unfavourably to what I was going through, thinking it was just a mood change, or a phase I was going through. Depression isn't just a mood you can snap out of. It encompasses your entire world, strips you of your self-worth, leaves you feeling hollow and desperate.

Armed with more information I hope that people will no longer have to suffer in silence. If people are as lucky as I was, to be surrounded by caring friends and family, the tiniest act can have the biggest impact. beyondblue is a wonderful resource for those who would like to learn more about depression and related mental health issues, and has links to other useful resources. And for footy fans, on the 25th of July, the Hawks and the Cats will play for the beyondblue Cup to raise awareness of depression. There will be 2 public forums (1 for each team) in the lead-up to the game. More information can be found on the beyondblue website.

~ Amanda

28 May 2008

The Guides Say...

By Deb Baxter
Advocacy is at the heart of Australia's young women. Girl Guides Australia has released the results of their first National Survey of Australian Girl Guides after members asked to be given a voice to raise awareness about issues that are important to girls and young women.

The report gives an insight into the concerns of the next generation of Australian women, detailing the responses of 4,500 girls from 5 to 17 years to the broad questions of which issues Guides care about in the world, in Australia and in their community.

Nationally, the primary concerns for Australian Guides at a global level were Global Warming (16.9%), Environment (15.6%) and Poverty (15.1%) whilst 21.2% of Guides were concerned about Water as the most serious issue facing Australia.

At both the national level and at the local level, Environment (Aust.18.0% and local 12.3%) and Addictions (Aust. 8.7% and local 10.8%) were considered of significant concern. Bullying (8.4%) out ranked Water (7.5%) as a concern to Australian Guides in their local communities.

The older Guides varied from the national averages, recording their primary global concern as Poverty (22.3%) and issues relating to Government and Body Image were also seen as important issues facing Australians today.

The Body Shop is proud to have been associated with Girl Guides Australia for a number of years now, through the cork recycling program. This program enables even the youngest girls to advocate by doing something practical to make a difference and educate their peers and community.


09 May 2008

Happy Mother's Day

By Deb Baxter - Values Coordinator

The Body Shop Australia would like to wish all Mum's a very Happy Mother's Day.

Through the Mother's Day Gift Giving Programme , The Body Shop are proud to have distributed more than 4,500 individual products, to over 60 organisations supporting Mum's and children escaping domestic and family violence this Mother's Day. In States such as NSW, these organisations support up to 60 individual refuges. An alarming indication of just how big an issue domestic and family violence is.

The Body Shop hopes these products will help to make Mother's Day for these Mum's, a little brighter.

~ Deb

06 May 2008

Cheesecake anyone?

By Steph Maule, PR Co-ordinator





















Lunching on Saturday with four girlfriends, I got particularly disgruntled when two friends started debating how many laps of a nearby running track they’d need to endure in order to enjoy the delicious looking slice of cheesecake sitting in front of them. I immediately scolded my friends for even mentioning that we should feel guilty for enjoying such a wonderful treat.

So, you can imagine my sheer delight when I heard that today is International No Diet Day (INDD) - the annual celebration of body acceptance and diversity.

INDD originated in 1992, when British Feminist - Mary Evans Young - decided to fight the diet industry and raise awareness of the dangers of punitive and restrictive dieting, and to encourage people to accept their natural body shape. INDD has since been celebrated by body liberation, anti-diet, and other activists, groups and individuals around the world wanting to empower people of all sizes.

So today of all days, don’t count your calorie intake, enjoy a regular (rather than skinny!) latte, stop wishing you had Giselle’s washboard stomach, and LOVE the body you’ve been blessed with!

Cheesecake anyone?

For more information, visit The Butterfly Foundation http://www.thebutterflyfoundation.org.au/

- Steph

04 April 2008

The Body Shop Volunteers





















Darshini Dave
(TBS Murray Street, Perth Store) loved her Community Project experience at Princess Margaret Hospital working with sick kids.

If you work at The Body Shop you need to find and complete a Community Project.

This means volunteering for a charity in your local community for one or two days a year. There are hundreds of fantastic stories from a wide variety of projects we get involved in from cleaning up local environments to helping people or even animals through tough times. We feel privileged to be active in our communities... to be helping. We recently received a a great email about one of our staff's Community Projects in Western Australia. As Deb (Our awesome Values Coordinator) said: "Never underestimate the difference we can make through Community Projects."


Dear Body Shop,
A few days ago when my wife and I visited our 15 year old daughter in Princess Margaret Hospital we noticed that she had a real glow to her. She had been visited by someone from The Body Shop who applied gentle make up to her face and gave her frail little hands a massage. She has anorexia nervosa and suffers from very low self esteem and severe depression. She was looking beautiful and was really happy.
We do not know which store these very kind people came from, but we would sincerely like to thank you for what you have done for our daughter.

Thanks
Darren - Shelley, Western Australia


This 'thank you' belongs to Celina, Cara and Darshni from The Body Shop - Murray Street store! If you'd like to volunteer in this area contact your local children's hospital or eating disorder charity.

Websites for information that can help, if you or a friend are experiencing low self esteem as a result of body image issues...



The Butterfly Foundation
Eating Disorders Foundation (of Victoria)
Reach Out
Anorexia Nervosa (Wikipedia)


Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

18 March 2008

Congratz The Big Issue - 300 Editions Old!

From left to right: Tim Dempster (The Big Issue's Business Manager), Adam (You know who I am), Steven Persson (The Big Issue's General Manager) and Deb Baxter (The Body Shop's Values Coordinator)

From July 07 to January 08 The Body Shop sold 21,375 Bags For Life. Deb and I took a trip into the big city to have a coffee with some of the nice people at The Big Issue and give them an equally nice cheque for 100% of the profits. This came to exactly $17,610.86

Not bad huh!

We've been selling them since 2003, so the total amount we've been able to donate thus far is $56,858.94. Woo-hoo! Our funding is spent on training up and supporting the vendors to sell the magazine which in turn helps them help themselves.

Not many people know this, but The Big Issue is kinda related to The Body Shop. Here's how:
  • It was started in England by Anita Roddick's husband Gordon Roddick and John Bird in 1991.
  • Graeme Wise (The Body Shop Australia's owner) helped The Big Issue get off the ground here in Australia.
  • Polly Caldow our Chief Executive was The Big Issue's General Manager from 1997 to 2000.
  • The Ex-Editor of The Big Issue Martin Hughes now writes books for Affirm Press (also owned by Graeme). "Affirm Press is a new Melbourne-based publishing company committed to publishing books that have a positive impact on the community, that influence by delight rather than being earnest or right-on." They recently published the Slow Guides to Melbourne & Sydney. (Hi Martin!)
  • We have had The Body Shop staff on The Big Issue Board.
  • Maybe most significantly, The Body Shop stores sell the magazine as well as distribute them to the vendors right around Australia. Our staff and the vendors have a special bond and like looking out for one another.
  • Deb just reminded me that many of our Melbourne city store staff also volunteer at The Big Issue HQ to help with the administration of the magazine.
Congratulations to The Big Issue who is celebrating their 300th Edition this week. If you see a vendor on the street have a chat with them, congratulate them and (most importantly) buy a magazine! We heart The Big Issue and are proud to be doing our bit, giving the homeless and long-term unemployed a hand up, not a hand out.

Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

05 February 2008

Marula Makes Make-up Fair

4 Members of the Eudafano Women's Cooperative with their harvest of Marula Nuts.

The Body Shop was the first company ever to use Community Trade Marula oil in their make up and now it’s an important ingredient in nearly all of our cosmetics.

Happily, the 6,000 women of the Eudafano Women’s Cooperative (EWC) in Namibia have been able to supply all of our needs. The EWC was established in north central Namibia in 1996 to market oil from the local marula fruit. The EWC helps local women with otherwise limited employment opportunities earn fair wages. It also contributes to regional economic development.

The Eudafano women harvest fruit from wild marula trees and deliver kernels and seeds to the EWC processing factory. Juice and oil are extracted and prepared for local customers and international buyers including The Body Shop. Women now involved in the project report that the benefits to them go beyond money, affording them a sense of independence, competence and confidence. Many women use money earned to educate their children. Community Trade makes such a difference including equality, independence and confidence!

Last year The Body Shop launched a new range of make-up called "Make Me Fabulous". They tell me (because I don't really use cosmetics) the lipsticks, bronzing collections and eye colours makes you feel fabulous. Thus the name I guess. As a guy who can't tell the difference from one cosmetics counter to the next - I think people out there using our make-up should feel fabulous because they are helping some truly beautiful women out of poverty as well as minimising their impact on the environment. Here are the facts:

  • The Make Me Fabulous range uses recycled plastic wherever possible in its packaging.
  • Over 70% of colour product packaging contains post consumer recycled plastic.
  • The range supports Community Trade by using Marula Oil from Namibia in the majority of Make Me Fabulous products.
  • "Marula Oil moisturises and conditions skin"
WOW! What more could you ask for from your make-up?

Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

EWC Factory Image Courtesy: DeBeers

11 January 2008

Nice One Girlfriend!

Delta Goodrem on the February 2008 Girlfriend magazine cover with a zoom-in on the bottom left hand corner.

This is by far the best 4x2cm of a teen-girl magazine cover I've ever read! Seriously, congratulations to the team @ Girlfriend, the last two mags have shown a genuine commitment to bolstering its readers self-esteem. They approached this in a few ways...

1. Small buttons on the cover and throughout the magazine with "perfection is boring" and "mood improving" quotes. The front cover is fantastic -just really refreshing. Now young women reading the magazine know the price and time required for Delta's good looks - they aren't realistic, or attainable. Die beauty myth die!

2. In the January edition the Editor pledged:

"This year our Self -Respect motto is 'perfection is boring!' Self Respect is something we all have to keep working on and this year we are committed to celebrating each person's uniqueness and getting you to love yourself MORE by signing a pledge... 2008 is your time to glow, Girlfriend! Self acceptance and self-love are the starting points for having the year (and the time) of your life" - Sarah Oakes
Nice pledge!

3. Impressive content like the I Delete Bullies MySpace campaign as well as articles like 'Killer Tans' and 'Protest Chic' they seem to be trying to making ethics and activism cool! Awesome!

So yeah - in general - very impressed. Nice one Girlfriend!


Adam Valvasori - Not usually a teenage girl

11 December 2007

What is Beautiful?

Left: Controversial Jennifer Love Hewitt photo. Below: Skeletal Nicole Richie.

Trashy magazines and the media in general, display to the general public what they perceive is beautiful. To me, Nicole Richie with an emaciated chest and an obvious problem with her weight is not inspiring but sad. She does not look good and it is not cool to look like a skeleton. There are a lot of people starving in Africa that would do anything to be able to not look like her.

Today's generation needs to look at beauty in a different way. I find Nigella Lawson cooking a feast real beauty, or anyone that is comfortable in their own skin, the most beautiful thing of all.

A recent story about Jennfier Love Hewitt and her cellulite (it must be pointed out, that she is an Australian size 6!) had her turn around and say "To set the record straight, i'm not upset for me, but for all of the girls out there that are struggling with the their body image. To all girls with butts, boobs, hips and a waist, put on a bikini. Put it on and stay strong." Jennifer Love Hewitt is spot on.


In the 90's The Body Shop came out with a campaign with the Ruby doll which stated:


'There are 3 billion women who don't look like supermodels and only eight who do.'

It was such a successful campaign and for once women turned around and said 'how true!'.

When I first started working at The Body Shop, I remember walking through the hall and seeing the back of an old staff t-shirt that said 'You are Beautiful'. It made me feel good. I am definitely not one to wake up every morning feeling good about my body image but if I can say one thing to everyone it is 'You are beautiful!' Smile, laugh and live. That is what beauty is all about!

Polly Viska - PR Coordinator

30 November 2007

A Walk to Beautiful

Last night a few staffers from The Body Shop including yours truly were lucky enough to attend the opening night of the first Australian Human Rights Arts & Film Festival at the RMIT Capitol Theatre in Melbourne. All thanks to our friends and partners Amnesty International.

We saw A Walk to Beautiful. It's the story of five women who suffer from devastating childbirth injuries and embark on a journey to reclaim their lost dignity.


I was deeply moved and outraged by this movie. These women are forced into marriage and sex and child birth when they are still just children. The lack of basic rural health services (or even roads in least developed countries like Ethiopia) means some women can't get to a nurse let alone a doctor or obstetrician to help them during child birth.

There's a high percentage of easily preventable miscarriages, still-births and even maternal deaths compared to develop countries. The movie focuses on the problem of
obstetric fistula - a hole in the birth canal caused by prolonged labour without prompt medical intervention, usually a Caesar section. The woman is left with chronic incontinence and, in most cases, a stillborn baby. On top of the trauma of losing their baby, fistula causes the added psychological suffering of humiliation and social alienation.


The facts:

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates (but as this month's Gapcast on maternal health illustrates it could be a gross underestimate) 500,000 women actually die in childbirth every year.
  • More than 2 million women live with fistula worldwide.
  • In Ethiopia, there are 59 ob-gyns and 1,000 midwives for a population of 65 million.
  • Number of patients treated at the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital every year: 1200
  • Number of obstetric fistula cases occurring in Ethiopia alone each year: 9,000
  • Number of new obstetric fistula cases resulting from childbirth occurring worldwide each year: 50,000-100,000
  • More than 99% of The Fistula Hospital patients are illiterate. (The hospital teaches all patients the Amharic Fideles and the Oromiyffa alphabets.)
"Fistula is the single most dramatic aftermath of neglected childbirth"- WHO

How You Can Help:
Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

13 November 2007

NO Means NO Show

Photo: tanjila

Last Thursday I had the opportunity to attend the “NO Means NO Show", presented by the Centre Against Sexual Assault (CASA) and Absolutely Women’s Health through the Royal Women’s Hospital.

NO MEANS NO is an interactive theatre program with a “whole of school” approach that aims to prevent sexual assault and create a school environment where young people will feel safe to disclose sexual assault and receive appropriate support, information and options”.

Hilariously funny at times, with the No Means No message remaining strong throughout, the realness of the show and the interaction of the school student audience with a panel of experts was at times both confronting and revealing, as to just how real sexual assault is in the lives of so many.

This show was amazing and should be a compulsory component of all secondary schools.

your body = your choice

Deb Baxter - Values Coordinator

08 November 2007

Community Project: Debutante Ball



On Oct 3rd, the Victorian Office of the Child Safety Commissioner, in partnership with youth outreach agencies, organised the inaugural Debutante Ball for young people in Out of Home Care. That is children who can not live with their own families. The young people involved were either wards of the State or in foster care arrangements and have often missed out on many of the 'rites of passage' events that many of us take for granted.

The Body Shop's People Team were fortunate to be invited to help the girls in their preparation on the night, doing their makeup, fixing hair, calming nerves and generally getting them ready for this event, for which they had been preparing all year. They were presented to Victorian Premier John Brumby and his wife Rosemary.

By all accounts the night went off beautifully and it was a pleasure for our team to help out.


Louisa Wallace - People & Values Manager

05 November 2007

Women's satisfaction not looking good

Photo entitled: "Luke. Again I was being ugly and the pixels were called upon to punish my face" by Emmola.

Earlier this year, Newspoll surveyed 537 Australian women aged 10 - 64 years. There were many questions asked about beauty, looks and perceptions. According to the poll only 6 per cent of 18-64 year old Australian women surveyed said they were very satisfied with their looks.

According to Professor of Statistics John S. Croucher, the proportion of surveyed Australian women who say that beauty advertisements make them feel bad about the way they look is 49 per cent.


A recent Dolly magazine survey of 4,000 girls aged 11-18 found 27 per cent would have cosmetic surgery if they could, and 2 per cent had. Surgeons say the trend is most prevalent in Sydney and south-east Queensland.


In 2004, the Victorian Government set up an inquiry into the growing trend in teenagers to go on crash diets and have eating disorders. The then Youth Affairs Minister said that anorexia nervosa was the third most common chronic illness for teenage girls in Australia and that Melbourne University research showed about 10 percent of teenage boys were using muscle-enhancing drugs.


Queensland Premier, Anna Bligh, has said there is worrying anecdotal evidence the number of young girls having plastic surgery is rising. She has cited a Gold Coast surgeon who reportedly treats more than 100 minors a year.


Ok, so what can we do about this? The Body Shop has a core value of activating self esteem. We encourage the celebration of the unique qualities that make us who we are. We challenge the unrealistic beauty ideal presented by the beauty industry and we always use language and images that show respect and reverence. If you're passionate about these issues and want to make a difference, here are some things you can do:


Photo: Lazy Lightning


Adam Valvasori - Values Manager