Woman’s World Magazine Diet Fosters
Low Self-Esteem in Women?


Since the early 70s and the advent of women’s lib, lots of women’s magazines have burst on to the scene. In the early 70s there were magazines like Family Circle, Woman’s Day and Ladies’ Home Journal reporting on the latest topics such as women’s rights and stay at home mothers as well as various other popular topics of the decade.

As we progressed to the 80s and 90s, magazines for women like Shape, Fitness, and Self made their debut. Although all of these magazines are targeted for women, today’s women’s magazines have a different agenda.

The agenda is to make women believe they are not good enough or beautiful enough as they are. Although these magazines cater to women of different ages and lifestyles, they all have one thing in common. Every one of these magazines has several diet sections for women. Woman’s World Magazine is no exception. Woman’s World Magazine diet is no different from Ladies Home Journal diet, in that it has the same agenda – to make women live up to impossible standards of beauty.

All Women’s Magazines Are Created Equally

All magazines have a following. Their following is based on age and gender as well as content of the magazine. Woman’s World Magazine is a weekly publication that’s read by women approximately between the ages of 35-55.

That might explain why Woman’s World Magazine diet is so popular. In their mid thirties, women start to get pudgy around the middle. Woman’s World Magazine diet promises cures for the “cottage cheese” effect, perimenopausal weight gain, menopausal weight gain, wrinkles and bags around the eyes, and women who simply want to recapture their youth by losing weight.

The Barbie Doll Syndrome

In light of the fact that women are bombarded daily with images of impossible standards of “beauty” it’s no wonder women purchase magazines in droves looking for diets like the ones in the Woman’s World Magazine diet section looking for the cure for perceived imperfections.

As women, we are taught to hate our stretch marks, get rid of back fat, lose the big butt, lose stomach fat, get a beach body, have thin thighs, and on and on. We are forced to compete with Mattel’s Barbie doll. This kind of impossible competition leads women to have low self-esteem, especially young women.

Just Say “No” to Magazine Diets

As women, we appreciate Woman’s World Magazine diet as well as various other diets found in popular women’s magazines because we are a nation with an obesity epidemic on our hands. On the other hand, it’s important to “Just say no” as Nancy Reagan used to say to the onslaught and bombardment of diets that promise to make us have the perfect thighs, the perfect flat stomach, and the perfect thin thighs.

In other words, if a diet is being promoted as a way of achieving good health and weight loss for the sake of good health, then great. We’re all for it. But if the sole purpose of a woman’s magazine is to promote its diets so that women can achieve some impossible standard of beauty, we say, cease and desist all publications immediately.

 

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