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The American Fertility Association Blog

The Full Body Project….

November 7, 2007 - Wednesday
Posted by Pamela

So...maybe you have not heard....but there is big news a float....Leonard Nimoy of Spock Fame is also a photographer...actually a wonderful photographer....but the reason that he is making news...is that....now are you sitting down? He photographed FAT women! And not just fat women....but fat naked women!!!! Oh My!!! Can you imagine that? He had the nerve to do something as controversial as see women who were fat as beautiful? Through Leonard Nimoy’s lens....you see beautiful...sexy....women of size...dancing! Smiling into the camera...almost daring us to truly see them! They seem to be saying to us....that they exist...that they are not invisible...and more than that...that they feel beautiful....and what is more...they are.

So much of how we feel as sexual beings does not come from the inside...we are so badly influenced by the media of our times...that we often do not see what is before our eyes....in “The Full Body Project”....Mr. Nimoy challenges us to do just that...simply see...simply feel...and I challenge you not to see beauty and wanton sexuality in these images....Click here to view the photos....http://www.leonardnimoyphotography.com/7body.htm

When was the last time you felt sexy? I mean really sexy?

One of the hardest consequences of trying to conceive...and having our efforts not work… is what it does to your own sense of femaleness or maleness.

I am not just talking about the general depression that can come from dealing with a chronic illness like unresolved infertility. But rather, about what the inability to fulfill your sexual role in reproduction can do to your feelings of personal beauty and your own body image. Not to be ignored are the very real body changes that can come from hormone therapy and surgery to repair or explore.

When I was in treatment, I put on twenty pounds in a year of intensive hormone therapy. I did a cycle of fertility drugs...every other month for one year. With each cycle, my body reacted strongly. My breasts would enlarge (I had to have bras for alternate months), my stomach would swell as my ovaries did overtime, and I would gain as much as ten pounds at the peak of each cycle.

I clearly remember one day, trying to look pretty, going into my doctor’s office with my husband for an insemination. My doctor looked up at me and smiled. I smiled back. And then she said to me, “Gee, Pam, you sure look puffy.” Okay, I was already emotionally fragile and sensitive about my weight. But I was devastated. Not only was I infertile, but I was also “puffy”.

Often times, even our actual clinical diagnoses can actually alter how we feel about our bodies. My diagnosis, “hostile cervical mucus”, doesn’t do much for making a woman feel very sexy. Sometimes, when my husband and I made love, I used to have to consciously erase the picture in my mind of his healthy and virile sperm being knocked unconscious by my inhospitable and rather nasty cervical mucus. My mental imagery probably wasn’t helped by viewing his motile sperm before a post coital test and then after. As the doctor put it as she looked up from the microscope, “it looks like Bunker Hill”.

I was able to combat these negative mental images about my body by consciously telling myself in a firm voice to cut it out! That my cervical mucus was not representative of myself as a woman. But it took some time.

Several years later, when I went for my second IVF cycle, my doctor found my left tube was now adhered to some other internal organs with scar tissue. My tubes, that were once perfect and a source of pride for this infertile person, who was trying not to feel defective as a woman, were no longer perfect.

The feelings that accompanied this news were not just upsetting for what they meant to the outcome of the cycle, but it was upsetting again to my self-image.

Now, not only did I have “funky mucus”, but my left tube had decided to redecorate! Still groggy from the effects of the anaesthesia, I remember feeling ugly. In retrospect, this sounds silly. Obviously, no one but my doctor saw this less than perfect tube, and even in the best of conditions, my left tube held no physical beauty.

It is actually a little embarrassing talking about these feelings. They sound ridiculous and self indulgent on paper. But if I have learned anything about my experience with infertility, it is that there is very little I have felt, that someone else hasn’t also felt or isn’t presently feeling.

The feelings I had, before I found out that I had Hostile Mucus… of a free flowing sexuality were over. They were taken with my diagnosis. And it took years to get it back....

I want to say to you, that you are not your diagnosis nor your treatment. You are a sexy man whether you have sperm in your testicles or not. You are a beautiful woman whether your eggs are in low reserve or your tubes are closed (yes, even if your mucus is a little unfriendly!) We have to stop punishing ourselves with ugly mental images of our bodies.

I am not a therapist. But I have felt the pain and have tried to deal with it on my own terms. My terms were to stop the negative images and replace them with positive images. Perhaps we should be like the women in “The Full Body Project” and dance naked!!! For the joy in ourselves...comes from a place deep inside of us....it is there....just look at their faces.

Until Tomorrow,
Pamela

Categories
Fertility DrugsInfertilityIVFViolence Against Women




Posted by Carrie Leigh  on  11/07  at  09:16 PM

This is the first and probably the last time I will ever respond to a blog. But, what Leonard Nimoy did is so important for
women I feel the need to do this.
I recently interviewed Mr. Nimoy for my
Magazine and found his dedication both
to the arts and to society so real
that days after the interview I was
still focused on our discussion
regarding the way society portrays
females. As a young model I was
one of those that had to be perfect.
The years I spent living with Hugh
Hefner and the Playboy influence of
what a women should look like have a
negative impact on society.
Mr. Nimoy took on a subject and did
it from his heart-I know because of
the time I spent with him. It is time
society takes notice of the people and
their inner soul not just what they
look like. To have 16 year olds
get plastic surgery for breast enlargements is routine and I believe that that in itself says it all.

Posted by Stephanie  on  11/13  at  03:55 AM

Thank you for using The Full Body Project as an example for the importance of feeling beautiful and how much of an impact it makes on our general well-being.
I am a model in the book. I am a burlesque dancer. I was also a speaker at the Full Body Symposium in Northampton too.
It is so good to hear such positive comments.

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