About 17 percent of British women with healthy weight describe themselves as 'fat' - with almost as many saying they felt 'down' when they looked in the mirror, says a new research.
About 17 percent of British women with healthy weight describe themselves as 'fat' - with almost as many saying they felt 'down' when they looked in the mirror, says a new research. And just one out of 17 women actually consider themselves 'slim', reports the Daily Mail.
A woman who slips confidently into a size 12 jeans might be the envy of her larger friends, but the reality is she still hates what she sees in the mirror.
The research, based on more than 2,200 volunteers by diet company Slimming World, provides a disturbing insight into self-esteem of British women.
The participants were asked to look at themselves in the mirror and select from 12 adjectives to describe how they felt or looked.
They were also measured to determine whether they were overweight or stood within the healthy limits.
Among those women whose weight was judged to be just right, only 13 percent said they felt happy when they saw themselves in the mirror and only six percent - or one in 17 - thought they were slim.
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Just 6 percent of men with a healthy weight described themselves as fat.
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The company's poll also found the obese struggle with their emotions in at least five everyday situations, from looking in the mirror and at holiday snaps, to seeing old friends, trying clothes on in a shop, and getting dressed for a night out.
Psychologist Pam Spurr, who discusses body image in her book 'How To Be A Happy Human', said many women are not satisfied unless they are 'supermodel thin'.
Source-ANI