Celebs

Plus Size Celebs Who Encourage to Be Yourself

Posted on

 

 

More and more women (and even men, at times) who deem themselves as plus size start to be visible in the media. They are on covers of magazines, they’re on TV, and most importantly – us plus size folk are on the streets, trying to be happy and find love and acceptance. If you’re interested in how plus size celebrities and ordinary people alike are trying to come to terms with the society, take a look at those 17 beautiful quotes from this world’s famous.

 

Plus-Size-Celebs-Who-Encourage-to-Be-Yourself-1

Via: fashiongonerogue.com

 

Ashley Graham

 

“Back fat, I see you popping over my bra today. But that’s alright—I’m going to choose to love you. Thick thighs, you’re just so sexy you can’t stop rubbing each other. That’s alright, I’m going to keep you. And cellulite, I have not forgotten about you—I’m going to choose to love you, even though you want to take over my whole bottom half.”

Via: billboard.com

 

Adele

 

  “I’ve seen people where it rules their lives, who want to be thinner or have bigger boobs, and how it wears them down. And I don’t want that in my life. I have insecurities, of course, but I don’t hang out with anyone who points them out to me.”

 

Via: justjared.com

 

Danielle Brooks

 

“I might not have the power to change what media puts out there, or to single-handedly convince young girls like me that they should love themselves. But what I can do is start with me: living each day, embracing who I am. Embracing who I am by refusing to hide my legs or or cover my arms because they make someone else feel uncomfortable. By realizing that every stretch mark on my body is kissed by the sun, and no longer wishing them away. By no longer operating out of a place of fear. So if you see me on a carpet with my arms and legs out glistening, or my midriff exposed, it’s a reminder to myself and the world that I know I’m beautiful.”

Via: abcnews.go.com

 

Amy Schumer

 

“I say if I’m beautiful. I say if I’m strong. You will not determine my story — I will. I will speak and share and f*ck and love and I will never apologize to the frightened millions who resent that they never had it in them to do it.”

Via: oprah.com

 

Oprah Winfrey

 

“I think of all the years I’ve wasted hating myself fat, wanting myself thin. Feeling guilty about every croissant, then giving up carbs, then fasting, then dieting, then worrying when I wasn’t dieting, then eating everything I wanted until the next diet (on Monday or after the holidays or the next big event). Wasted time, abhorring the thought of trying on clothes, wondering what was going to fit, what number the scale would say. All that energy I could have spent loving what is.”

Via: allaboutmusic.pl

 

Kelly Clarkson

 

“I do cardio. I run. I strength-train using my own body weight. I don’t like free weights, because I build muscle easily. Really, what I try to instill in my fans is to be healthy and happy. I have no desire to be super-skinny.”

Via: glamour.com

 

Melissa McCarthy

 

“There’s an epidemic in our country of girls and women feeling bad about themselves based on what .5% of the human race looks like. It starts very young. My message is that as long as everybody’s healthy, enjoy and embrace whatever body type you have.”

Via: xojane.com

 

Gabourey Sidibe

 

“If they hadn’t told me I was ugly, I never would have searched for my beauty. And if they hadn’t tried to break me down, I wouldn’t know that I’m unbreakable. So when you ask me how I’m so confident, I know what you’re really asking me: how could someone like me be confident? Go ask Rihanna, asshole!”

Via: heightandweigths.com

 

Queen Latifa

 

“When I was around 18, I looked in the mirror and said, ‘You’re either going to love yourself or hate yourself.’ And I decided to love myself. That changed a lot of things.”

Via: hawtcelebs.com
Dascha Polanco

“It’s important for me to be able to accept myself and be proud of my shape and my thighs — and to be able to say I like to eat hamburgers. I firmly believe that the beauty of life is being able to have variety and being able to have control.”

Via: dailymail.co.uk

 

Meghan Trainor

“It’s a mental thing. Just recently I was thinking, I’m confident now, and I look good, and that’s because I’ve started saying those words out loud more. So now when I see pictures, I’m like, ‘Oh my God, why would I hate myself at all? I look incredible in that picture!’”

Via: people.com

 

Lena Dunham

 

“I have sort of a Zen body philosophy, I’m sort of like: we’re one weight one day, we’re one weight another day, and some day our body just doesn’t even exist at all! It’s just a vessel I’ve been given to move through this life. I think about my body as a tool to do the stuff I need to do, but not the be all and end all of my existence. Which sounds like I spent a week at a meditation retreat, but it’s genuinely how I feel.”

Via: theboombox.com

 

Jazmine Sullivan

 

“Love yourself the way you are…it’s a constant struggle, so I don’t want to preach something that’s unrealistic. Because where I’m at, I’m constantly reminding myself of my good qualities and trying to affirm myself positively. So I understand sometimes you’re just not feeling yourself, but you have to love yourself for who you are.”

Via: ecowallpapers.net

 

Octavia Spencer

 

“I feel for my overly thin women as much as I feel for the overly overweight women. I think there is a lot that needs to change. It’s our society that has told [women] and continues to tell them that when you reach a certain age, you are no longer valuable. When your reach a certain weight, you are [no longer] valuable. I am working out with a trainer. I’m not trying to be a thin mint. I’m just trying to be healthy and look good for me.”

 

Via: popsugar.com

 

Mindy Kaling

 

“You know what’s funny? If I call myself a cute, chubby girl, the natural kind woman’s response is, ‘You’re not chubby! You’re beautiful! And thin!’ And I always want to hug the person and say, ‘It’s OK, I identify as someone who is cute and chubby – that doesn’t mean I’m not worthy of love and attention and intimacy.”

Via: clipsuper.com

 

Jill Scott

 

“I’ve learned over the years that it’s more important to be comfortable with yourself than whatever anybody else has to say. It can be a challenge when you don’t look like anybody on the magazine cover. It can feel alienating, but every woman in my opinion has their own power.”

Via: dailymail.co.uk

 

Amber Riley

 

“That’s the key to life, is make your own path, set your own rules. There is no set rule, no set look, no set anything, you make your own rules in life, and your own decisions.”

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

Most Popular

Exit mobile version