“My Thighs Can Squash You”: Young Māori and Pasifika Wāhine Celebration of Strong Brown Bodies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature: Context, Positioning, and Theoretical Framing
2.1. Context: Māori and Pasifika Connections in Aotearoa
2.2. Cultural Context: Body Image and Hauora in Aotearoa
3. Methods
4. Analysis: Amplifying the Voices of Young Māori and Pasifika Wāhine on Body-Image Ideals
“How do you find beauty, when what is deemed beautiful, is never the reflection you see in front of you? How do you change the narrative when the stories that have been told are never the ones of your own people? Maybe it’s time for a new voice. The dawning of a new day”.[111]
4.1. Influences on Body Image
People chase that image of looking good and having a six pack. I guess it’s different for different people, but my approach to my health is looking after my mental state and it’s spiritual things too. Like if I’m going to work out I’m working towards a goal, whether it is rugby-related, it doesn’t really have to be sports related to be honest. It’s more working towards a better version of myself. I know that if I’m fit and well it just opens up so many opportunities because I’m ready, I’m prepared I know my body’s prepared for opportunities.(Nina, 18, Māori–Samoan)
I think it’s all about being mindset healthy and knowing when to put yourself first. Because for myself, I go out of my way a lot for other people, so knowing when to put my foot down and knowing when you deserve better. So, mindset-healthy kind of thing.(Charlotte, 24, Māori–Pakeha)
I think healthy looks when you’re feeling more energised or looking better, glowing and feeling happy, and just looking after yourself more and having those positive thoughts about yourself, your body. You’re not worrying about anyone else’s opinion about your own body. I think healthy, like you want to change in your own way, not to fit someone else’s type of body shape or what you need to look like as a woman or a girl. I think that’s the best.(Tali, 19, Samoan)
I think it’s hard not to get influenced by social media, because hell, it’s everywhere. Especially in this generation, social media is the number one thing…it influences the people that are growing up and that’s what makes them kind of lose themselves in the process of their health, wellbeing and stuff like that.(Mary, 19, Tongan)
I used to buy into having a certain body type when I was Year 9 [roughly aged 13] on the insta-explore page. I really under-appreciated my body, but then as I got older it’s really not realistic. I also noticed that a lot of models for some reason they were all white. I don’t know why. I wish I had some black or some brown models on my explore page. That would have been nice. That would have influenced me. Mental health is just basically for me, it’s not trying to get your mind sucked into all the social media stuff. It’s all false reality, like you have to fit into a box. By leaving Instagram it helped me build up my confidence again and help my mental health to appreciate myself more.(Norah, 16, Samoan)
Sometimes I wish I could be like the Instagram body but at the same time I don’t give a crap, I’m too lazy. I could if I would. But I don’t have the means to at the moment. But at the same time, why do I want to look like that when I can just be myself? Just walk out with hairy legs? If no one can accept me for hairy legs then it’s their problem. If I’m confident wearing hairy legs out, you know then, then cool. But like it’s other people’s problem, you know?(Rangi, 24, Māori–Samoan)
In probably 2015, [the body shape you wanted to be like] was skinny, not bones but enough to feel around your whole waist or enough to fit into size small jeans and stuff, [that] is what you need to be. But now, people are accepting that not all body types are the same… But I think other people shouldn’t have an opinion on women’s body type, they shouldn’t really have opinions on what we should look like, to be honest, because it’s the body that we have.(Tali, 19, Samoan)
Looking around, I’d be like oh, this girl’s got a boyfriend because she looks that type of way, or people like her because she’s this type of body shape. That was my mentality of thinking of it when I was younger. But once I grew up, it was more about your personality. It’s more important if you’re nice, if you’re kind, if you have all those attributes; it’s not about your body type. I wish I thought about that when I was 15. But, when I was 18, I could see how that was negative thinking, because that’s just bad. But to me, my ideal one would just be one that I’m comfortable in or one that I’m not shy to show off and stuff. If you’re happy with that, then you do you.(Tali, 19, Samoan)
4.2. Navigating Body Image Stereotypes
Earlier on this year, when I was back at the Islands, one of my cousins… called me fat. And I was like, that’s not nice to say, but I actually take it into heart. And, yeah, and I felt like, Oh, I want to be skinny, I’m gonna start exercising, and then actually started exercising when I was in Raro. And I never missed a day of exercising, but when I was exercising I went back to my eating, like you know just eating anything I want to…the fatty food and stuff like that. And I say to myself, am I happy? And then I said, I don’t think so and then I was like, you know what, I’m not gonna care if anyone says, ‘You’re fat’ and things like that, I’m just gonna say, ‘yeah nah, you can call me whatever you want but I don’t care’.(Rita, 23, Cook Island Māori)
In Samoa culture they take it just as a joke, “Hey, you’re getting a bit chubbier there” or “You look a bit chubby there.” It just defeats the purpose of love or is this what you’re supposed to be hearing from your aunties or your uncles and stuff? When I was a little kid I was, “ha ha, that’s funny.” But now I’m grown up, you can see how that messes with you sometimes. I just laugh it off and I’m like, nah, I like the way I look now.(Tali, 19, Samoan)
I think I’m still the same really because I blocked it all out. Well, my dad used to always say I was skinny, [but] my Mum was like no, you’re fine. Yeah, and I just happened to like put a guard up when anyone would say ‘oh you’re too small’ or ‘you’re getting too big’. And yeah I would just like ignore it. Just because that’s just how I am…I’ll try and keep the negativity out because it’s not good for your health.(Nadine, 24, Samoan–Niuean)
Sometimes I want to stand up for that person cos we all come from the same place, same background, like we’re all trying to make our parents proud and stuff. And like, that person may be having some problems at home and they come to school and they think coming to school as like a place where they can get their mind off the things that’s happening at home. And just coming to school and having those people pick on you on your worst flaws. It just makes it even worse. And that’s what leads some people to take their own life. I don’t know like some people, they have the same background but they still have the audacity to come and do that to a person, like I just don’t understand why you can’t you just can’t be nice to everyone, like my Mum has told me and my sisters, if you don’t have anything nice to say don’t say it at all. And just seeing how other people get treated because of just the way they look, how they weigh and like their size, like we’re all, we’re all not perfect, and we’re all not made the same.
They say it’s like known to be ugly to be musclier than boys. Yeah, it’s not feminine being muscle toned and all that. I used to get so pissed off and be like, ‘oh, I’m gonna get skinny arms and all that’, but it’s never gonna happen (all laugh). You try but it’s just like, no, it’s not gonna happen, it’s genetics, it’s what you were born with and what God gave you. Just continue being yourself. Just don’t let anyone tell you any different. Just yeah from experience, listening to everyone’s opinions, you know, I put my younger self down, so if I had a chance to tell [my younger self], I would say ‘tell them to shut up and get outta my face’.(Wenzie, 19, Cook Island–Samoan)
Because my male PE teacher knew I did CrossFit and, you know, CrossFit was like, just coming out and everyone’s like “It’s not a sport”, “It’s just for men”, “women, aren’t supposed to lift”. And I think that’s what got me the most then I think like a few times I’d be smart and be like, well you have chicken legs (all laughing). My thighs can squash you (more laughing). And like just growing up doing weightlifting and CrossFit and just training was like the people that I was with you could just realize, well, I’m an Islander, this is how I was built and this is what I’m made for. So like yeah, I just think of it as like it’s raw strength, use it while you can, while you’re young. I’m like you have this body, use it while you can.(Nadine, 24, Samoan–Niuean)
When I played reserve league for netball, we had to be a certain weight. We had to be 65 [kg] and under. You could never go above or else you’d get dropped. There are a lot of girls that deserved the spot more than other people, but just because of the weight restriction, they were cancelled out, which I reckon was pretty unfair. Some of the girls I’ve played with for years put in so much work and one girl just gets it because she’s skinnier. It just changes the whole point of playing netball basically. Polynesians always had the weight restriction thing. We have bigger bodies, but big bodies can do a lot of things. [They] can do just as much as a little body can.(Lene, 20, Cook Islander)
Once she [teacher] saw me she was like, you need to lose weight and I actually did it because I was like ‘okay, this is the sports coordinator, she’s gonna make me the best athlete ever.’ But then I got sick [from] doing that, so I stopped. But then just hearing all the opinions from everyone about me being you know too muscly, too big. At first it made me more angry than anything, the fact that they had the audacity to tell me that I’m overweight or too big for my age. But like, it’s my genetics and I can’t change that about myself, and I’m proud of that, of course!(Wenzie, 19, Cook Island–Samoan)
At college (high school), most people wouldn’t think Samoan girls would play netball. It’s usually just, “I thought you played this kind of sport”, like rugby and stuff because they think we’re kind of like the Samoan boys. I reckon some of the girls that are Samoan have the ability to go just beyond playing at college. But I guess the other stereotype would just be that we’d do shotput and stuff, or big things that we can carry because we’re of big stature and stuff. They’ve never seen people sprint, like in the 100 m one. I was like, oh my gosh, you’ve never seen a girl Samoan sprint, oh wow!(Tali, 19, Samoan)
Sometimes Islander girls are the stereotypes, like Islander girls should be playing rugby or contact, like men’s sports. Not doing gymnastics and ballerina stuff. I get that one. If you’re an Islander, doing gymnastics is like, oh you must be half something else. It’s sad.(Mary, 19, Tongan)
Being a rugby player it’s, you know, you’re muscley, you’re, you’re massive. I was, one of the biggest girls on my team. I’m not that big. Hey I’m not that big, (girls laugh reassuringly) but I was the biggest. I did reinforce my own you know attributes towards the game but then also, it’s genetics like you know the muscliness, the strength. I’m gonna always have that from the stereotypes that all these people say about me. I’m not gonna, I can’t hide it. I can’t take my toughness away just for them, you know, so yeah I reinforce my stereotypes in a good way, like, kind of make bad into good, you know? I have my own individual strengths, like speed and stuff.(Wenzie, 19, Cook Island–Samoan)
A lot of white people, they just look at me and they’re like ‘oh, she’s dumb, she doesn’t know a lot’. Also, being a young woman, it also puts me under the bar as well because stereotypically we’re weaker, meant to be weaker than males overall. Being both of those things is kind of hard because when people, mostly just white people, when they look at you it’s kind of like they really underestimate you. They just look at you and think that you act a certain way. I don’t like that. I guess in sport, sport really helps me to prove to people that I don’t have to be a certain way. I can be really good at sport! For me, sport is the place where people can recognise you, see who you are as a person on the court or on the field.(Norah, 16, Samoan)
I think just getting everyone, especially females to understand that we’re all given our own body type and we don’t have to look like that person. It’s not like a must, because I see it in social media there’s a lot of girls that really want to hit a specific shape or type. I’m like, just be happy with your skin and your body, your body looks nice.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pseudonym | Age | Ethnicity | Social Situation |
---|---|---|---|
South Auckland | |||
Deena | 18 | Māori | High school student. |
Anne-Marie | 22 | Māori | Full time work; university graduate |
Rayena | 23 | Māori | Full time work; mother of one |
Evelyn Burns | 25 | Māori | Full time work; university graduate |
Tati | 16 | Māori–Samoan | High school student |
Hera | 17 | Māori–Samoan | Tertiary study |
Vaitala | 21 | Māori–Samoan | Part time work |
Lele | 22 | Māori–Samoan | Part time work; solo mother of one |
Rangi | 24 | Māori–Samoan | Solo mother of two |
Rita | 23 | Cook Island–Māori | Tertiary study |
Lene | 20 | Cook Island | Tertiary study |
Wenzie | 19 | Cook Island–Samoan | Tertiary study; part time work |
Nora | 18 | Samoan–Niuean | High school student |
Nadine | 24 | Samoan–Niuean | Tertiary study; part time work |
Tee | 24 | Samoan | Tertiary study; part time work |
Mary | 19 | Tongan | Tertiary study; part time work |
Porirua | |||
Tanya | 19 | Māori | Full time work |
Jean | 22 | Māori | Full time work; university graduate |
Cherie | 23 | Māori | Tertiary study |
Nina | 18 | Māori–Samoan | Tertiary study |
Mischa | 25 | Māori–Samoan | Part time work; mother of one |
Wairemana | 21 | Māori–Scottish–Swedish | Tertiary study |
Charlotte | 24 | Māori–Pākeha | Full time work |
Norah | 16 | Samoan | High school student |
Sally | 17 | Samoan | High school student |
Tali | 19 | Samoan | Full time work |
Toni | 20 | Samoan | Full time work |
Larma | 16 | Samoan–Tongan | High school student |
Paige | 19 | Samoan–Tokelau | High school student |
Mia | 20 | Samoan–Tokelau | Full time work |
Rya | 23 | Samoan–Tokelau | Full time work |
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Nemani, M.J.; Thorpe, H. “My Thighs Can Squash You”: Young Māori and Pasifika Wāhine Celebration of Strong Brown Bodies. Youth 2023, 3, 971-990. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3030062
Nemani MJ, Thorpe H. “My Thighs Can Squash You”: Young Māori and Pasifika Wāhine Celebration of Strong Brown Bodies. Youth. 2023; 3(3):971-990. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3030062
Chicago/Turabian StyleNemani, Mihi Joy, and Holly Thorpe. 2023. "“My Thighs Can Squash You”: Young Māori and Pasifika Wāhine Celebration of Strong Brown Bodies" Youth 3, no. 3: 971-990. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3030062
APA StyleNemani, M. J., & Thorpe, H. (2023). “My Thighs Can Squash You”: Young Māori and Pasifika Wāhine Celebration of Strong Brown Bodies. Youth, 3(3), 971-990. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3030062