If you know me well, you will know that I love dance and musical theatre of all sorts. I don't care if the effort is amateur or polished, I will ferociously applaud anyone with enough guts to get up on stage in front of people and perform! I was at the resort show every night in Dominican and I loved every second of it!!
What I loved most was this: the dancers came in all shapes and sizes! The women (and the men too!) were tall, short, heavy set, waifish, light skinned, dark skinned, curvy, glamorous, plain, EVERYTHING! It was so exciting because sadly you would never see that in North America in a dance show. There were beautiful bare bellies of all descriptions and not one of those dancers was self conscious.
I want to include this article from Sexis because it is a brilliant read! Enjoy:
Fire in the Belly: Self-Love and Navel Gazing
By G.L Morrison
My lover made up a modern proverb: “A woman who loves her belly loves her body.” I don’t think it will catch on. It’s true that women, particularly modern women in Western culture, have a love-hate (or even a hate-hate) relationship with their bellies. Why? What did that sweet bump of skin (located as it is under the two much glamorized and beloved fat-bags) do to deserve such scorn?
The High Cost of Low Self-Esteem
“I think it would be nice if hating the way you look weren't so good for the economy...We know, too, that women in ads, knockouts to start with, are artificially perfected beyond human emulation. We know, but we forget.”
—Anne Bolin
Your skin is too dry. Your hair is too flaky. You can pinch an inch. You smell “not so fresh.” Your clothes are out of style. Your pimples are huge. You have bad breath. Literally hundreds of industries depend on your believing all that. There are the primary offenders: the people who make shampoo and mouthwash and diet sodas. Then there are the secondary offenders, the accomplices: the people who make their money from advertising said products. That’s ad agencies, television stations, newspaper, radio, and magazines—and all their shareholders. A lot of people are depending on you to hate yourself enough to pay to put their kids through college.
And along the skin highway between two favored recreation spots is a much-overlooked delight. The belly.
—Anne Bolin
Your skin is too dry. Your hair is too flaky. You can pinch an inch. You smell “not so fresh.” Your clothes are out of style. Your pimples are huge. You have bad breath. Literally hundreds of industries depend on your believing all that. There are the primary offenders: the people who make shampoo and mouthwash and diet sodas. Then there are the secondary offenders, the accomplices: the people who make their money from advertising said products. That’s ad agencies, television stations, newspaper, radio, and magazines—and all their shareholders. A lot of people are depending on you to hate yourself enough to pay to put their kids through college.
And along the skin highway between two favored recreation spots is a much-overlooked delight. The belly.

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