She stood arms outstretched in just her underwear in one of the busiest squares in the world.
The young woman walked through Piccadilly Circus with a blindfold and a sign.
She had a purpose and as she moved through the crowd nobody took a second look.
She stopped.
Placed a sign at her feet then undid her dress allowing it to fall to the ground.
Still no one took much more than a second glance.
In just her underwear she blindfolded herself and stood arms stretched.
And stood waiting.
Jae West, a British woman in her late 20’s, was about to become famous.
But it isn’t fame she is seeking.
It is acceptance of the way she looks, and it isn’t just acceptance for her. She wants it for every body of every shape and size.
Jae, who suffered an eating disorder when she was at school and in her early 20’s, said her social experiment aimed to highlight body image and self-acceptance.
“I’m standing for anyone who has struggled with an eating disorder or self-esteem issue like me…To support self acceptance, draw a [love heart] on my body.” Her sign read.
Jae has since written of how it felt to first remove her dress.
“As my clothes fell to the ground and I placed the blindfold over my eyes, I could feel a shift of attention and confusion stirring in the air.
My heart was racing while all the worst case scenarios were going through my head. I was scared that no one was going to draw a love heart on my body and I was going to be left out there in the open in my underwear on show to be ridiculed.”
She says:
“As the minutes passed it felt like hours.
‘All of a sudden I felt one of the pens in my left hand slip out of my grasp. The feeling of the felt pen was on my skin was one of the most overwhelming feelings of relief, gratitude and love that I’ve ever felt.
The reaction from passersby warmed her heart.