If you’ve ever ventured into the health and fitness world on social media, you’ve probably come across #fitspo.
It’s short for “fitspiration” – and basically covers off on any kind of social media post that encourages people to be fitter and healthier.
Which is good, right? It’s never really a bad thing to encourage people to eat better and move a little bit more.
But there is a dark side to fitspo, and it’s come into the firing line today. New research from Flinders University’s School of Health Sciences has found that “fitspo” is having a seriously negative impact on how teenage girls view their own bodies. Professor Claire Drummond has found that pictures of fitness models – which are all over social media – make teenage girls feel both guilty and negative about the way that they look.
The dark side of fitspo
This from The Australian:
Professor Drummond said girls were put off because they did not look like the fitness models they saw online a dozen times a day, compared to leafing through magazines irregularly in the past. She said girls were also dropping out of PE in senior years when it was no longer compulsory, because it did not help their academic record and they did not want to play sport in front of their male peers.
“Girls seemed to be concerned about making fools of themselves doing sport, but a lot of it was about how they looked and how fit girls were perceived on social media,” Professor Drummond said.
Professor Drummond’s findings didn’t surprise me. I’m not a teenage girl, but I’m still a self-conscious girl who spends far too much time on social media. I follow all of the online fitness models – partly out of interest, partly from a “screw you, how can you be so hot” kind of mental headspace.
And what I see on social media is, frankly, pretty depressing.
These fitness models spend their time posting endless photos of themselves, in which they’re either posing in bikinis or teeny-tiny Nike crop tops and matching Nike booty shorts: