18 min

Your Body Is A Vehicle The Embrace Podcast

    • Superación personal

There is popular quote by Myles Munroe that says - "When the purpose of a thing is not known, abuse is inevitable".

There is an over importance that has been placed on physical appearance that we somewhat neglect the possibility that the body was made to be just a vehicle - driving our lives.


Not because there's anything wrong with physical appearance, or the need to look good, but in clamoring for physical beauty, we have placed an unhealthy amount of emphasis on body (types) than is necessary. One that has led us to the point in our society where people no longer feel worthy, or deserving of anything good, because they don't match up to beauty standards.

Was the body made to be just a part of us that contributes to our functionality, or was it made for so much more? Find out in this episode.

Here are the things I talked about:

• A review from the previous episode

•Our limitation as humans in our knowledge of what we think could be best us, per time.

•The first step to transforming something from a disorderly state to an orderly one is identifying its purpose.

•How exposure, background and culture plays a part in programming what we now call our preferences.

•The entirety of your existence is not hinged on your body type/whether or you meet up with beauty standards. You are more than your body.



-> Join the interesting conversation on Spotify:
Love & Self-Esteem https://open.spotify.com/episode/0HRyzrZm5FjgIcEYnnyxik"Are we objective enough or well-informed, as humans, to determine our worth?" Please, state your answer with your reasons. Let's keep the conversation going!

-> For further questions and enquiries, reach out to me here:
Instagram: www.instagram.com/ayanpella/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/_ayanpella

Email: ayantemeetope@gmail.com

Sign up to get letters from me: bit.ly/AyanpellasNewsletter

Like this show? Please, leave your ratings and review, they go a long way. Thank you!


---

Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/buildyourselfesteem/message

There is popular quote by Myles Munroe that says - "When the purpose of a thing is not known, abuse is inevitable".

There is an over importance that has been placed on physical appearance that we somewhat neglect the possibility that the body was made to be just a vehicle - driving our lives.


Not because there's anything wrong with physical appearance, or the need to look good, but in clamoring for physical beauty, we have placed an unhealthy amount of emphasis on body (types) than is necessary. One that has led us to the point in our society where people no longer feel worthy, or deserving of anything good, because they don't match up to beauty standards.

Was the body made to be just a part of us that contributes to our functionality, or was it made for so much more? Find out in this episode.

Here are the things I talked about:

• A review from the previous episode

•Our limitation as humans in our knowledge of what we think could be best us, per time.

•The first step to transforming something from a disorderly state to an orderly one is identifying its purpose.

•How exposure, background and culture plays a part in programming what we now call our preferences.

•The entirety of your existence is not hinged on your body type/whether or you meet up with beauty standards. You are more than your body.



-> Join the interesting conversation on Spotify:
Love & Self-Esteem https://open.spotify.com/episode/0HRyzrZm5FjgIcEYnnyxik"Are we objective enough or well-informed, as humans, to determine our worth?" Please, state your answer with your reasons. Let's keep the conversation going!

-> For further questions and enquiries, reach out to me here:
Instagram: www.instagram.com/ayanpella/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/_ayanpella

Email: ayantemeetope@gmail.com

Sign up to get letters from me: bit.ly/AyanpellasNewsletter

Like this show? Please, leave your ratings and review, they go a long way. Thank you!


---

Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/buildyourselfesteem/message

18 min