A documentary about body image
activist Taryn Brumfitt’s fight to encourage women to be more accepting of
their bodies will be shown on different nights in the coming weeks in Big
Flats, Vestal, Binghamton, and Ithaca.
Tickets for “Embrace: Your Body, The
Movement, Global Change” are $12.70 each except in Ithaca, where tickets are
$13.20 each. The 90-minute movie is not rated.
The movie schedule and links for
tickets by location:
Ithaca: 7:30 p.m. Oct. 27 at the Regal
Cinemas’ Ithaca Mall Stadium 14 theater on Catherwood Road (https://gathr.us/screening/17984).
Big Flats: 7:30 p.m. Nov. 7 at the Regal
Cinemas’ Arnot Mall 10 theater on Chambers Road (https://gathr.us/screening/17974).
Vestal: 7:30 p.m. Nov. 15 at the AMC Vestal
Towne Square 9 theater on Vestal Parkway (https://gathr.us/screening/18066).
Binghamton: 7:30 p.m. Nov. 23 at the Regal
Cinemas’ Binghamton Stadium 12 theater on Front Street (https://gathr.us/screening/17915).
Upstate
New York Eating Disorder Service of Elmira, home of the Nutrition
Clinic and
Sol Stone Center, is sponsoring the Big Flats and Vestal showings. There are
also Nutrition Clinic offices in Vestal and Ithaca.
Taryn Brumfitt |
"It's
one of the best films I've seen on body image,” said Carolyn Hodges Chaffee,
MS, RDN, CEDRD, the owner and director of Upstate New York Eating Disorder
Service. “You leave the movie feeling very positive about all shapes and sizes.
There have been several films on body image, but this is one of the first that
actually accomplishes a positive feeling toward all."
Brumfitt
founded the Body Image Movement after before-and-after photos of her on
Facebook sparked controversy. The before photo showed Brumfitt at a
bodybuilding competition in 2012, and a second photo showed her sitting naked
later that year after she had gained weight.
She
told Cosmopolitan magazine: “I loved how I looked in the second shot — I saw a
sexy, confident woman. I thought it would be good to share the photos with my
friends – to make the point that you can feel good about the ways in which your
body changes.”
The
photos have had more than 3.6 million views and about 20,000 people shared it,
she told Cosmopolitan. Since then, Brumfitt said she has been trying to help redefine
and rewrite the ideals of beauty.
“Our
job is to harness and facilitate positive body image activism by encouraging
women to be more accepting of who they are, to use positive language regarding
their bodies and others, and to prioritize health before beauty,” she wrote on
her website (bodyimagemovement.com).