tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post1621682144144828091..comments2024-03-26T06:17:49.527-07:00Comments on Had Enough Therapy?: Mind Your Own BusinessStuart Schneidermanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12784043736879991769noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post-44361103207776664022019-02-06T08:45:46.803-08:002019-02-06T08:45:46.803-08:00What's strange here isn't that this woman ...What's strange here isn't that this woman isn't minding her own business, but that she doesn't seem to have any of her own friends at the gym. The ordinary reality is none of us "mind our own business", and in a slightly different setting where people actually knew each other, this woman would be gossiping her concern to every other woman she could find to ask their opinions.<br /><br />Photos can help clarify self-image distortions. So like if these women befriend each other and they take a photo together and the skeletal woman's first look at the picture is to say "OH, I look so fat!", we would have some real evidence of a distorted self-image. And then the bold intervention might be to say "No, you look skeletal." and see how that goes.Ares Olympushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09726811306826601686noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8078379512095504946.post-54660495995467617492019-02-06T07:37:12.572-08:002019-02-06T07:37:12.572-08:00Everybody wants to get into the intervention act. ...Everybody wants to get into the intervention act. What if Skinny Minnie is a rich runway model living on two gallons of artisanal water and one cage-free boiled egg every day?trigger warninghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06310637474428322994noreply@blogger.com