POPSUGAR UK

Before Commenting on Someone's Appearance, Watch This Therapist's "5-Second-Rule"

15/03/2022 - 03:40 PM
@my_destanation [1]

#stitch [2] with @crazystoreowner 5-second rule! #mentalhealth [3] #LaysGoldenDuet [4] #wellness [5] #tiktoktherapist [6] #support [7] #appearance [8] #learnontiktok [9] #intent [10]

♬ original sound - My Destanation [11]

Therapist Dr. Desta [12], PhD, MS, known as @my_destanation [13] on TikTok, recently posted a video about a principle called the "five-second rule" — and no, it doesn't have to do with dropping food on the floor. "The five-second rule is simple. You can comment on any aspect of someone's appearance if and only if they can change it in five seconds," Dr. Desta says in a TikTok video. "If it would take them more than five seconds to change it, then hush. Especially if the comment is based on your opinion."

The idea of this five-second rule is something that her mom told her growing up: "Do not comment on someone's appearance if they cannot change it easily." This includes comments about someone's weight, teeth, scars, stretch marks, and pimples, says TikTok user @jjones451 [14] in another video uploaded about the five-second rule. [15]

As "an individual who inhabits a larger body," Dr. Desta explains the reason she posted this video to TikTok was because she's had so many people comment on things that she physically can't change or things she doesn't want to change. "I remember how small these comments on my body made me feel; I felt embarrassed and ashamed. I hated when others would make these comments and try to excuse their bad behaviour because they had 'good intentions.'" But good intentions or not, it didn't matter. "What matters is the impact — the impact of you making another person feel like sh*t," she says.

So if you feel the need to comment about someone's appearance, make sure they can change it in five seconds or less. We're talking a bug in their hair, their fly is down, a poppy seed is stuck in their teeth, or they forgot to remove a price tag from their clothes. And as a reminder, here are things you cannot change in five seconds or less that should not be commented on:

Quoting shame researcher and storyteller Brené Brown [18], Dr. Desta says, "We judge people in areas where we're vulnerable to shame." If you find yourself making evaluative judgments or comments on someone's appearance, Dr. Desta recommends you take a minute to self-reflect on how you feel about that aspect of yourself. She says to remember: "You are enough just as you are; you are worthy solely because you exist. You don't have to make others feel small as a way to uplift yourself out of your own shame spiral."


Source URL
https://www.popsugar.co.uk/fitness/therapist-5-second-rule-about-commenting-on-appearance-48753158