Hate seeing yourself in photos? Maybe it's time to take a selfie course - Action News
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Hate seeing yourself in photos? Maybe it's time to take a selfie course

Photographer Vivienne McMaster, 39, has come a long way since she hit bottom in her late twenties. Her company, Be Your Own Beloved, encourages people to rebuild their self-esteem and feel less lousy when they see photos of themselves.

'I was just exhausted from having this relationship with self-hate. That's when I picked up a camera'

Vivienne McMaster runs Be Your Own Beloved, a business that teaches empowerment and self-love through selfies. (Vivienne McMaster)

Photographer Vivienne McMaster, 39,has come a long way since she hit bottomin her late twenties.

"I saw certain parts of my body, especially in photos, with disgust," McMastersaysfrom her home in Vancouver.

"It definitely stopped me from a lot of things in life, in terms of finding relationships, confidence in general. When we don't feel good about our bodies, it often holds us back from believing we're worthy in a number of ways in our life."

McMaster's self-esteem began to dip in her early teens and tanked as she approached 30 riddled with body image issues and, eventually, depression.

'Exhausted by self-hate'

"I was just exhausted from having this relationship with self-hate," she said."That's when I picked up a camera and started doing this work."

Her company, Be Your Own Beloved, encourages people to rebuild their self-esteem andfeel less lousy when they see photos of themselves.

She accomplishes thisprimarilythrough online and in-personcourses teaching "self-love" throughselfies the very art form widely criticized for cultivating low self-esteem, because it is driven by reliance on "likes."

But McMaster says her classes aren't about the opinion of others; instead, it's about taming the inner critic.

"It's really about self-definition and standing in your own power and not needing everybody else to tell you anything to feel good about ourselves," she said.

Vivienne McMaster says she's come a long way towards accepting herself and her body as it is instead of by other people's expectations. (Vivienne McMaster)

Her clients begin by takingselfies an intimidating process in itself for those who have long avoided the camera out of shame.

They then evaluate the photos whilemonitoring theirinner monologue, and try to bemore self-accepting.

Her business attracts about 200 students per year enough for McMaster to make a living from it. She says others have offered similar classes but hers is the only business that has survived.

Hundreds of students worldwide

The majorityof her clients are women between the ages of 25 and 60, although men occasionally sign up too. They comefrom all over the world mostly Canada and the U.S. but also Brazil, Japan, Germany and Italy.

McMasteremphasizes that what she does isn't therapy. Instead, she describes it as usingcreative tools to encourage people to build their own visual narrative.

"I like to describe it as seeing themselves with compassion. Because most people hate photos of themselves," she said.

Social media expert Jesse Miller saysMcMaster'scourses could helpwith many of the issues he sees every day with online bullying and over-reliance on online activity to build self-worth.

"We live in a world of judgment, we live in a world of criticism," Millersaid.

Education needed about impact of social media

"Unfortunately we also live in a world where the social media narrative has turned into a constant attention-seeking approachwhere we're searching for daily affirmation."

Miller works with schools, parents and health authorities to build educationabout online bullying and social media use.

"I think [a course like this] isa positive approach to talking about avery real issue in terms of how people portray themselves on social media," Miller says.

"People need an understanding of digital literacy and media literacy to tell their story."

Selfies as political movements

Asselfieshave evolved and become a cultural phenomenon, they increasinglyhave been examined by academics.

The University of Southern California Los Angeles offersa selfie course exploringhowgender, sexuality and race areportrayed using self-portraits on social media.

"Selfies are not just about self-portraiture ...They are also autobiographies andautoethnographies," said Alison Trope, communications professor at USC,on awebpage promoting the course.

"The more interesting ones deliberately challenge conventions or templates of a beautiful face and body, and really try to show something broader about who you are as a person, about how your identity can be about performance or politics or changing norms."

LiannaPisanihas also studied selfies from an academic perspective.Sheresearchedpolitical movements driven by women takingselfieswhile she was completing a masters in communications and culture atRyersonand York universities.

"It can be extremely positive and I've seen it bring people together globally through different movements," she said.

Students feel better about themselves

Pisani has seen women from around the world use selfies to question and defy standards of beauty, like when Chinese women took to social media to post photos of themselves with hairy armpits.

Regardless of the academic inquiry onthe subject, McMastersays people who take her classessee positive results.

"It kind of feels like why I'm on the planet, because I spent so long healing my own body image," she said."I plan to be doing this work as long as there [are]people who need it."

Vivienne McMaster says she has healed her negative body image through photography, and she hopes to do the same for as many people who need it. (Vivienne McMaster)