Discovery Girls Magazine describes itself as âa magazine created by girls, for girls.â Given that the magazine is aimed at girls as young as eight, I was shocked to come across an article on my newsfeed today titled: âWhat Swimsuit Best Suits You?â

The layout of the magazine. Image Source.
The underlying premise: itâs never too early to teach young girls that their value comes from their bodies.
With lines like, âFind the perfect suit for your body type,â the message that can be discerned here is: only certain bodies deserve to be seen. It also sets up the idea that there are rules for how girls should present their bodies.
Have a curvy body? According to the spread, you better get yourself a one-piece.
The diagram reads: girls who are âcurvy up topâ should go for a one-piece with âside ties and cutouts that draw the eyes down,â while those who are ârounder in the middleâ should opt for âbusy geometricsâ that âdraw the eye inward.â
Letâs pause here for a moment. Who exactly is looking at these girls and why are these girls being painted as spectacles to be looked at in the first place? The implication here is that girlsâ bodies are inherently sexual and there to be gazed at.
If we really want to help boost confidence in girls, then we canât perpetuate narratives that their worth and self-esteem should rest in how they look to others, and in how desirable they are.
Letâs not forget the message that your confidence is inherently linked to what you wear and all it takes to feel confident in your body is finding the right swimsuit. The idea that happiness and feeling good about yourself are rooted in your appearance is a capitalist invention that many industries profit off of. And it doesnât even work.
The angry response to the swimsuit feature led the Discovery Girls publisher to post an open letter acknowledging their mistake on Facebook.
A statement from the letter reads: âThe article was supposed to be about finding cute, fun swimsuits that make girls feel confident, but instead it focused on girlsâ body image and had a negative impact.â
I appreciate the response and the acknowledgement, but why does it take a swimsuit for a young girl to feel confident? Why does her confidence have to come from her appearance and her clothes? We have to remember that there wouldnât be a similar article in a magazine targeted towards boys about what to wear to feel confident. In fact, we donât feel the need to teach boys confidence at all.
So why do we teach girls to gain confidence through their looks?
Letâs look at the issue with this feature intersectionally now. Bikinis and swimsuitsâwe are told by the mediaâare for thin, able-bodied, and conventional bodies that are almost always modeled by white women. So for women and girls who live in unconventional bodies, it can be incredibly difficultâif not impossibleâ to feel good in a swimsuit.
Thatâs why this equation for confidence is not nearly enough. This does nothing but reinforce the status quoâoperating under the thin ideal and norms about bodies.
Iâll admit it, Iâve fallen into this trap myself. Iâve written on this very blog about how Iâve grown to feel comfortable in my unconventional body wearing sports bras out in public and bikinis on the beach. But why is that what it took for me to stop feeling so bad about myself?
But you should know that I didnât wear a bikini when I was nine. I already thought I didnât have the right body type for it. So what about those girls? Where should their confidence come from?
Simply wearing the ârightâ thing wonât fix anything, it wonât suddenly boost self-esteem and it rests in the notion women are inherently insecure.
So letâs redefine how we teach body acceptance and confidence. Letâs teach young girls that you can like how you look and wear what you want regardless of whether or not it is âperfect for your body typeâ because that does not define you. Letâs teach young girls that feeling good about oneself can come from a variety of avenues that go beyond appearanceâlike talents, personal accomplishments, the ability to make people laugh or be a good friend, and so on.
Letâs challenge this narrative of bodies and confidence because we can do better. For the young girls reading this magazine and picking up these messages, we can do better.