Jelena Dokic has lost 20 kilos. If only she could shed the trolls

Jelena Dokic has lost 20 kilograms. And again,we’re hit with deja vu as she’s inundated with body commentary from trolls and supporters alike.

For years,body trolls have dwarfed the achievements of Dokic,arguably one of the best tennis commentators we’ve seen. She has long been both vocal and powerfully vulnerable about the abuse she has faced at the hands of her ex-coach and father,and from trolls online – the latter focused squarely on her changing body.

Now Dokic’s body has changed again. So again,in her signature take-no-prisoners approach,while somehow still coming off as the cool big sister you always needed,she has written apowerful statement about the uninvited online feedback.

“It was always about not judging,shaming and bullying people no matter what their weight and size is and instead highlighting that kindness is what matters not our size,” writes Dokic in a now-viral Instagram post.

Her message remains the same:a woman’s weight has no bearing on her worth. But many of us are still missing her point.

Coverage of her full statement inspired messages of support,including:“Well done. Ignore those trying to promote obesity as the new normal.” And:“People wanting fat influencers to promote obesity …” Many chimed in to approve of her choice to lose weight. “She has some very good reasons for losing weight,diabetes and high blood pressure can kill you,” said one. Another offered:“She was a bit too big before. Healthwise she has done the right decision and I hope she is happy and well done.”

At first glance,they appear supportive of the tennis champ turned author and commentator but,looking closer,it’s clear these responses are born of the very fatphobia Dokic works so hard to combat. The support extends only “as long as you’re healthy” – a condition often placed on those living in larger bodies. They support Dokic’s honesty while skating straight past her point.

Then there’s the response that prompted Dokic’s post in the first place. Messages from those who,Dokic says,“already jumped on the judgment and shame train for my weight loss and said that I have succumbed to the ‘diet culture’ and don’t represent the plus size people any more”.

Messaging someone to express disappointment at their weight loss is undoubtedly insensitive,if not despicable behaviour. Yet it’s perhaps understandable if people living in bigger bodies feel left behind when a public figure such as Dokic or singer-songwriterAdele undergoes a drastic loss of weight. Our world demonises fatness so relentlessly that when someone in a larger body is celebrated for their brilliance,it can feel,even if only briefly,that the world is waking up to what is really important.

So,when plus-sized celebrities receive a positive public reaction for weight loss,inevitably leading to “supportive” anti-fat comments,it can feel as if that fleeting moment just evaporated.

It is similarly disillusioning to watch incredible women in larger bodies do great things,only to be met with lengthy public discussion of their bodies. Sara Milliken,recently crowned Miss National American Alabama,immediately faced online body trolls and questions of the legitimacy of her title and pageant.

Amid widespread misreporting of Milliken’s title,former Miss Alabama Amie Beth Shaver rushed to denounce the contest won by Milliken as less prestigious than the Miss America pageant she was part of. “But this National American Miss,no one has heard of it,” Shaver told US outlet1819 news. “I don’t even know what it is. If you are a pageant person,you’re only going to participate in either Miss America or Miss USA.”

Dokic experienced disregard for her achievements by body shamersthis time last year. “If my size defines me and measures my worth for someone out there and makes me less worthy in someone’s eyes,well that says everything about them,” she wrote in response,in a previous Instagram post.

In a peri-Ozempic world,we’re witnessing a lot of people’s bodies changing around us. The continued fixation onOprah Winfrey’s weight since she announced her support of the medication semaglutide led to headlines and online speculation about her trip to the emergency department this week.

But there’s a big problem with using someone else’s body as a guide for our own sense of worthiness. I should know. I used to do it all the time when I suffered from anorexia.

The danger is that bodies change,whether by choice or by chance. Taking ownership of the size of another person’s body is both unfair to them and harmful to you.

That’s why we must hear what Dokic is working so hard to teach us. “While I have lost 20 kilos it changes nothing,” she says. “I still want people to value me and others based on whether we are kind and good people.”

This includes refraining from using derogatory terms about big bodies,even when expressing support for Dokic. Her weight loss,she says,changes nothing. But if we listen to what she’s really saying,it could change everything.

Hannah Vanderheide is a freelance health writer and actor based in Victoria.

Hannah Vanderheide is a freelance health writer and actor based in Victoria.

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