Teenage girls and soccer moms. Housewives and corporate executives.
Young professionals and those who are retired. No matter their
professions or responsibilities, women of all ages and all walks of life
often struggle with an all-consuming issue-self-image. We as Americans
are continually obsessed with the grass-is-greener,
anything-else-is-better-than-what -we-have philosophy. And that is never
truer for women than when it comes to our bodies and our self-images.
The media and the world around us tell us that we should be perfect in
every way. But this kind of scrutiny and obsession with perfection
leaves women feeling unloved, unattractive, frustrated, and even
depressed.
In The Real Me, contemporary Christian singer and songwriter Natalie
Grant is on a mission to especially help young women deal with this
struggle and to find acceptance in how God created them. And this
struggle is something that Natalie understands fully-she gives the
reader an inside look at her own struggle with image issues that led her
on the path to bulimia. In acknowledging her pain and sharing her
struggle, she offers practical help and hope to women of all ages.