Media Kit – Heather Creekmore Compared to Who?

I approach issues of body image and comparison from a slightly different angle than many. Raised in the church and Christian schools (through graduate school), I knew all the scripture about how God made my body good, that I was created in his image, and that I was fearfully and wonderfully made. I believed that God looked at my heart (1 Samuel), but I was stuck in my concern over what others would think about my body. Intellectually, I knew the truth–but I couldn’t make my heart believe that my insides were more important than my physical apppearance.

I spent more than 20 years wrestling (undiagnosed) Body Dysmorphic Disorder, disordered eating (EDNOS-Eating Disorder Not Otherwised Specificed) and insecurity. I thought I could fix it by becoming a fitness instructor. I believed it would magically go away when I reached my goal weight. Marriage, children, career success . . .none of these things could distract me from my non-stop thoughts about changing my body. I’d tried every diet and exercise, but nothing could satisfy. I never arrived at a place where I felt good enough in my skin.

But, God . . .in his grace, he showed me where I was stuck. My problem was a body image idol. I believed that a better body would save me and bring me everything I longed for–love, acceptance, joy, peace, contentment. I didn’t realize it at the time–but I had replaced a true salvation I had in Christ for the vain promises of an idol. It was so subtle, I didn’t know I was doing it. Yet when God opened my eyes to the reality of what my heart was really worshipping everything changed. I found freedom I didn’t even know was possible. Obsessive thoughts stopped. I was able to see all the lies I had believed and finally my ears were open to hearing and understanding God’s truth about my value.

As the author of two books and a body image coach, I cherish the opportunity to help women find freedom in the same way I did. For this reason I focus on helping women identify the body image idol and break free. I do believe that our body’s are good. I do believe we are made in God’s image and that alone gives us tremendous value. But my main message is to help women (and some men too) discover where they are stuck. In my experience, messages of body positivity keep the focus on self love and body love–which feeds this idol. I encourage women to take their eyes off of their thighs and find freedom through a greater understanding of the reality that their body is not where their value is derived. I want all women to know they were made for a purpose much more important than looking good in a bikini. It’s a joy to help women taste freedom and see that they have already been given everything they need, physically, to accomplish God’s purpose for their lives.


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