Ashley Graham hates being called a "real" woman

Photo credit: Getty
Photo credit: Getty

From Harper's BAZAAR

In case you missed it, Ashley Graham is basically the poster child for body positivity. Yes, 2017 was already the year of showing off natural bodies in all their glory (like ASOS and Glossier not retouching its photos, Lady Gaga shutting down body shamers, and Demi Lovato embracing her non-thigh gap), though the queen of it all was probably Graham.

But of all the titles she's been given by society (and us), there's one she refuses to be called: a real woman. After Graham posted her most recent Instagram photo, which showed her on a beach in a bikini, people began commenting on her body, writing, "finally, a real woman," and "a real body," and "she is so real and so raw and so beautiful."

And though, on the surface, those seem like nice compliments, Graham pointed out that comments like this are actually somewhat warped, and she's not here for them. She addressed the problem in her Instagram story, posting a photo of herself with the caption: "We are all real women. I can't stand it when I read comments that say, 'finally, a real woman,'" her post read. "No matter your size/shape/amount of cellulite-we are in this together."

Photo credit: instagram.com/theashleygraham
Photo credit: instagram.com/theashleygraham

When commenters say things like a "real woman," they mean they're happy to see someone in the spotlight who looks, realistically, like them: Photoshop-free, with cellulite and stretch marks and uneven skin tones, and whatever else most humans have. But Graham just wants people to know that there truly is no way to define what it means to a real woman, because we all are.