Susie Orbach (born 1946) is a British psychotherapist, psychoanalyst, writer and social critic. Read full biography of Susie Orbach →
No one likes to feel helpless. We find it psychologically unbearable and inside ourselves we may try to make ourselves part author of our misfortune... →
Bodies are becoming our personal mission to tame, extend and perfect.
Fat is a way of saying no to powerlessness and self-denial.
Fat people are so rarely included in visual culture that fat is perceived as a blot on the landscape of sleek and slim.
In my mum's day, you needed to be beautiful for a very short time to catch your man. It didn't start at six and go on until you're 75... →
The insistence that the commercialisation of the body is a fit subject for political discussion and intervention is well overdue.
There are so many young women who tip over into being a facsimile: they don't really inhabit their lives or their bodies.
We accept there's an emotional aspect to life. But we're not very developed in our ways of understanding it.
I wish we could treat our bodies as the place we live from, rather than regard it as a place to be worked on, as though it were a disagreeable old... →
I think it is one of the capacities of human beings, to create style.
A wanted pregnancy as much as a dreaded pregnancy can play differently than all one's previous imaginings.
Dare to be as physically robust and varied as you always were.
From a child's point of view, there is rarely a great time for parents to separate, even if there has been a lot of commotion and fighting.