During a busy New York Fashion Week where she has already walked for Jeremy Scott, Brandon Maxwell, Prabal Gurung, and Bottega Veneta, Gigi Hadid took to Twitter Sunday evening to defend her body against those criticizing her weight. In a series of candid tweets, the supermodel and current BritishVogue cover star opened up about her struggle with Hashimoto's disease, a chronic lymphocytic illness that can lead to an under-active thyroid.
"For those of you so determined to come up with why my body has changed over the years, you may not know that when I started at 17, I was not yet diagnosed with Hashimoto's disease," she wrote. "Those of you who called me 'too big for the industry' were seeing inflammation and water retention due to that."
Unfortunately, whenever models are placed on the world's stage, they're subjected to criticism. Yes, condemning the industry as a whole for its unhealthy representation of women is necessary and important. But when it's dished out to specific models, it's more like bullying.
Hadid opened up further to her 8.5 million Twitter followers, writing: "Over the last few years I’ve been properly medicated to help symptoms including those, as well as extreme fatigue, metabolism issues, body’s ability to retain heat, etc...I was also part of a holistic medical trial that helped my thyroid levels balance out."
PHOTO: THOMAS CONCORDIA/WIREIMAGE/GETTY IMAGES
During a busy New York Fashion Week where she has already walked for Jeremy Scott, Brandon Maxwell, Prabal Gurung, and Bottega Veneta, Gigi Hadid took to Twitter Sunday evening to defend her body against those criticizing her weight. In a series of candid tweets, the supermodel and current BritishVogue cover star opened up about her struggle with Hashimoto's disease, a chronic lymphocytic illness that can lead to an under-active thyroid.
"For those of you so determined to come up with why my body has changed over the years, you may not know that when I started at 17, I was not yet diagnosed with Hashimoto's disease," she wrote. "Those of you who called me 'too big for the industry' were seeing inflammation and water retention due to that."
Unfortunately, whenever models are placed on the world's stage, they're subjected to criticism. Yes, condemning the industry as a whole for its unhealthy representation of women is necessary and important. But when it's dished out to specific models, it's more like bullying.
Hadid opened up further to her 8.5 million Twitter followers, writing: "Over the last few years I’ve been properly medicated to help symptoms including those, as well as extreme fatigue, metabolism issues, body’s ability to retain heat, etc...I was also part of a holistic medical trial that helped my thyroid levels
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