I'll refrain from excoriating myself in print (I usually leave that to letter writers) -- I really do enjoy the idea of creating a rubric for something as irrational as body image. But as a follow-up on that same subject, it made me want to mention a photo essay in this weekend's Play Magazine about the bodies of Olympian athletes. It featured a lineup of Olympic contenders as "six variations on the Olympic ideal" -- and provided a refreshing break from the athletic image projected by most magazines, where being a professional athlete requires looking like a (muscular) model. Here, though, the pictures ranged from Christian Cantwell, a 335-pound shot-put thrower, to 103-pound marathoner Deena Kastor to Cheryl Haworth, a 300-pound weightlifter who told the Times that "when I say my thighs are 32 inches, they're really hard all the way around, and my butt is huge from squatting all the time." (Track cyclist Sarah Hammer made a similar comment, saying, "My punch comes from my thighs and my glutes. I always say that it's my butt that gets me there.") As someone who spends way too much time attempting to coax her body into the illusory ideal of an "athlete" (and who succumbs far too often to context-based fluctuations in her own body image) it's nice to see proof that being strong takes all kinds.