Wednesday, March 9, 2011
EDNOS
I just found a really great blog called Two Whole Cakes. She's funny and irreverant, and I like her style. Anyway, she also had some good things to say about the recent study that came out about eating disorders:
So what we have here is a comprehensive study instructing us that anorexia is as common in boys as girls, that children are developing eating disorders at 12, and that eating disorders are extremely dangerous to kids’ health both medically and emotionally. Also, that while anorexia rates have remained stable, the instances of binge eating disorder and bulimia have doubled since the 1990s. In a complete coincidence, the fearful cultural rhetoric regarding an alleged obesity epidemic has also doubled—at least—since the 1990s. But this is totally unconnected.
It doesn't surprise me at all that the incidences of eating disorders are rising in the U.S. Just look at some of our role models. Kids are looking to celebrities, who are all about 80 pounds at 5 foot 1, which is just ridiculous and never an achievable look if you are built bigger than a pixie.
One of the other things the study says is that people with eating disorders otherwise not specified (EDNOS) are rising. That means people like me who obsess about what they put into their body and then binge. I definitely have a bad relationship with food, but I'm fat and so don't qualify for anorexia and I don't puke, so I'm not bulimic.
So how do we turn this around? Well, better, healthier role models would be good. People who love their bodies just the way they are. Less reliance on medical science to create "perfect" Barbie-like women. I don't know. There's got to be a way out of it.
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