Our culture seems to be obsessed with physical appearance. Beauty in our society is narrowly defined. Societal and cultural norms and mass media marketing impact our concepts of what beauty looks like. These external influences are so widely accepted that most of us never stop to challenge them or ask how they came to be.
- Is “skinny” on a woman really beautiful?
- Are “big, bulky muscles” on guys really attractive?
The media uses the accepted cultural values of thinness and fitness for monetary gain. Americans spend billions of dollars trying to achieve an unrealistic ideal. Both men and women are given the unspoken message that they should look like a model, but only one in 40,000 persons naturally have a model’s body type!
When you look in the mirror, how do you see yourself? Body image is our personal view and interpretation of our body. Some signs and symptoms of a distorted body image include:
- Thinking or talking about the flaws in your body.
- Spending a lot of time in front of a mirror, obsessing about specific body parts.
- Weighing yourself frequently and judging yourself by the number on the scale.
- Refraining from enjoyable activities because you are ashamed or self-conscious about your body.
- Obsessing about food, weight, and fitness level in private and/or in public.
Distorted body image and dieting are thought to contribute to eating disorders. Learning to accept the body that you have, see through media messages, and to practice healthy lifestyle behaviors are the keys to staying healthy.
1. When you find yourself being critical of your appearance, tell yourself to stop. It does no good to be unkind to yourself.
2. Remind yourself of what you like about your appearance. This may take some time and practice.
3. Break the habit of comparing yourself to others in terms of appearance.
4. Don’t criticize or comment on other people’s weight or appearance.
5. Strive to value yourself for other strengths besides appearance: are you intelligent, witty, kind, a good listener, artistic, etc.?
6. Pay attention to the way the media influences your self-image, and stay away from media that causes you to feel badly about your body.
7. Compliment others for things besides their physical appearance.
8. Focus on developing skills and abilities that have nothing to do with appearance.
Eating disorders are psychological illnesses in which persons become obsessed with food and with their body weight. People with eating disorders have an extremely distorted body image; they feel fat and see themselves as overweight regardless of whether they are at a normal weight or are emaciated. Food becomes a ruling passion in their lives. At the same time, eating disorders aren’t really about food. Food is the mechanism used to help cope with underlying difficulties.
Research shows that eating disorders among college students continue to be on the rise. The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) reports that “10 percent of college-age women have a clinical or near clinical eating disorder.” Commonly recognized eating disorders include anorexia nervosa, bulimia, binge-eating disorder, and chronic dieting. A description of each follows:
These are just a few:
1. Preoccupation with food, weight, nutrition, or dieting
2. Frequent changes in weight or severe weight loss
3. Wears baggy, loose fitting clothes
4. Complains frequently of the cold
5. Faints, blacks out, has dizzy spells, difficulty concentrating
6. Fine downy hair growth
7. Isolates self; or seems sad, irritable, angry
8. Skips meals, cuts food into small pieces, or eats large quantities of food
9. Steals food
10. Makes frequent trips to the bathroom
Realize that there are a high number of college students suffering from these disorders, and seeking help from someone that knows and understands how you feel is a great step toward recovery. If you think you or someone you know might have an eating disorder, come see one of the professionals in the Counseling Center (447-5441). Recognizing this problem is the first step towards getting better, and we can help.