T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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73.1 | Reader poll.... | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Wed Jul 01 1987 09:07 | 40 |
| Are women so different from men? Don't men eat for many of the
same reasons? I think you could substitute "people" for "women"
in your review and have the same truth value.
Jim is currently taking a course called "psych of women", and
comes home almost daily stunned by what women think is "normal"
for women. Apparently there are FAR more self-esteem problems
in women than in men. I suspect that women and men simply show
their lacks of self esteem differently, and that men are not
willing to admit it.
Perhaps the only way to get some info on this is to ask the
readers of this conference to answer a few questions. Feel
free to add more when you think of them:
1) How long have you had a weight problem? Is this from childhood
or did it start at some later point in your life?
2) How do you think your weight has affected your life?
Your relationships with people?
"" with the opposite sex (or same sex, if that's your preference)?
Your schooling
Your job
Anything else
3) How do *you* think of yourself?
4) How do you think *others* think of you?
5) What are your fears about staying overweight?
6) What are your fears about becoming slim?
7) Self analysis: why do you think *you* overeat? (do any
of the reasons from .0 apply?)
--Louise
(you can probably do fancy things with rep/extract or something
to get the questions in your edit buffer).
|
73.2 | First one in.... | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Wed Jul 01 1987 09:21 | 41 |
| <1) How long ...> since childhood
2) How do you think your weight has affected your life?
<Your relationships with people?> I chose people who seemed
less popular as friends, because I didn't think I
could "measure up" to the more popular prettier ones.
Actually, I'm glad I did this - they're great people.
<opposite sex > ditto - I started dating much later, also, and
put up with more garbage, due to lower self-esteem.
<Your schooling> I probably spent MORE energy on it, since I
depended on it for much of my self-worth.
<Your job> I ended up much less aggressive - put up with more.
<3) How do *you* think of yourself?> I still see a fat person in
the mirror, even after losing about 38 lbs. I still lack the
confidence I'd like to have. I still find myself telling myself
"that's ok, it's only me."
<4) How do you think *others* think of you?> I think they used to
think of me as fat and perhaps incompetent - now, I'm readjusting
very slowly.
<5) What are your fears about staying overweight?> That I'd never
change - that I'd stay stuck in the rut I was in - that I'd keep
having health problems, and they'd get worse.
<6) What are your fears about becoming slim?> Oh lordy, now I'll
have to do some of those things I've been putting off, like getting
the rest of my life in gear! Being fat has been such an excuse
for not doing things, or not being things. If I'm "normal" I don't
have an excuse!
<7) Self analysis: why do you think *you* overeat? (do any
of the reasons from .0 apply?) > because:
It tastes good
I'm bored or lonely
Everyone else is
it's easier than doing something else
Ok, there's one statistical point.....
|
73.3 | Reader poll | WINERY::ROCH | Leslie Roch | Wed Jul 01 1987 11:28 | 41 |
|
re:.1 Are women so different from men?
I once read an article that started off "To guarantee
slimness......be born a male." This article was, of course,
generalizing, but it went into the basic chemistry differences
between men and women. How and why it is easier for men to lose
weight or keep the weight off.
Now for my poll input:
1) How long? When I graduated from highschool I weighed 200lbs.
I am now 29.75 yrs old and weigh 140. All my childhood years
I was overweight. During my adult years I've gone up and down
like a yoyo.
2) How has it affected my life? I am shyer then I wish I was.
I have always been a sort of loner. Not real comfortable at
parties. I think it helped me advance at school and at work
for the same reason, I concentrated most of my efforts there.
But now I am concentrating more on exercise, still alone but
making me feel better about myself.
3) How do I think about myself? Still real negative, although I
know I have come along way. I still see that blimp in the
mirror.
4) How do others think about me? I feel they see me as just another
average individual. If I tell them I use to weigh 200lbs. they
are flabergasted. If they get to know me they see the insecurties.
5) What are my fears about staying overweight? I won't have any
fun. Won't live a normal life. The heavier I am the more of
a recluse I am.
6) What are my fears about being slim? None what so ever....
7) Why do I overeat? I love food, I also love a good dry Cabernet.
I actually don't overeat that much anymore, I have changed
my eating habits alot over the years. I just can't seem to
get rid of those thighs.
|
73.4 | not hiding behind my weight... | ARGUS::CORWIN | I don't care if I AM a lemming | Wed Jul 01 1987 12:41 | 58 |
| 1) How long have you had a weight problem?
I started gaining weight when I went away to college, and was out from
under the protective umbrella of my mother's low-calorie cooking. I
weighed 117 in high school. I was able to diet back down during summer
breaks, but then I stopped coming home for the summers. My major
accomplishments since then were:
high of 145 to a low of 124, which I kept for a short period of time, until
I had to find another job, and I stopped going to my health club and caring
about my weight.
high of 160 to a low of 145, which I attained when I was just separating
from my ex-husband, and held until I started the single life and went out
all the time for dinner and drinks, or stayed home and snacked.
high of 155 to a low of 117.5, which I attained last January after turning
my single life into a happy life with a special someone. I am currently
slightly above that low.
2) How do you think your weight has affected your life?
I don't think my weight has affected my life that much. I have low self-
esteem, but I don't think it has to do with my weight, or former weight.
I never had any trouble finding friends or dates when I looked in the right
places.
3) How do *you* think of yourself?
I still think of myself as weighing more than I'd like to. I don't think
I'm "fat" anymore, but am not happy with what the mirror shows me.
4) How do you think *others* think of you?
I think others perceive me as an "average" person, and certainly not as
one with a weight problem (unless they know my history :-))
5) What are your fears about staying overweight?
I want to be happy with the way I look. It makes me feel better to look
better. I want to be active without getting tired or having to maneuver
excess weight. I don't want to think "I have to lose weight" anymore!!!
6) What are your fears about becoming slim?
None. My fears are that I will stay slim this time...
7) Self analysis: why do you think *you* overeat?
I don't think .0 reasons apply to me. I overeat because I love the taste of
food. I eat when I'm not hungry because I'm bored, or because the food
is there, and because I love eating.
(I'm not feeling creative enough to add my own questions and answers now)
Jill
|
73.5 | Food ;-) for Thought | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Tue Jul 07 1987 15:12 | 65 |
| It's interesting to think about fat being a "feminist" issue. I
think the connection comes from the fact that many women feel judged
primarily by their appearance by an appearance-conscious society.
Certainly men who are appearance conscious can have inferiority
feelings when they don't conform to the ideal either, and I think
that many more men today are more appearance conscious than in the
past. But it has indeed struck me, over the years I've been dieting,
how many men I knew were dieting for health reasons (their MD's
read them the riot act, so to speak) and how many women I knew
(including yours truly) were _always_ dieting simply because we
didn't feel we looked right.
Considered from a feminist angle, it gets interesting. What is
the most frequently repeated message a young girl receives, other
than the one that her appearance is of paramount importance? I
feel it's that she should never accomplish anything on her own,
never be self-actualized; you know all about the stories of women
trained to live their lives through their husbands and children.
She is also trained, usually, that the opinions and approval of
others are of paramount importance. (I realize here that I'm
theorizing based on my own upbringing and experiences.)
What if a girl desires to rebel against this? How can she do so
and still be at least marginally accepted by society? In the past,
to become independent for real often resulted in very real ostracism
by society at large, and if one has been trained (as many are) that
the approval of others is tremendously important, removal of support
of others is a crushing blow. So a kind of passive agressive strategy
can take place; she can refuse to live up to the culture's ideal
for her appearance, _and_ use that as an excuse to put her life's
ambitions on hold (that one reply saying "my god, if I got thin
I couldn't put off getting my life together any longer" was really
telling). So she uses the culture in order to rebel against it.
And lets, perhaps, her fat express all her anger at being told she
must be passive, must always be in ideal condition, must never
displease.
This is a real genius of a solution that a subconscious could concoct,
if you ask me. Is it any wonder that the subconscious might panic
in such a person? Getting thin for this person may be wrecking a
life-long coping strategy for her! The fears about having to get
one's life in order and start accomplishing perhaps produce such
terror because deep down she knows the culture does not approve
of her, fat or thin, if she begins to act on her desires. And also,
the act of dieting and getting in shape can produce rage because
it represents not a nourishing act for her Self, but a bowing to
the culture's standards for her, a giving in to the appearance
standard.
Now I don't believe this dynamic operates powerfully in everyone.
But if one does have trouble losing weight because of self-sabotage
of one's own efforts, it can be useful to examine our hopes and
dreams in the context of the culture in which we were raised. It
can be quite sobering. For instance, I know that this dynamic has
operated in me--not strong enough to drive me to bulemia or anything,
but as a hidden undertow. Now, I also love the sensuous side of
eating, love to taste, touch, smell, feel. This has been my downfall
too. But would I have had an easier time becoming sensuously
interested in low-cal foods (spa cuisine can be very yummy and lovely)
if I weren't also laboring with the cultural dynamic? I kind of think
so . . . I think it can aggravate what might otherwise be a simple
problem.
Marcia
|
73.6 | Care to arm-wrestle, buddy? | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Wed Jul 08 1987 09:04 | 8 |
| So THAT'S why I'm successful this time! I'm not becoming society's
"norm" of a thin, beautiful in weak-femininity, clinging, dependant
woman - I'm doing bodybuilding and have 12" (unflexed) arms! And
that's not fat there. So now I've got the guys asking *me* to help
*them* move furniture!
--Louise
|
73.7 | Soft drink ads | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas DTN 381-1624 | Wed Sep 09 1987 09:07 | 17 |
| re .6:
I'm slated to move to ZK3 in November, if you would like to do some
furniture moving...:-).
Here's an observation I've made while watching TV recently that
probably fits as well here as anywhere else. Has anyone besides
me noticed that in soft drink commercials, the man is always drinking
the "regular" Coke, Pepsi, or whatever, and the woman always is drinking
the "diet" equivalent? (An example that comes to mind is the Pepsi
Free ads, where after a couple go on a wild car chase or airplane
ride, they take a break for a Pepsi Free. The man is *always* drinking
the regular Pepsi Free, and the woman *always* has a Diet Pepsi Free.)
Almost seems like they're implying that "women are always on diets".
Strikes me as being a bit chauvanistic.
|
73.8 | Yep, I noticed that! | WINERY::ROCH | Leslie Roch | Wed Sep 09 1987 11:04 | 9 |
| I think you're right, Paul. In fact I remember making a mental
note of that just the other night. But when I actually sat there
and thought about it, I know many more women who are dieting than
men. Also a previous note about the Weight Watchers meetings having
more women than men seems to say the same thing.
-leslie
|
73.9 | a goose and gander question | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Wed Sep 09 1987 11:16 | 5 |
| I think it's less socially unacceptable for a man to be "a bit chunkey"
than for a woman. Anyone else agree/disagree?
Marion
|
73.10 | | STAR::YANKOWSKAS | Paul Yankowskas DTN 381-1624 | Wed Sep 09 1987 12:17 | 14 |
| re .9:
Have to agree with you, no doubt about it.
A couple of replies to other notes reinforce this:
Neal Goldsmith's statement that he's now at the point where
some men consider him a linebacker rather than a blimp.
The story about the woman who hoped that if her first child
was a girl, she wouldn't inherit the family "thunder thighs".
|
73.11 | Size Rights! | SRFSUP::GOLDSMITH | Any major dude would tell ya... | Wed Sep 09 1987 14:26 | 11 |
|
Interesting point, the advertising world does treat mass-market
ads as men = none-diet, women = diet. But!, there is hope. In some
ads it's equal. Micheal J. Fox drinks diet pepsi, runs out and must
go out and get some for his cute vistor. Some other ads are now
beginning to play to both men and women in the same ad.
The nation knows we're here! Finally...
--- Neal
|
73.12 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Sun Sep 13 1987 11:21 | 19 |
| I think that is partly because women have been trained that what
they have to look forward to in life is choosing clothing, getting
attention for being attractive, and getting and "keeping" a man.
Men, on the other hand, have been out in the world doing things
for centuries. What they could do was not bound to how they looked,
although it always helped to fit whatever the popular stereotypes
of the time were.
In old novels, and old photographs, it has always seemed to me that
once women had a few children, they were not expected to "keep their
looks". In some of the books I read, one matronly woman would
occasionally comment to another that it was nice to be able to
"let yourself go" and "eat what you wanted". I suppose that was
a small compensation for all the endless giving women were required
to do!
Holly
|
73.13 | Endless Giving | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Mon Sep 14 1987 12:06 | 25 |
| Re: .12
Boy does that comment strike a chord (minor)! I think (no, I actually
feel it in my guts) that many women, in trying to conform to societal
ideal that says they should always be endlessly giving and nurturant
are, of course, starved. Figuratively and in some cases, literally.
For when you examine the Endless Giving Ethic closely, there doesn't
seem to be any room in there for a giver to get. A tendency to
gobble food, to binge, to sneak food is many a woman's subconscious
way of crying out for emotional, mental, spiritual, even physical
sustenance.
I have a friend, an obstetrician who is chronically overweight and
often eats compulsively. At a workshop we took together, when the
instructor asked us what our favorite foods were, she responded
somberly, "Whatever is on everyone else's plate." I didn't doubt
her for a minute, and I didn't think it was coincidental. This
woman friend has not had a complete night's sleep since she entered
her residency, she cannot go away on vacations without wondering
whether her patients will sue her if the doctors covering for her
do not handle things to their liking, patients call her at her home
at all hours (I've been there when it happens). I'd gobble, too.
Marcia
|
73.14 | Women and Men are Biologically Different | RSTS32::KASPER | Beverly T Kasper | Tue Nov 10 1987 11:02 | 64 |
| Hey, c'mon, ladies! Stop blaming it *all* on the subconscious. I agree,
a lot of the problem is in the way we're taught to view ourselves, but
there's also a *big* genetic aspect to it.
As a generalization, men tend to be more muscular than women, and women
tend to be fatter. This is pro-survival -- women have the babies! That
layer of fat could save your life and the babies if there happens to be
a lean year when you're pregnant. Men need the strength to do hard physical
labor to provide food, and don't need to worry about surviving pregnancy.
This is discussed in The Woman Doctor's Diet For Women. I don't recall
the author's name -- I'll post it tomorrow.
I'm not talking about politics -- this is evolution. Most overweight men
can lose weight much more easily than overweight women -- they're bodies
don't fight them for every pound, especially if they're converting it to
muscle. As women, we must *not* accept some idiot doctor telling us "I
lost 50 pounds by cutting out deserts; you can do it, too." The fact that
you're not losing doesn't mean you're cheating.
Now, on to the survey:
1) How long have you had a weight problem?
I was plump as a child; I was consistently 20 lbs overweight for as
long as I can remember. I don't think it was really a problem, though,
until I was 8 or so. We moved, and I was miserable.
2) How do you think your weight has affected your life?
This is a tough one. I can't imagine any other life! I was picked on
for being fat, but I was also picked on for being Jewish, and for being
friends with the wrong kid. I've had a bad self-image for a long time,
but I think the fat was an excuse, not the real reason.
The extra pounds have certainly affected my relationships. My husband
and I get along much better when we're both at a weight where we
can breath :-( . I get so miserable about being ugly, and he loses
patience with my moaning.
3) How do *you* think of yourself?
Depends on my mood. Lazy, certainly. I'm not a high-energy person.
Sometimes I'll look in the mirror, and be surprised at how pretty
I am. Other times, I catch the side view and cringe.
4) How do you think *others* think of you?
Not especially friendly, snooty, etc. Mostly because I'm afraid
to join converstaions, develop friendships, etc.
5) What are your fears about staying overweight?
Mostly health-related. My dad was diagnosed as pre-diabetic some
years back (his father died from diabetes), and lost 40 lbs. It
never developed. I *know* I'm headed down the same path if I don't
lose. My general health would, improve, too.
6) What are your fears about becoming slim?
The same "oh, no, my excuse is gone" that has been so well stated
elsewhere. Also, finding out that I *still* don't feel comfortable
around others (same thing, really).
7) Self analysis: why do you think *you* overeat?
Not sure, but it definitely comes from my head. The sight of food
can make me ill, but I'll keep shoving it in. I feel, sometimes,
as though I'm going to have screaming hysterics if I don't get fed
*NOW*. Sometimes it's sugar specific, sometimes protein will fix it.
|
73.15 | The Woman Doctor's Diet for Women | RSTS32::KASPER | Beverly T Kasper | Thu Nov 12 1987 09:45 | 27 |
| The author of "The Woman Doctor's Diet for Women" is Barbara Edelstein.
Anyone in MKO who'd like to borrow one is welcome to (for some reason
I have 2 copies) - send me mail at GROK::KASPER, or stop by MKO1-2/K4
(my partitions include that pole - you can't miss it!). Of course,
anyone who wants to say hi is welcome -- you don't have to borrow
anything! :-)
I'm not necessarily recommending her diet plan -- I've never really
tried it. I think it's too strict in some ways, too lax in others
(tuna in oil, chicken with skin, etc). On the other hand, some
of my biggest failures have been when I tried to "mix & match" diet
plans; they all have trade-offs! The details don't start until page
149, though, so there's a lot more to this book!
A few entries from the Table of Contents:
- Men & Women are different - Damn the difference!
- Why does a Woman Start Dieting
- The Universal Overweight Syndrome (discusses personality traits
common to overweight women, and how to deal with them).
- Dieting and our Bodies [including a sub-heading: Pregnancy (or,
keeping your wife pregnant is almost as good as keeping her fat)
- Dieting and our minds
- Men Who Help and Men Who Hinder Dieting Women
(If you have a spouse or Significant Other who sabotages, hand
them this chapter to read!!)
|
73.16 | sorry to burst you bubble, but | BUSY::MAXMIS11 | | Thu Nov 12 1987 10:20 | 41 |
| Dr. Edelstein! She was my "fat doctor" when I lived in Connecticut.
She advocated every fad diet that came down the pike - as long as
you would visit her once a week and would pay for a blood test,
a urinalysis and a consult fee. She did the protien spareing fast,
the HCG shots ( where you had to go every day and pay up front )
and pritty much anything else to get a fee. I felt that she had
very little reguard for her patients. Let me tell you my experience.
I was on the protien spareing fast diet. That means no food except
for this reched liquid that you had to take once or twice a dat.
You had to go to visit her once a week for a blood test and a
urinalysis. She charged $10 for the urinalysis, but you had to
bring your own cup. If you did not bring your own cup, you could
not have the test done, but you were charged for it anyhow. One
time I forgot my cup. I asked her if it weren't dangerous for me
to go an entire week without the test. She told me that the test
was only to see if you are "legal". I asked what she meant by legal.
She told me that you can tell by the PH of the urine if I had eaten
any food. All you do is get some litnis (sp?) paper sticks and
she could tell if you had come out of keytosis. In other words
I was paying $10 for her receptionist to dip a paper stick in my
urine (in my own cup, no less) to see if I had eaten. She would
also see you for about two minutes at which time she asked you how
you felt. The last time I saw her, I told her I was feeling very
week and light headed. She told me that was probably because I
was fasting (gee, why didn't I think of that!). After I left her
office, I was in a department store and I passed out. Went to the
emergency room, stayed in the hospital over night. After I got
out of the hospital, I called her. I told her what happened. She
told me that I should have told her I was feeling faint. I reminded
her what I had told her that very afternoon. She told me that I
must not have made myself clear. For thirty dollars a week ($10
for the urine test, $20 for her consultation) I got nothing but
a big health risk. When I found out she had written a book, I just
figured that it probably pays more than ripping off patients.
The last time I saw Dr Edelstein, she was probably 50 pounds
overweight. Who said their is no justice in this world!
Marion
|
73.17 | Thanks for the info | RSTS32::KASPER | Calm Down! It's Only 1's and 0's! | Fri Nov 13 1987 07:04 | 9 |
| Gak! She does talk about fad diets; some of them she's very
disparaging about, others she says "well, it didn't seem to hurt
anything." While she sounds like a definite avoidance item for
consultation, I still think the book has some well-written chapters.
I could understand your inclination not to put any more money inher
pocket, though!
|
73.18 | It's a GREAT book - read it! | LAIDBK::SHERRICK | Molly :^) | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:19 | 19 |
| My experience of the book Fat is a Feminist Issue, after reading
it 8 years ago, led to a slow long term weight loss which has brought
me down to 140-145 lbs from a high at that time of 215 (I am 5'7").
The book opened up new ways of thinking for me, and helped me take
a look at my "problem" from a different perspective. It helped
to get me mentally un-stuck.
It seems to me that many of the concept covered by the author (Susie
Orbach) can be applied to men with weight problems as well. The
point of the idea of this being a feminist issue is just that women
tend to be pre-disposed socially to turning to food, it is an
acceptable problem. Often women bury some unacceptable or painful
problem under the acceptable one - fat. Of course men do this too,
but perhaps not as commonly.
I would highly recommend this book to EVERYONE. It changed my life
- or should I say it helped me change my life.
Molly S.
|
73.20 | therapy group | LYRIC::QUIRIY | Christine | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:57 | 39 |
|
Also posted in MOMCAT::WOMANNOTES-V3.
From the brochure:
Counseling Associates
23 East Main St.
Westboro, MA 01581
Compulsive Eating is a FEMINIST ISSUE?
YOU BET IT IS!
Ongoing Group for Compulsive Eaters
It's no accident that most people who alternately binge and starve
themselves are women...
This group is for women willing to consider the idea that their
eating habits and their feelings about their bodies have a whole lot
to do with the ideas they've been "fed" about how women are supposed
to be in our society.
We'll share experiences, learn how to meditate and use visualization
techniques to discover deep feelings about eating, do some writing
exercises to help get in touch with the true woman within, and work
on liberating her from compulsive eating.
The group will meet on Thursdays, from 7:15-8:15 p.m., beginning in
October 1990. Screening interviews begin now.
Insurance accepted/Sliding scale from $25-$45 per week.
Sherry Zitter, LicSW, is a holistic, heart-centered therapist who
specializes in working with women with eating disorders.
For more information, please call Sherry at: (508) 366-8576 or
(617) 332-7091.
Counseling Associates are: Jean Agster, Phyllis Dexter, Meryl Wolper,
and Sherry Zitter.
|