T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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104.1 | Possible reasons behind same | FDCV03::EDWARDS | | Mon Nov 03 1986 16:02 | 19 |
|
The reading I've done on the subject describes bulemia and anorexia
as happening to woman who are rejecting the acceptance of their
womanhood. The individual does not want to be intimate with
a man at a particular point in her life. Rather than face being
in a physical relationship, they are kept 'safe' by remaining
skinny and virtually *UNATTRACTIVE* to men. This made sense to
me at the time, considering how many young women this happens to.
I had a girlfriend who was anorexic and it happened at a time when
she was engaged to a person she did not end up marrying. For her,
there was a definite pay-off in that the guy eventually went away.
She also was pretty self-absorbed in this time, which also gave
the guy signals about how she was going to behave if they should
tie the knot. She ended up marrying someone else about 10 years
later, once she was better able to handle a physical relationship.
Just some thoughts on the matter and I'm interested in other's thoughts
and ideas....Regards, Christy
|
104.2 | anorexic friend | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | vote NO on #1 - Pro-Choice | Tue Nov 04 1986 11:32 | 18 |
| I don't know very much about those diseases either, but I had a friend
who was anorexic. I don't think she was trying to make herself
unnattractive, but the opposite. This was in the days when Twiggy was
popular, and there was a lot of pressure on girls to be thin and look
good. The problem (I think) was that she had a low self esteem which
distorted her perception of herself. She thought she looked fat even
though she only weighed ninety pounds. She also contemplated suicide
at that time, and appealed to the minister of my church for help. I
think that the acceptance she got from the church helped her self-esteem,
and she even gained weight (but she's still thin).
Anyways, the point I'm trying to make is that Anorexia and Bolemia
can be caused by a poor self-image as well as the pressure that society
puts on women (fat men are ok, fat women aren't). And off the topic,
my friend went to Oral Roberts' college and got kicked out because she
caught pnemunia (it must be some sin in you that caused your sickness!!).
...Karen
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104.3 | Choke... | ELMO::JESSOP | I am created Shiva... | Tue Nov 04 1986 12:12 | 15 |
|
There could be other reasons for Anorexia. For instance,
a long time ago (to me) When I was in grade school I choked on
something. After that, for almost a whole summer I wouldn't eat.
I wouldn't even swallow my own spit. I ended up inthe hospital
and then finally My parents took me to a hypnotist, and he convinced
me (via hypnosis) that I was OK, and that I could eat without worry.
So now I'm 6' and 175 pounds, fairly healthy! Although, I'll admit
that I STILL dislike eating, unless I'm alone and/or have something
else on my mind. Drinking and soft liquidy foods I can handle without
even thinking about it, sometimes meat bothers me. It's weird.
I KNOW I'll be OK, but it still lingers in my mind...
Mike
|
104.4 | Nervous over guys | TIGEMS::SCHELBERG | | Tue Nov 04 1986 12:25 | 16 |
| I don't know much about the diseases either but I remember when
I was fifteen and was in the dating scene. I was too nervous to
eat anything because I was afraid I throw up! So to avoid throwing
up I stopped eating. I mean I ate with my parents and my friends
but I would never eat around a date.....strange huh? I just was
too nervous and felt I guess alot of pressure. I weighed about
105 pounds all through high school and I was 5'7. I'm still 5'7
but I weigh 125 pounds now.....yeah food caught up to me finally.
I guess being scared of "will he like me" "what should I do" "how
should I act" was too much on my mind.....I would definitely agree
teenagers are under alot of pressure and that's probably why they
don't eat - either they feel they are "too fat" when they are not
or just being nervous about a situation.....
bs
|
104.5 | RESOURCE FOR MORE INFORMATION | NIMBUS::DOPART | | Tue Nov 04 1986 14:25 | 7 |
| American Health Magazine (July or August 86) used eating
disorders as the feature of the month. They did it justice and
devoted many pages to explanations of why this occurs, when it
occurs and how to cope with it. It was enlightening and very
worthwhile reading.
|
104.6 | Control | VAXUUM::DYER | Pat Robertson for Ayatollah! | Wed Nov 05 1986 06:19 | 11 |
| A big element of these eating disorders is control. The women suffering
from these disorders usually don't have sufficient control of their
lives.
The disorders allow these women to control their bodies to the desired
(as defined by society) thinness.
Also, when body fat is reduced to a certain level, attendant hormones
are also reduced, and menstruation stops. This is another thing that
the sufferer can now control.
<_Jym_>
|
104.7 | anorexic runner | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Nov 05 1986 12:12 | 7 |
| One of my cousins, who is a year older than I am, is anorexic, but
I haven't discussed it with her (in fact, I haven't seen her in
a very long time, since she lives in California and I live in
Massachusetts). She also runs a lot (not marathons, but fairly
long distances). I believe that she is in counseling now.
/Charlotte
|
104.8 | the more cushion... | CSC32::KOLBE | Liesl-Colo Spgs- DTN 522-5681 | Wed Nov 05 1986 17:23 | 8 |
| I found the comment 'fat men are OK but fat women are not" very
interesting. I'm in a non-verbal comm class. Our study of how body
types affect others perceptions showed that men *like* average to
slightly plump women BETTER than thin ones! The desire to be thin
which our culture pushes actually runs contrary to what people really
like. There was another idea/theory that women dress for the reaction
of other women more than for men. Food for thought, if you'll pardon
the pun. :-) Liesl
|
104.9 | so where do the skinny models come from? | DINER::SHUBIN | Go ahead - make my lunch! | Thu Nov 06 1986 10:21 | 14 |
| > showed that men *like* average to
> slightly plump women BETTER than thin ones!
That may well be true, but why do the advertising people keep pushing the
image of thin-is-beautiful? They spend all that money figuring out what we
"want" so they can sell stuff. It'd be nice to find that they're wrong!
> There was another idea/theory that women dress for the reaction
> of other women more than for men.
That may be because men don't react much to women's dress (not seriously,
anyway).
-- hs
|
104.10 | Built for Comfort, Not Speed. | CELICA::QUIRIY | Christine | Thu Nov 06 1986 12:46 | 34 |
|
I'm sure I have an eating disorder, of sorts. Not life threatening, I
think, and mostly under control. I only have to contend with cellulite
in the lower quadrants. My cholesterol levels are OK.
One of my favorite buttons carries the slogan "Eat to Forget". I'm not
sure what it means, but I like it.
At 17 (or was it 16?), I idolized Twiggy's knobby knees. When I was 18
and working at my first full-time job as a file clerk in a collection law
firm, a co-worker of mine -- a skeletally thin, "far-out" young woman from
Califonia named Zoe, who drove a souped up chrome-yellow VW Beetle with a
great stereo system -- left work one day to go to the hospital and never
came back. She was rumored to have starved herself to death.
Throughout most of her adult life, my mother weighed 97 pounds -- this
shot up to a horrifying 120 lbs. when pregnant. Of course, this was due
to the fact that she had an extremely small opening from the stomach to
the small intestine, of which she was not aware till she had to have most
of her stomach removed. (Well, she is a small-boned woman, under 5 feet
tall.) I was thin till I left home at 18 and discovered Kraft macaroni
and cheese (the jumbo size, with the can of processed cheese sauce).
I almost never eat because I'm hungry. Eating is most satisfactory when
I feel the need for instant gratification -- usually if I'm bored or
depressed. I've noticed that anxiety kills my appetite, so every crisis
carries a hidden blessing, a bonus of -5. Illness, too, carries this
"blessing". The last time I drank too much at a party, I remember
thinking after vomiting, 'Oh, good. I enjoyed eating it and now I don't
have to pay for the calories.'
I'm on a diet.
CQ
|
104.11 | Why is it gender specific? | ATFAB::REDDEN | The vision is becoming clearer | Mon Nov 10 1986 20:11 | 3 |
| Is the concensus that the bias toward women in eating disorders
a cultural or biological phenomena?
|
104.12 | I think it is probably cultural | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Nov 11 1986 16:34 | 6 |
| I always figured that it was a cultural thing, but I don't think
anyone really knows for sure. As I intimated in my earlier reply,
it's not the sort of thing I would ask my cousin, or anyone else
burdened with such a problem.
/Charlotte
|
104.13 | {RE .11} | VAXUUM::DYER | The Shaw Sleeps in Lee Harvey's Grave | Thu Nov 13 1986 12:41 | 3 |
| {RE .11} - Cultural, since the incidence of these disorders has not
remained steady through time or across cultures.
<_Jym_>
|
104.14 | and now a lighter note | TAHOE::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Nov 13 1986 20:34 | 15 |
| Well in reply to an earlier note (why all the skinny models), I'll come
out of the closet. I find plump women infinitely more attractive than
"skinny" women, and I find plump men, well let's just say
"unattractive". I've never understood why our culture prizes the
"emaciated" look, and why "Reubenesque" is supposed to be a polite
euphemism for "fat". I *like* Reubens' women. I *like* Renoir's
women. In fact, I have a postcard of Renoir's "Odalisque" that I
keep around for inspiration.
More seriously though, I have two things to recommend. One, if you
think you are overweight, and can't seem to do anything about it,
is the book "Diets Don't Work". The second, if you are plump, is
a magazine called "Big Beautiful Woman", no skinny models here!
-- Charles
|
104.15 | more books on the subject | MTV::HENDRICKS | Holly Hendricks | Fri Nov 14 1986 08:56 | 4 |
| Other books which address the topic are Fat is a Feminist Issue (Susie
Orbach) and Such a Pretty Face, don't remember the author. Such a Pretty
Face is especially interesting because it addresses a lot of the issues
around cultural negation of fat people, especially women.
|
104.16 | one more book | CARLIN::LEMAIRE | Sarah Hosmer Lemaire | Thu Nov 20 1986 14:55 | 10 |
| Read "Starving for Attention" by Cherry Boone O'Neill (daughter
of Pat Boone). It's a wonderfully honest book about someone who
suffered from both bulemia and anorexia and lived to tell about
it and counsel others. It's out in paperback. She got married
in the middle of her 7 years (or so) with the disease and her therapy
involved her husband totally. I've read this book several times
and think it and the author are wonderful.
SHL
|
104.17 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Fri Nov 21 1986 16:45 | 6 |
|
Re .8, gee, I've been naturally thin all my life. Maybe I should
stuff myself and get fat and I'd have better luck with men.
Lorna
|
104.18 | To shed more insight... | VAXRT::CANNOY | The more you love, the more you can. | Fri Nov 28 1986 22:29 | 37 |
| I suffered mildly from bulemia while in college and shortly afterward.
It is definitely an unpleasant experience to dislike one's self
so much that the only cycle you can see is to eat to give yourself
some gratification and then to starve or purge in retaliatory self
hatred so that others might like you.
When binging, I would hate myself for my weakness, for giving in to the
urge to eat to try to satisfy some part of myself, some part over which
I *did* have some control. Then I would starve for several days, to
try to keep anyone else from knowing what I did, hating myself then,
too, for not having enough self respect be myself.
My self image was so dependent on the opinion of others that I became
driven to be liked, but didn't believe it when someone liked me!
Then I would enter the cycle again: binge, starve, hate myself.
I have trouble pinpointing exactly what broke the cycle--but slowly
I began to appreciate myself and to realize that people weren't
lying when they said they like me. Slowly, I got out of the behavior
patterns which had been so self-reinforcing.
However, I still fight against these feelings. When I'm depressed,
the first thing I want to do is eat. (I am trying to train this
out by going shopping instead, but I'm not sure eating isn't a better
alternative ;-). You should see some of my credit card balances.)
I still find eating to be a very satisfying thing to do, but now
I try to do it because I *enjoy* it, not because I hate myself.
A very good book to read on the subject is _The_Obsession_ by Kim
Chernin, sub-titled _Reflections_on_the_Tyranny_of_Slenderness_.
This book might be considered by some to be a radical feminist's
view of why society forces women into slenderness. It sheds some
very interesting insights into the nature of food and eating and
being female.
Tamzen
|
104.19 | Fat woman on a rickety soap-box | LYMPH::MUNSON | | Wed Dec 17 1986 11:05 | 37 |
|
I've had trouble with overeating since I was about 10. It seems
to me to be the flip side of the anorexia/bulemia illness. It has
to have some connection with being female judging from the people
who are troubled by the problem. Go to any Overeaters Anonymous
meeting, and you'll find a large circle of women with an occasional
man. That's not to say that there aren't a lot of fat men, but
men are not called upon to obsess about their weight the way that
women are.
For example: Any supermarket checkout line has at least 3 magazines
aimed at women. Most of these magazines carry a double message.
The cover has pictures of rich, fattening foods and at least one
title of the "lose up to 25 pounds in 10 days" type. All the ads
have borderline anorexics in them, whether they advertise clothing,
perfume, or laundry detergent. Magazines aimed at men tend to stress
prestige (whether monetary, sexual, or atheletic.) The men are
usually of meduim build (as opposed to fat), and only rarely are they
obviously gaunt. The men's magazines are also not for sale at
supermarket checkout stands.
So what's the point? The point is that it is considered appropriate
for women to spend large amounts of their time and effort on conforming
to an elusive standard of "beauty" and that to fail to achieve that
standard is to be a Failure.
To me, the most important part of the women's movement has to do
with the freedom to figure out what it means to "be yourself", and
to be it, tall, short, fat, skinny, ambitious, career-oriented,
family-oriented, spiritual, areligious, ridiculous, serious, or an
ever-changing combination. In short, what I want from life is
the right to be human, and to have my humanity recognized as my
most important attribute.
I'll get off the soap-box now, but thanks for listening.
Joanne
|
104.20 | It's not changing | RSTS32::TABER | If you can't bite, don't bark! | Wed Dec 17 1986 13:07 | 35 |
| Oh, I happened upon something that disturbed me yesterday. On this
very topic.
I happened to pick up a couple of children's behavior books, some
titled Me and My New Mom, Why Can't I, and one called Don't Call Me
Fatso.
An 8 year old who likes peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, chocolate
milk, and cookies for lunch who has a weight problem has become the
butt of some cruel boys' jokes at school. She goes home and tells her
father about it and he says "Well, we could BOTH stand to lose some
weight..." and then, of course, Mommo joins in and they're one big,
happy, dieting family.
After a failure at jumping off the diving board at school, she submits
to the temptation of 3 candy bars, but then climbs right back on the wagon.
Weighed at school next, she's lost 5 pounds....
Now, on the surface, I thought," Not a bad book. Deals with a reality
of life, shows the kid suffering a failure, but she succeeds. It's
positive and upbeat..."
And then my friend says, "Yeah, but the message is STILL that everyone
has to be thin to be liked!"
She went on to say that the solution wasn't to accept being fat, but to
change herself....
Suddenly, I felt this overwhelming feeling of sadness that we;re STILL
teaching our kids that to be happy, you must be thin....
*sigh* I'm not thin, never have been, never will be, and I'm one
contented Bugsy...
|
104.22 | The Goal's The Thing | VAXUUM::DYER | Spot the Difference | Mon Jan 05 1987 01:39 | 9 |
| {RE .20} - From the sound of the child's diet, I wonder if the message is "be
thin" or "eat right?" If the book just talked about losing weight, that's
unfortunate. If the book talked about being healthy, that's better.
It does sound like the book is saying "fat is unpopular," which isn't good.
It would be best if the book had the child losing weight because she wanted
to - perhaps because she wants to swim better. Or would that be (*gasp!*)
promoting "secular humanism?" :-)
<_Jym_>
|
104.23 | exit | MSTIME::RABKE | | Wed Jan 07 1987 15:14 | 47 |
|
Excuse me if I am out of sync, repetitive, or just all wet but I
haven't read this entire note. I do have something to say on the
topic of being overweight and eating disorders. I haven't thought
alot about what I'm going to say but will just speak what's in my
heart.
I have always been fat. I don't think I would call myself fat right
now but do have some extra weight (more than 10 lbs.). In the last
1 1/2 year, I have lost 120+ pounds, having weighed about 250 at
my top weight.
Fat people in this society are very much discriminated against,
particularly females. I have on several occasions asked people
of non-white ethnic races (blacks, Mexicans, orientals) if they
felt they were discriminated against more for being non-white, fat,
or female (if they were female, of course). The majority response
was they were descriminated against more often for being fat.
Females are especially vulnerable because it is their "role" to
prepare food & generally be more concerned with the nourishment
of the family. Therefore, they are around food more often & have
more opportunity for temptation. Unfortunately, they gain weight
easier than most men (more body fat). But on the other hand, they
must look slim (along w/ a whole host of other musts) to be attractive
and they are judged more on appearance than a man. Fat Is A Feminist
Issue is a very good book to read.
This society has created an almost universal acceptance of making
fun of fat people. Jokes, comments, etc. on being fat are more
acceptable than "polish" jokes. But at the same time, the message
is eat but don't get fat. Enter bulimia, the "ideal" solution.
I went thru several periods of bulimia & felt like I was a wino
lying in the gutter. That was the bottom of the barrel for me.
I'm not sure why but one thing I remembering thinking at that point
was that everyone in the world could handle food so why couldn't
I handle such a simple thing as food.
Even though I am much lighter & have established better eating/exercise
habits I still have a struggle. I'll never arrest my eating disorder
because it doesn't depend on how much I weigh.
handle
|
104.24 | | COGVAX::LEEDBERG | | Sun Jan 11 1987 13:11 | 14 |
|
re: -1
I have been able to control my weight most of my life. I love to
eat and have at times had stomach problems and could not eat. So
I value the fact that today I can eat pizza and fried foods - but
not all the time. I hope that I never have to pay close attention
to the food or the amount that I eat ever again. This is all to
say that I am in awe of anyone who can do it without having the
pain to remind them to watch what they eat.
_peggy
|
104.25 | More books on eating disorders | RTVAX::CANNOY | Souls merge when the time is right. | Mon Jan 19 1987 16:53 | 159 |
|
A friend mailed me the following reviews from the USENET. I thought
they were worth posting here.
Newsgroups: soc.women,rec.arts.books
Subject: Bibliography on Eating Disorders/Weight Issues
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 13 Jan 87 12:20:07 GMT
Sender: [email protected]
Reply-To: [email protected] (Controls Wizard)
Distribution: net
Organization: University of California, Berkeley
Lines: 98
Xref: lpi soc.women:1601 rec.arts.books:103
I've cited many of these in my postings but I thought it might be
useful to put them all together in one list.
Orbach, Fat is a Feminist Issue
Fat is a Feminist Issue, Vol II
The first is the classic work on the subject. I found
reading it really revolutionized my thinking. The second is a workbook
to help you put some of her ideas into action.
Chernin, The Obsession
The Hungry Self
The first of these is better written. It has an
excellent chapter on health issues. She also discusses anorexia and
bulimia.
Roth, Feeding the Hungry Heart
Breaking Free from Compulsive Eating
Anyone who has ever ordered a large pizza with 3 cokes
so "the delivery boy won't know I'm eating it myself" will appreciate
the first of these. The second is more methodological but still fairly
anecdotal. These are also highly recommended for people who don't suffer
from eating disorders but are trying to understand the experience of
compulsive eating. There's a wonderful mixture of pain and humor (how to
overeat sneakily is a favorite anecdotal subject and one close to my heart.
All of the roommates who saw me eating broiled fish and veggies for dinner
and didn't understand that it was the Pepperidge Farm Mint Milano cookies
I ate in my bedroom with the door closed and locked that were making me
stay fat should have read this the first of these two.)
Bruch, The Golden Cage
This is the classic work on anorexia. It is somewhat outdated
but still interesting. If you read it, I suggest reading Chernin's
books to put it into perspective.
Atwood, Lady Oracle
The Edible Woman
Nobody writes woman oriented fiction as well as Ms. Atwood.
These are highly recommended even without their eating disorder specific
content. Every woman who was fat as a child/adolescent will relate to
Joan in Lady Oracle. The Edible Woman is symbolically involved with
anorexia. In both novels the events turn bizarre. These books should be
very easy to obtain now that Atwood's latest (The Handmaid's Tale) is
a big (and well earned) success.
(author unknown), Diets Don't Work
This workbook is somewhat annoying in tone but is still
fairly useful. (My objections were to writing style, not really to
content). This is also the only book on the list that is not
primarily woman oriented.
Baker, The Beauty Trap
This book was written when Nancy Baker realized that she was
obsessed with her appearance, not with what she had to say, while
appearing on talk shows to promite earlier books. The chapter on
history is frightening. As you might guess from the title, the subject
is more general than weight issues but they are considered.
Millman (not sure if author's name is correct), Such a Pretty Face
This is another book describing the problem not the
solution. Several approaches to weight management (or lack thereof)
are discussed - including Overeater's Anonymous, summer camps for fat
teenagers and NAAFA. An excellent overview of what the experience of
fat women in America is like and what's wrong with the proposed solutions.
The photographs are particularly good.
Small, "A Song for the Roly Poly People"
This song is on her album "Mothers,Daughters,Wives". It
includes such lines as "Weight Watchers is owned by Heinz."
(author unknown), Making it Big
Primarily a beauty manual for fat women but also has
chapters on practical issues (sexual positions, furniture, etc.)
Big Beautiful Woman
This is a fashion magazine for women who wear size 16
or over. If you think fat women can't be attractive, this magazine
will show you how wrong you are.
Schwartz, Never Satisfied: A History of Dieting
Mr. Schwartz is a dancer who got interested in the
obsession dancers have with dieting. I haven't read his book yet but it
sounds interesting.
I would welcome any additions/corrections to this list.
Miriam Nadel
From: [email protected] (Moira Mallison )
Newsgroups: soc.women,rec.arts.books
Subject: Re: Bibliography on Eating Disorders/Weight Issues
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 14 Jan 87 20:05:26 GMT
References: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected] (Moira Mallison )
Organization: Tektronix, Inc., Beaverton, OR.
Lines: 32
Xref: lpi soc.women:1633 rec.arts.books:116
In article <[email protected]> [email protected] (Controls Wizard) writes:
>(author unknown), Diets Don't Work
>
> This workbook is somewhat annoying in tone but is still
>fairly useful. (My objections were to writing style, not really to
>content). This is also the only book on the list that is not
>primarily woman oriented.
The author's name is Bob Schwartz. I also participated in seminars
(no longer offered). Application of these methods have moved me
a long way toward letting go of my excess weight, and even further
toward self-acceptance.
Bryan, Nancy Thin Is A State of Mind
Talks about stress and the role it plays in compulsive overeating.
Learning to relax is of primary importance in any weight release
program.
Wardell, Judy Thin Within
Another workbook, not unlike Diets Don't Work. Not surprising,
since Schwartz and Wardell have similar roots in the human
potential movement in the Bay Area. The suggested structure
is to read (and apply) a chapter/day for 30 days. I read it
all in one day last summer when I was sick, and mostly to get
somebody off my back :-) about it.
moiram
|