A Shameful Secret: Men and Eating Disorders
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Eating disorders tend to be considered "women's disorders." In our society, men are not allowed to show the weakness of having mental health disorders, much less suffer from eating disorders. Since men and eating disorders is a problem, they virtually always keep this a painful secret. According to the National Association of Anorexia and Associated Disorders, men comprise about one million Americans who suffer from eating disorders.
When the issue of men and eating disorders comes up, and the men do see their doctors for help, physicians will take a thorough medical history. They usually discover that the disorder began to emerge as teen-agers. An adolescent peer group can be very emotionally harsh; "fat boys" are made fun of and isolated from others. The social pressure to be thin is overwhelming among today's teens.
Men and eating disorders recount both anorexic and bulimic behavior as adolescents. In addition to starving themselves, they play sports and exercise excessively just as teen-age girls and grown women do. "Boys don't get fat" unenlightened pediatricians tell mothers. "He's just got some baby fat that will go away on its own." But it doesn't, and problem eating isn't supposed to happen in men.
Do Men and Eating Disorders Have the Same Symptoms as Women?
Yes, but with one very important difference. People of either gender can develop an eating disorder, and they keep their eating behavior secret. Men and eating disorders is a subject which sort of ties that knot of secrecy even tighter. As adults, they are almost always morbidly obese. They don't socialize with others, especially women. They rarely date or get married.
They know that fat men are even less tolerated in our society than fat women. Men and eating disorders tend to spend their time alone, either starving themselves (anorexia) or binge-eating and then purging by vomiting (bulimia). Just as women are, men are obsessed with calorie counting and unhealthy diets to lose weight. Through anorexic and bulimic behavior, men with eating disorders use food, or the lack of it, to cover feelings of guilt and shame, loneliness, anger, and fear. But men aren't supposed to feel these things! Men must be aggressive, self-confident and desired by women.
Similar to women, men with eating disorders may have suffered physical or sexual abuse as children. They may have been neglectfully denied food due to either poverty or because they were overweight as children. Men with eating disorders learn at an early age that one sure-fire way of preventing sexual abuse is to make themselves as unattractive and undesirable as they can. If they're skin and bones or obese, they figure, their abuser will move on to another victim.
Eating disorders, among either gender, isn't a matter of vanity; wanting to fit into a smaller pair of jeans. In fact, eating disorders don't really have anything to do with food! What drives men with eating disorders is a need to be in control of something, anything. They don't do well expressing emotions, are perfectionists, and don't allow themselves to be less than perfect and have a deeply seated self-loathing. The one thing men can always control is the amount of food they allow themselves to eat. The bathroom scale becomes their mortal enemy.
Parents, teachers, physicians and coaches must understand that men develop eating disorders as women do; they're just better at hiding it until cardiac arrest brings them to the attention of medical personnel, or they die from a disorder that could have been avoided.
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