Article

***The Destructive Culture of Dieting

Topic: Eating DisordersBy Rebecca CooperPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 2,048 legacy views

Legacy rating: 5/5 from 1 archived votes

Weight problems and food addictions have become a national epidemic. At any given time, twenty five million Americans are seriously dieting. Only 1 out of every 200 dieters lose their weight and keep it off for a year or more. Although there are more diet programs and weight loss products than any other time in history, recent studies show that roughly sixty percent of adult Americans are overweight and one third are obese.

America’s obsession and preoccupation with food and body image is often a precursor to the development of an eating disorder. Statistics show that thirty-five percent of normal dieters progress into an eating disorder. Approximately eight million people in America have an eating disorder and eighty-six percent started by age twenty.

Why Diets Don’t Work
When you diet, you set yourself up to overeat because you subconsciously rebel over restricting your food. You are discounting your appetite, your inte
al guidance system. You no longer eat when you are hungry or stop when you are full. You let the exte
al source, the diet, determine when, what, and how much to eat. You may no longer know what it feels like to be hungry or full.
Due to the food restrictions of the diet, your metabolism slows down. Your body thinks it is experiencing a famine; it is in starvation alert mode and is trying to store every calorie. Then you “slip” or eat normally. Your body then stores as much fat as it can because it thinks there may be another famine just around the corner. The result is that you gain weight with a vengeance, faster than before dieting.

The Truth about Disordered Eating
Disordered eating is using food, or the thoughts of food, weight, diet, or body image as a way to stuff down feelings. It is using food to escape thoughts, feelings, and emotions. It provides something to focus on rather than the inte
al discomfort. It is used as a way to relieve stress. After awhile it becomes a habit. We feel the discomfort and immediately reach for the food.

It can become an addiction. Many speak of an uncontrollable urge to eat. They can’t eat just one dessert, piece of bread, or fast food. They eat even when they know they are not hungry or they are trying to lose weight. They feel like they are hard-wired to eat.

The Many Faces of Eating Disorders
Eating disorders include a spectrum of manifestations and behaviors. Many people with eating disorders experiment with a wide variety of behaviors in order to control their weight. These behaviors may include compensatory methods such as yo-yo dieting, restricting, bingeing, purging, over-exercising, or abusing diet pills or laxatives.
Once in the addiction or disorder, it takes on a life of its own. You always think tomorrow will be different. “I’ll get control over this when I set my mind to it, or when I get to my ideal weight. As soon as I go on the next diet I’ll be able to stop this obsession.” It may take many years of trying to control this. All the while you are getting more and more entrenched in the eating disorder. The longer you are in disordered eating, the less chance for full recovery.

The Road to Recovery
With treatment sixty percent of people suffering from an eating disorder do recover. They are not consumed with thoughts of food, weight, and body size. They participate in life and have healthy relationships. Eating disorder recovery requires a team approach consisting of a physician, dietitian, therapist, and sometimes psychiatric medication.

Without treatment, twenty percent of people with eating disorders die, due to the complications or direct results of the disorder. It is the most lethal mental health diagnosis.

The other twenty percent of eating disorder clients spend their life in and out of treatment centers, hospitals, and therapists' offices. They live a life of quiet desperation. Sometimes their immediate family may not even know of their suffering. The shame and secretiveness of the disorder destroys their self-esteem. They never find a fulfilling, purposeful life. They live in bondage to their eating disorder.

It usually takes five to seven years to recover from an eating disorder. Unlike recovery from alcohol or drugs, food cannot be omitted from our life. Most eating disorder recovery includes setbacks into bingeing, restricting, over-exercising, and obsessively thinking about food, weight, and body size. Most will notice longer periods of remission between episodes until they reach a point where the recovery takes hold.

The best way to avoid all this pain and suffering is to get help before yo-yo dieting or emotional eating turns into an eating disorder.

Article author

About the Author

Rebecca Cooper, LMFT, LPCC, CEDS is the founder of Rebecca’s House Eating Disorder Treatment Programs™ and the author of Diets Don’t Work®, a structured program for disordered eating. She is an inte
ational speaker/lecturer and author of several published articles and has appeared on television and radio. You can get more information by calling 800-711-2062 or visit www.rebeccashouse.org.
For speaking engagements see www.rebeccacooper.com.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

As we age, the appearance of wrinkles and fine lines becomes an inevitable part of our lives. While these signs of aging are natural, many individuals seek ways to reduce their visibility and regain a youthful appearance. One popular treatment option that has gained immense popularity is Botox. In this blog post, we will explore the different aspects of Botox for wrinkles, including treatment options and effectiveness. Understanding Botox Botox , short for Botulinum Toxin, is

July 20, 2023

Website

Eating Disorder Solutions is a co-occurring eating disorder treatment center specializing in individualized carernAnorexia: https://eatingdisordersolutions.com/anorexia-treatment/rnBulimia: https://eatingdisordersolutions.com/anorexia-treatment/rnAnd more! rn

July 22, 2022

Article

QuickBooks Premier Phone ☎️☎️☎️ ☎️ "Number" is a 5-star rated Accountant on Bark, serving New York City and surrounding areas. ... QuickBooks Premier Support +1-808-900-3847 Number. QuickBooks Enterprise is to help you track your expensesrnDirectly call +1(855)475-2895 our QuickBooks Premier Support Phone Number and get your queries fixed simultaneously from our competent QB technicians with accurate result-intended answers. They are available 24*7 in your ser

May 11, 2022

Article

Hyperacidity is not that new to everyone … rnFeeling of burning in the stomach, sourness in the throat, headache or heaviness, feeling of food in the stomach as well as lying down, feeling of panic – all these symptoms are due to acidity.rnWe all suffer from bile at some point in our lives, some people suffer from bile constantly and some people have a habit of it and some people see us taking pills for bile constantly, and they think this is normal. But do you know that

April 14, 2021