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Last week a distant 16-year-old female relation fresh out of her maths GCSE introduced herself and said, “You did that size zero programme, didn’t you?” Yes, I said, unsure of what was coming next. Since a documentary in which I explored the effects on my mind and body of sticking to some of the more ludicrous diets women subject themselves to in order to keep their body weight well below normal, I have got used to being accosted by women and girls fascinated by my experience.
The 16-year-old was exceptional in that she was angry. “Well, I think you’re really setting a bad example, because when I watched that programme, I thought I can do that, and . . .” she delved into her school bag and scuffled the pages of her diary. “See, it says, ‘ it starts here’,” she flicked the pages forward, indicating the insanely short period she had set to lose a stone or more in weight. “And then it was meant to end here” – she showed me a page that said, “ it ends!”
I was horrified that she had taken my own swift and irresponsible weight loss as inspiration, despite the fact that my experience had included an ensuing swift gain in weight and a period of bingeing and purging which, had it gone on, would have been considered by any doctor as full-blown bulimia.
Desperately repeating again and again to her that it was a dreadful experience, which left my eating habits in a mess for months afterwards, she said, “But I hate my body.” We talked some more, and in as many different ways as possible I said, “Eat normally, love yourself, and talk to someone about how you feel. And whatever you do, do not diet.”
Depressed that something meant to put women off diets merely encouraged more sad and negative behaviour, I wondered, where is this madness going to end? The truth is that girls such as this one – bright, pretty, feisty, funny and nowhere close to unhealthily big, but obsessed by their shape – are everywhere. We live in an age when women have more equality than ever, yet they pour hate and discontent onto their bodies as if it were body shape and not any other kind of achievement that defines our success as human beings.
It was observing the women and girls around her suffering from disordered eating that set Courtney Martin, a 27-year-old New York-based academic and writer, on the path to Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters (Piatkus) a roaming epic charting myriad ways in which women turn food on themselves like a loaded gun, with a frequency which stifles potential and befouls self-esteem.
Her study of women and their relationships with food and weight is being called third wave feminism’s answer to Susie Orbach’s seminal 1978 Fat Is a Feminist Issue. Martin’s book addresses every form disordered eating takes in a developed world, which turns millions into severe self-critics; be that the woman who occasionally crams pints of ice cream down her neck when she’s tired and under stress, even though she doesn’t really even like ice cream (that’s me); or the one who runs for hours on bones that can’t support a miserably malnourished frame.
One of Martin’s braver theories is that this state women find themselves in is a direct cause of feminism; indeed, she calls it feminism’s unintended legacy. “It’s the super-woman issue, we’ve gained equal opportunities, and we’re doing well, we may have a female [US] president soon. But with that comes this idea that we have to be everything: graceful, beautiful and thin.”
The title for the book, she thinks, “is an apt description of the way in which today’s girls feel compelled to chase after the dangerous delusion of perfection, all the while their ‘starving daughters’ – the innate and neglected wisdom of their bodies – scream ‘slow down!’ ” The mental health charity Mind estimates that in the UK as many as one woman in 20 have eating habits that give cause for concern. Most are aged 14 to 25. About one in 100 young girls are affected by eating disorders, with 6,000 new cases of anorexia nervosa diagnosed last year alone. Some 1.1m people in the UK are believed to suffer from an eating disorder, although the true number is not known as many go undiagnosed. More than 25% of people with anorexia become so weak that they require hospital treatment Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (Ednos) is a medical term used when a patient clearly has disordered eating but does not meet diagnostic criteria for any one specific condition. Ednos is a condition that would appear on many women’s medical notes, were they to be open about some of their eating habits. “In the western world,” Martin says, “it is a difficult task to get back to the middle path of authentic hunger.” Her description of a typical girl’s daily battle makes sobering reading: “One minute debating whether to have a bagel and be “bad” or a protein shake and be “good”; two minutes chastising yourself for choosing the bagel; two minutes contemplating how fattening the cream cheese was . . .”
Speak to headmistresses at the country’s elite girls’ schools and all are aware of the fragility of their charge’s relationships with food. At certain top London girls’ schools, the anorexics eat at special tables. It’s an inescapable fact for young women today that food and body image are the big hurty sticks they use to beat themselves with.
Martin’s focus is largely her own generation, the teens to late twenties who contend with the schizophrenic media barrage of being told the fashion icons held up to them in the stick-like shape of Nicole Richie, Lindsay Lohan and the Olsen twins (all of whom have admitted at some time or another to having eating disorders) are unhealthy ones. Yet icons they are.
For many girls those images of glowing, honey-blonde, fashion-dandy, stick-thin hip-sters are compelling. At 37, I should know better, but even I found the picture of Richie, a woman who is unquestionably ill, used in another newspaper’s discussion of the issues in Martin’s book, frankly gorgeous.
If the mixed messages in the media are compelling to an old-timer like me, God only knows the effect they have on a teenager.
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In addition to looking at all the grossly thin celebrities, we here in the US have the news media to blame, too; nearly every night there's a story about how we're all fat and are going to die because of it. The government has set ridiculous standards (I am close to being considered obese; for comparison, I am the same height and weight and size as Anna Nicole Smith was at her passing, and while she'd never be considered "thin" she certainly wasn't fat) that can never be met. Some people just tend to be larger (bone structure et al) and I agree with an earlier comment--being healthy is more important than what the scale says. Study after study actually shows that people who weight a little more than the charts actually live longer than those who are underweight. Turn off the tv, chase the kids around the yard, take a walk with a loved one and don't eat at McDonald's every day. It may not be perfect, but at least you're doing something.
MKG, Minneapolis, MN
When you see some of the pictures of women for the fashion / beauty items on the Times website you think they are for articles about eating disorders because they are so skinny you can see most of their bones.
Helen , Edinburgh ,
Why doesn't the press positively reinforce feminitity by showing some of the older movies where the curvy woman was fashionable? This is going to make younger women and girls expand their idea of beauty and its diversity. Showing programmes on binge diets only brings more attention to dysfunctional behaviour. Functional behaviour should be the focus of attention. Let us see some former screen goddesses and celebrities that had beauty in its more rounded fuller voluptuous and fertile form; perhaps it would do some good.
Ollie, London, UK
The discussion about eating disorders and super thin models will continue in perpetuity, because the fact is that designers will continue to use extremely thin women/ girls as their clothes fall better off them, so sometimes this discussion seems senseless. However the discussion on feminism might lead to something, as one questions why successful women are perceived as being thin.
michelle, malta,
i think if ideals of grace of motion were adopted, there would still be a lot of 'losers', myself included!
Jenny, Bangor, UK
'graceful, beautiful and thin'. Perhaps if ideals of beauty were associated more with grace of motion, for example the outstanding athletes and dancers of our day, and less with static photos of languorous twiggies in glossy magazines, we would stop analyzing what size of dress these idols wear and shift the focus onto the way in which they wear it. Maria Sharapova over Paris Hilton every time.
Melissa, Oxford,
Eating disorders are passed from generation to generation with the occasionaly family member developing full blown anorexia or bulimia. I was brought up (by my female relatives) to believe that being thin (weak) was feminine and attractive. 40kgs at age 21 was attractive to no-one. Luckily this phase was short lived. I now have a very demanding job that requires me to be top of my game. This empowers me to look after my body properly. I don't weigh myself or diet anymore. I eat healthily (most of the time) and exercise. I want my daughter to think health not weight and I don't want my lifetime achievement to be in any way related to my waist size.
gabrielle, london,
As far as eating disorders go, I am aware of the dangerous effects they can have physically and psychologically. I can say from experience that the issue is not with the men in our lives or with the fashion magazines or with the television. We, as women, do not compete with any of these things. We, as women, are our own biggest critics. We spend much of our time comparing ourselves to other women (ie: fashion models, television and movie stars, our skinny friend). The fashion magazines advocate health and show.... fashion. That is their purpose. Men like women. They do not even notice the extra two or three pounds. And we choose to watch television shows with skinny women. Our problem, as women, is that we objectify ourselves AND we are cruel to each other. Have you ever seen a woman walking around the mall and thought, "she should NOT be wearing that." I have. and that is exactly the mentality that causes us to have unhealthy ideas about our bodies and ourselves.
Cortney, Fresno, CA
Good article. If women want to stop the unhealthy stick-insect icons being portrayed by our media, there's only one way. Stop buying the magazines that use these images to sell themselves, ie the majority of womens magazines. For as long as you buy them, it'll continue. And please don't try and pin this to a "male" issue. Surveys in men have long reflected that these skinny characters are not what men find attractive, they're just what a lot of women want to look like.
DK, London,
I concur with Ms. Burgess' comment about the EDITOR. After all, the women's magazines, as stated by another viewer (i think Mr. L), are the purveyors of this "image" of stick thin people. We can not buy groceries in a store without being assaulted by these images CHOSEN / APPROVED by "BEAUTY" magazine editors.
stacy mckie, ottawa lake, USA
Seriously ... blaming men is NOT going to help this issue. As if men are responsible for the image of women in media today (reality-check: where do you find the thinnest women portrayed as idols, womens magazines or mens?).
We don't need any more research into feminism, and neither do we need the same sick standard for men (as if, by making the other half of society suffer, the suffering would magically end ... what a fantastic way to bring more pain in the name of good).
We need to change society and culture, so that the underlying reasons for anorexia and bulimia are neutralized.
Stop and think, for once. Why do people do things like this? Because in a world where they have lost more and more control (i.e. having standards and goals set for you, like looking perfection) eating is the one thing that you can control. The frustrations become internalized. We have to target those frustrations as a society, not as individuals or ignorant extremists.
Peter L, London,
This will never end until the male standard of beauty is subject to the same rigorous discourse as the female.
Karen Kraft, Santa Cruz, CA, USA
A good article totally undermined by the inclusion of "the Beach Body Diet" in the same issue. Do Editors not make the connections? Are they that dumb?
The problems and anxiety that women have over thier bodies will only start to lessen when the world of newspapers, magazines, Fashion and TV stop pushing the likes of Nicole Ritchie and her stick thin sisters on our young and old and the terrible and dangerous diets that go with them. The message needs to be to stop telling women that they have to look a certain way. Encourage them to embrace their bodies as they are. The only important issue is health, both mental and physical.
Government also needs to understand that they have a duty to ensure that all children can cook ( and by that I do not mean putting a meal in the microwave ) properly and understand what constitues a healthy balanced, financially viable eating habit.
Linda Burgess, Kingsbridge, UK
I am very very angry with all of this and i am not happy with journalists who blame feminism and equality because any intelligent woman can see what we have is not in any way equality, merely a 'male' version of equality because womens most basic philosophical approach to life is not about money- we need much more research and creativity into feminism. i am also a little angry with the this jounalist because it never occurred to her that she would get this reaction, so this would have been the part missing in her exploration of this controversial subject.
su sullivan, hook, england