Negative Body Image

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Jack is just a month shy of being six years old, unfortunately, he’s already becoming extremely insecure about his body. His mother, Heather, describes how her young son began weighing himself multiple times a day; before and after meals, and with and without his clothes. What she originally thought was just an interest in numbers and math, she soon realized was her son’s obsession with getting bigger. Heather explains how each time Jack weighed himself, if he didn’t put on any weight, or worse, lost even a fraction of a pound, he would become extremely anxious and discernibly upset. He would frantically ask his mother, “Why am I getting smaller? Why am I less?!” Heather attempted to explain to Jack that everyone has his or her own body type, …show more content…

The western media inclines to concentrate on a physical ideal that the majority of individuals could never come close to achieving. Nevertheless, women and men of all ages feel immense pressure to meet these body standards. Sadly, the often dangerous actions taken to meet these standards, such as, dieting, rapid weight loss, and excessive exercise are praised in our culture. Women in various studies consistently report that magazines impact their idea of what an attractive body type is, and lead to determination to lose weight and diet (“Media and Eating Disorders,” 2012). Even media targeted at elementary school age children, such as cartoons and children’s videos, stress the importance of being attractive. Studies show that the effect on body image, disordered eating, and internalization of the thin ideal is much more prevalent in young adults than in children. This shows that long- term exposure to the media throughout childhood and adolescence may possibly lay the foundation for the negative effects that surface during early adulthood. Countless studies show that this exposure to the media’s thin ideal is linked to the development of negative body image and eating disorders in both men, and women (“Media, Body Image,” 1). Critics of this theory argue that disorders like body dysphoria and eating disorders existed long before the media even existed, and that cases of such can be traced all the way back to the 1800’s (Toothman 1). However, although this way be true, research shows that rates of development for new cases of eating disorders has been increasing since 1950 (“Get the Facts,” 2011). A study by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, revealed that cases of children 12 and under that were hospitalized for eating disorders had increased by 119%

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