Starve for Perfection, the Cost of Anorexia Nervosa

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Starve for Perfection, the Cost of Anorexia Nervosa There are innumerable amounts of people in this modern society that suffer from eating disorders. Forcing to be part of a society were it is more significant to be thinner than healthier and fitter, the media perpetuates and feeds over the strong feelings that women have to be thin to be desirable. With the media purporting the standards of what a beautiful woman should look like to get into a relationship, and emphasizing how undesirable fat is, new disorders are being born. And to us comes anorexia nervosa, a new disease without precedence. Women and men suffer to attain a deception of the perfect body image until anorexia nervosa sacrifices their existence. The desire to be the perfect ideal figures that we see on TV and magazines; clusters the minds from what is reality and how it is portrayed. The difficulties living with an eating disorder are immeasurable, and hard to grasp, starvation and excessive exercise all for the achievement of the perfect physique. But is it really and achievement?! Anorexia nervosa is a new disorder affecting the state of mind, and it is characterized by the actions taken to lose weight for the sake of a better physical appearance. The disorder is strictly psychological and aims to achieve self-acceptance, and pleasing oneself with a thin body image that is indeed unhealthy and dangerous to ones life. People affected with this disease have such a distorted perception of themselves that they cannot help but see their body as fat when in reality they are not. The perception of oneself as fat, leads people with anorexia nervosa to lose as much weight as they can, by limiting the intake of the food. This psychological condition is so strong that ... ... middle of paper ... ...Better Health Channel. "Anorexia nervosa." Better Health Channel. N.p., Oct. 2013. Web. 18 Apr. 2014. . Penn State Hershey. "Anorexia nervosa." Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. N.p., 14 Feb. 2013. Web. 18 Apr. 2014. . Sidiropoulos, Michael. "Anorexia Nervosa: The physiological consequences of starvation and the need for primary prevention efforts." McGill Journal of Medicine 10.1 (2007): 20-25. National Center for Biotechnology Information. Web. 18 Apr. 2014. . Univeristy of Maryland. "Anorexia nervosa." University of Maryland Medical Center. N.p., 14 Feb. 2013. Web. 18 Apr. 2014. .

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