Develoepmental Eating Behavioral Anorexia Nervosa Is everyone's Influenced Best Friend
Exposure to magazine expressing thin-ideal images have been the cause to the increasing effects of the body dissatisfaction, negative mood swings, and decreased self-esteem. "The thin-ideal women often portrayed in media are typically 15% below the average weight of women, representing an unrealistic standard of thinness (skinny thighs, narrow hips, tall, long legs)" (Johnson, Tobin, & Steinberg, 1989). According to this view, women are conditionedto makeconstant social comparasions between themselves and highly reinforced cultured models of ideal femininity. people who support a proper Idea of feminiity create a stereotype thats convinced on achieving a thin-ideal body,which states the influenced idea that starving one ownself will makes us beautiful.
The Issue of anorexia nervosa, bulimia, or binge eating, is not a new problem. It remains a threat among our women, young teen and males. Author Marika Tiggeman (1996) discusses the issues within our society about "enormous influences which contribute in our social concept of media and health. This suggests that the exposure to media images that expand the idea of thinness, my contribute to be development of eating disorders by causinng the dissatisfaction, negative moods, low self-esteem, and eating disorders symtoms amoung the youth, women, and males. This applies to the issue of dissatisfaction of the body, repeated exposure to solid thin-ideal images and media, women have constant reminders of their weight, or what they would say "fatness", which may trigger higher stages of emotions (anxiety, depression, insecurities). Having the mindset of the " Fantasy Image" women, males, and young teenagers tend to expersience high goals for unrealistic body demensions, and engaging in disorder behaviors created to speeding the process to achieve desired body proportions (vomiting, extreme dieting, laxitive abuse, and extreme excersicing)