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Vegetarianism or Politically
Correct Eating Disorder?
Written
by Brooke Finnigan for The National Eating
Disorder Information Bulletin
Whether
vegetarian for health, religion or for ethics, research exists about
the benefits of a plant based diet. Recent
research also shows that a growing number of people, especially women
in their late teens, are adopting vegetarian and vegan diets in order
to lose weight, maintain low body weight, and mask restrictive eating
patterns.
A study
from the University of Minnesota found teen vegetarians are more likely
to have eating disorders than non-vegetarians. In this study, vegetarians
were more likely to contemplate and attempt suicide, and vegetarian
males were noted as an especially high risk group for unhealthy weight
control practices. The research indicated that teens who were already
susceptible to emotional difficulties were drawn to vegetarianism as
a means to lose weight and fit in, but that vegetarianism itself had
no correlation with emotional difficulties.
In a nother
study, conducted at California State University-Northridge, researchers
found college women who claimed to be vegetarians had a significantly
greater risk of developing eating disorders than their meat-eating peers.
The overlap between eating disorders and vegetarianism occurs because
vegetarianism is a way for men and women to openly control their food
choices, without attracting negative attention to their behaviour. Also,
many believe that restricting meat from a diet will lead to weight loss,
believes Michelle Morand, founder of The
CEDRIC Centre, an eating disorder counselling centre in Victoria, B.C.
"Family,
friends, clinicians, and vegetarians themselves, need to know that the
potential exists for vegetarianism and veganism to mask an eating disorder,"
Morand said. This doesn't mean vegetarianism is the cause of an eating
disorder, or that people shouldn't adopt a vegetarian lifestyle, but
it may be a way for the individual who is struggling with food and weight
issues to justify her or his restrictive eating behaviours.
Carol
Tickner, R.D. Nutrition Therapist with
the Eating Disorders Program in the Capital Region
cites two possibilities for the increase in popularity of vegetarianism.
" Vegetarianism has been promoted as a healthy way of managing
weight. With weight being such a focus in our society, it makes sense
to some as a way of managing weight, and health, at the same time,"
she says. "For those teenagers who have disordered eating tendencies,
becoming vegetarian can be a way of trying to respond to a changing
body, (weight gain due to puberty), in a healthy way, vs. dieting like
their friends." However, this is just dieting for weight-loss in another
form.
In many
ways, beliefs about animal protein in diets versus plant-only diets
are similar to the messages we hear about physical appearance in North
American culture. In both cases, we are given conflicting messages.
In one breath we're admonished not to judge a book by its cover,
and in the next, we can never be too rich or too thin .
In a similar vein, we say one thing about the humane treatment of animals,
and treat our pets as mini-humans, but frequently farm animals for food
under dreadful conditions. This cultural hypocrisy is increasingly in
the media with stories of unsanitary conditions and contamination of
foods. And, at this stage in their lives, young adults are acutely aware
of societal doubletalk.
"Teenagers
are searching for meaning and a way of being in the world that expresses
their individuality. This is exactly what they are meant to do at this
stage in development." says Morand. "They're in the process of individuation,
separating from their parents, developing and testing their own value
systems, and learning about who they are. By choosing a plant-based
diet, they're choosing to exist on the planet in a different way than
most of their parents' generation. For many teenagers, becoming a vegetarian
may be the first informed, adult decision they make."
Why Go Veggie?
Vegeterian
diets can r educe risk from certain cancers
by up to 40%, decrease the possibility of heart disease by over 30%,
and lower high blood pressure, and cholesterol levels.
A
plant-based diet can also be environmentally friendly. By eating a diet
rich in fruits and vegetables, less packaging and processing is needed.
On the other hand, as popularity for vegetarian diets increases, more
packaged foods are available to supplement and complement the traditional
vegetarian diet, which means more waste from packaging.
Some
religions advocate a vegetarian lifestyle. Some people choose a vegetarian
diet over an omnivorous one out of ethical concerns for animals. Many
vegetarians are concerned about the wide spread usage of factory farming,
growth hormones, and abuse of animals designated for human consumption.
It is also cheaper to consume a vegetarian diet than to include animal
products in one's shopping basket.
"
There is an increased societal awareness
about where our food comes from and more people taking an interest in
how animals are treated. This was especially brought to the forefront
last year with mad cow disease and the chicken flu," says Tickner.
In
addition to eschewing meat and animal by-products in their diets, a
large number of vegetarians purchase animal friendly cosmetics, and
cleaning products that haven't been tested on animals, as well as alternative
sources for leather, silk and wool products.
The
Incredible Lightness of Being Vegetarian
Adherents
of a vegetarian lifestyle have always touted the health benefits, and
in recent years, as coverage of the obesity crisis continues to influence
public policy, some organizations have linked a plant based diet with
slenderness. Given our cultural preference and pressure around thinness,
(which is seen as an indication of a person's worthiness in North American
culture), it seems inevitable that vegetarianism would be adopted as
yet another tool in the quest for weight loss.
In his
book, The Obesity Myth , author Paul Campos argues that we use
body weight as an indication of "moral fitness". Culturally, we idealize
people who have managed to sublimate their appetites and become, or
remain, slender. In this puritanical atmosphere, fatness isn't just
a body type description, but an alleged indication of how a person really
is: undisciplined, stupid, and unworthy. Fatness is one of the last
socially sanctioned forms of discrimination in our culture, and avoiding
fatness is often used as an added allure to becoming vegetarian.
On
vegetarian websites, in magazines and books, weight loss is often included
as a benefit of switching to a plant based diet.
PETA,
(People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), in particular, correlates
a vegetarian diet with being thin. Recent advertising campaigns have
included "jokes" about fat passengers needing two airline seats as a
reason to go vegetarian,and equating letting children eat meat to child
abuse.
While
PETA is notorious for its overstated style of linking health, body weight,
and vegetarianism, most other groups are subtler. But the connection
between health and weight continues to thrive in the minds of many people.
In fact, for many, health and thinness are synonymous.
The reality
is, it's possible to be a healthy, happy person, at any size, vegetarian
or not. And creating false categories for health based on body size
is one way in which the health and weight loss industry overlap, and,
reap sizable profits.
A person's
weight will tend to fall into a certain range that the body is happiest
and healthiest at, called our "set point" or "natural" weight, and will
tend to want to return to this weight range despite strict calorie restriction
or excessive exercise. Many other factors affect a person weight, not
only the type of food they eat, but the quantity of food they eat, the
amount of activity they get, and their genetics.
A healthy
vegetarian, Carol Tickner explains, is someone who "t akes the time
to ensure that they are getting all the nutrients their body needs.
This person would be eating vegetarian sources of protein at all meals
and making sure they find alternate sources of protein, which is required
to maintain a healthy metabolism, repair and build new tissue, and boost
immunity, calcium, iron, zinc, and Vitamin D & B12 as well as omega-3
fatty acids."
Morand
adds, "To me, a healthy vegetarian is someone at peace with their decision
to avoid animal products, and is committed to enjoying foods that nurture
their bodies and spirits. A healthy person is someone who has energy,
listens to his or her body, and feeds it accordingly."
Feeding the soul
Morand
has worked with many young women over the years who have used vegetarianism
to cloak an eating disorder. "Typically, they don't want to worry people
in their lives, and saying they can't eat something because of their
moral commitment to vegetarianism is a safe way to avoid conflict or
suspicion, especially since many people aren't educated on the topic."
"Some are
in denial about their behavior, or if they have just begun down the
path of disordered eating, they are still in that period where they
believe they are "benefiting" from the behavior. They may be getting
positive attention and reinforcement from their family and peers for
their commitment and/or weight loss." In any case, Morand continues,
"it's important to remember that the eating disorder, whether masked
by vegetarianism or not, is a coping mechanism, and the person struggling
has adopted it to camouflage other, more painful issues in their lives.
They aren't lying or manipulating, they're just trying to cope in the
best way they know how."
It isn't
necessary to give up vegetarianism in order to recover from an eating
disorder. However, an honest exploration of the motivations behind the
choice to cut animal products from one's diet is fundamental to the
recovery process. If someone is truly dedicated to a vegan or vegetarian
lifestyle for ethical reasons, then he/she has to be true to themselves
and honor their decision. But, if the original impetus was weight loss
or gaining a sense of control over their relationship with food, the
greatest gift that they can give to themselves is to authentically explore
what may be currently taking place in their lives, or what may have
occurred in the past, to lead them to feel that they lack control to
the extent that they are seeking it in their relationship with food.
Then they are in a position to solve the real problem, and no longer
expend their energy trying to control the symptom.
- Neumark-Sztainer D., et al. Adolescent vegetarians
: a behavioral profile of a school-based population in Minnesota .
Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 1997 Aug;
151(8): 833-838.
- Klop, Sheree, et al Self-reported vegetarianism
may be a marker for college women at risk for disordered eating, Archives
of Journal of American Dietetic Association , 2003, June, 103:745-747
- http://www.vegsoc.org/health/
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