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1.
One Size Does Not Fit All2. Check
Your Genes According to Eating Disorders Review, genetic factors
play a part in developing personality characteristics such as anxiety, obsessive-compulsive thoughts and perfectionism.
Furthermore, people with these characteristics seem more prone to eating disorders. A family history involving a mother
or sister with an eating disorder also increases a young woman's chance of developing anorexia or bulimia. Anorexic people
often have higher levels of cortisol, the "stress hormone," and decreased levels of calming brain chemicals like
serotonin and norepinephrine. Recent research reveals that behaviors like starving or purging actually alters brain chemistry
in the brain's dopamine receptors, which regulates pleasure. Eating too little or too much may be a way of self-medicating
against depression and anxiety by producing feelings of euphoria.
3. Doing Your Best to Develop an Eating Disorder
People with anorexia feel a strong need to be perfect. Despite overachieving behavior, they never measure up to
their expectations. Additionally, those with eating disorders define everything as good or bad with no in between. Thin
is good; fat is bad. Attached to this is a strong need to control everything around them. When people with eating disorders
experience difficulty controlling events outside themselves, they can comfort themselves by controlling what goes into their
mouths. Professionals who treat people with eating disorders find a lot of anger in their patients - anger that can't be
expressed in healthy ways and is expressed via food.
4. Causes of Eating Disorders in Family Dynamics
Professionals often find that people with eating disorders come from overprotective and rigid families. Difficulty
resolving conflicts, plus physical or emotional absence by a parent, may also play roles in the development of an eating
disorder. Yet, these families may also demonstrate high expectations for achievement. Unwittingly, mothers can model attitudes
about body image that daughters notice. Dysfunction can play a hand in eating disorders, too. Sometimes, young women with
a history of sexual abuse develop a binge eating disorder.
5. Blame the Media
Young
women at risk for eating disorders don't find any support from society. Billboards, television and movies portray underweight
women as the ideal. Impossibly thin models wear the latest fashions that everyone wants. Women receive the message that
thinness equals success and popularity. Exposure to these ideals of the perfect body may wreak havoc with an already poor
self-image.