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UNIT 2 – Body Image

UNIT 2 – Body Image. 2.3 Weight Management Chapter 6.1/6.2 Standard 6.3a. Quick Write. List and describe three reasons people diet. Body Image. Body Image – The way you see your body. Body Image Statistics.

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UNIT 2 – Body Image

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  1. UNIT 2 – Body Image 2.3 Weight Management Chapter 6.1/6.2 Standard 6.3a

  2. Quick Write • List and describe three reasons people diet.

  3. Body Image • Body Image – The way you see your body.

  4. Body Image Statistics • Two out of five women and one out of five men would trade three to five years of their life to achieve their weight goals. • In 1970 the average age of a girl who started dieting was 14; by 1990 the average dieting age fell to 8. • A study found that women overestimate the size of their hips by 16% and their waists by 25%, yet the same women were able to correctly estimate the width of a box. • After viewing images of female fashion models, seven out of ten women felt more depressed and angry than prior to viewing the images. • The “ideal” woman - portrayed by models, Miss America, Barbie dolls, and screen actresses - is 5’5, weighs 100 pounds and wears a size 5. • Young girls are more afraid of becoming fat than they are of nuclear war, cancer, or losing their parents. • One out of three women and one out of four men are on a diet at any given time. Two thirds of dieters regain the weight within one year and virtually all regain it within five years. • The diet industry (diet foods, diet programs, diet drugs, etc.) takes in over $40 billion each year and continues to grow. • 30% of women chose an ideal body shape that is 20% underweight and an additional 44% chose an ideal body shape that is 10% underweight. • The average U.S. woman is 5’4” and weighs 140 pounds whereas the average U.S. model is 5’11” and weighs 117 pounds.Colorado University Study

  5. Body Image Questionnaire • Have you avoided sports or working out because you didn’t want to be seen in gym clothes? • Does eating even a small amount of food make you feel fat? • Do you worry or obsess about your body not being small, thin or good enough? • Are you concerned your body is not muscular or strong enough? • Do you avoid wearing certain clothes because they make you feel fat? • Do you feel badly about yourself because you don’t like your body? • Have you ever disliked your body? • Do you want to change something about your body? • Do you compare yourself to others and "come up short?“ If you answered "Yes" to 3 or more questions, you may have a negative body image.

  6. Ten Steps To Improve Body Image • Appreciate all that your body can do. Every day your body carries you closer to your dreams. Celebrate all of the amazing things your body does for you --running, dancing, breathing, laughing, dreaming, etc. • Keep a top-10 list of things you like about yourself -- things that aren’t related to how much you weigh or what you look like. Read your list often. Add to it as you become aware of more things to like about you. • Remind yourself that “true beauty” is not simply skin-deep. When you feel good about yourself and who you are, you carry yourself with a sense of confidence, self-acceptance, and openness that makes you beautiful regardless of whether you physically look like a supermodel. Beauty is a state of mind, not a state of your body. • Look at yourself as a whole person. When you see yourself in a mirror or in your mind, choose not to focus on specific body parts. See yourself as you want others to seeyou -- as a whole person. • Surround yourself with positive people. It is easier to feel good about yourself and your body when you are around others who are supportive and who recognize the importance of liking yourself just as you naturally are.

  7. Cont. • Shut down those voices in your head that tell you your body is not “right” or that you are a “bad” person. You can overpower those negative thoughts with positive ones. The next time you start to tear yourself down, build yourself back up with a few quick affirmations that work for you. • Wear clothes that are comfortable and that make you feel good about your body. Work with your body, not against it. • Become a critical viewer of social and media messages. Pay attention to images, slogans, or attitudes that make you feel bad about yourself or your body. Protest these messages: write a letter to the advertiser or talk back to the image or message. • Do something nice for yourself -- something that lets your body know you appreciate it. Take a bubble bath, make time for a nap, find a peaceful place outside to relax. • Use the time and energy that you might have spent worrying about food, calories, and your weight to do something to help others. Sometimes reaching out to other people can help you feel better about yourself and can make a positive change in our world.

  8. Dove Project • Watch “Evolution” by DOVE • Watch “Amy” by DOVE • http://www.boardsmag.com/screeningroom/tvfilm/3421.html • http://www.spike.com/video/dove-evolution/2779259

  9. Appropriate Weight Range • Body Mass Index (BMI) – Ratio that asses body size in relation to height and weight. • BMI = Weight (Lbs) X 703/[Height (Inches)] • Find your BMI. Compare Your BMI to the one on the following chart. 2

  10. BMI Chart

  11. Body Composition • Body Composition – Ratio of body fat to lean body tissue. • Overweight – A condition in which a person is heavier than the standard weight range for his/her height. • Obesity – Having excess amount of body fat. • Underweight – Less than standard weight and height

  12. Weight Related Health Risk Overweight • Strains Muscles • Strains Skeletal System • Heart Works Harder • Lungs Work Harder • High Blood Pressure • High Cholesterol • Diabetes, Asthma, Cancer Underweight • Low Energy • Fatigue • Decreased Ability to Fight Illness

  13. Managing Weight • Target Appropriate Weight • Set Realistic Goals • Personalize Your Plan • Write the Goal Down • Evaluate Progress

  14. Managing Weight Weight Loss Strategies • Reduce calorie intake • Use moderation in eating your favorite foods • Eat Nutrient Dense Foods – foods high in nutrients compared to calorie content (whole grains, fruits, vegetables, etc.). • Drink plenty of water Weight Gain Strategies • Increase calorie intake • Eat often and increase portion size • Eat nutritious snacks • Build muscle

  15. Risky Weight Loss Strategies • Fad Diets – Weight loss plans that are popular for a short period of time. (Atkins, South Beach) • Liquid Diets – Replacing food with a special liquid formula. (Slim Fast) • Fasting – Abstinence from eating. • Diet Pills – Pills that suppress appetite. (dexatrim)

  16. Eating Disorders • Eating Disorder – extreme eating behavior that can cause serious illness or death. • Anorexia Nervosa – weight loss through self-imposed starvation. • Health Risks • Absence of Menstrual Cycle • Low Bone Density, Low Body Temp., Low Blood Pressure • Slowed Metabolism • Bulimia Nervosa – eating then purging. • Health Risks • Dehydration, Kidney Damage, Irregular Heart Beat • Tooth Decay, Digestive Tract Damage • Binge Eating Disorder • Health Risk • Unhealthy Weight Gain • Type 2 Diabetes • Heart Disease/Stroke • High Cholesterol/High Blood Pressure

  17. Body Image What you think you look like Do you think you’re overweight? Do you think you’re ugly?

  18. Eating disorders • Mental illnesses related to nutrition

  19. WARNING • The pictures you will see are of REAL people who are suffering from deadly diseases. Many of them have already died by now.

  20. Anorexia • Exercising and dieting to get EXTREMELY skinny • Usually involves a distorted body image

  21. What does anorexia do to you. • You slowly starve to death • It becomes an addiction you can’t break • Of people with severe anorexia, more than half of them die—it’s the most deadly mental illness

  22. Stereotypes of Anorexics • Most anorexics are: • Female • Young • But, anorexia can occur in any group • Men • Older people • Any race

  23. Bulimia • Purging to lose weight • Purging usually means making yourself vomit, but it can also be taking laxatives to cause diarrhea

  24. Bulimia • Binging is when you eat tons of food, then purge • Bulimia is a often more an issue of stress and emotion, not body image—they just want control over some part of their life

  25. Bulimia is VERY common • 1:5 girls are bulimic • 1:20 boys are bulimic

  26. If you have a problem with bulimia… • Talk to an adult you can trust • You’ll need to see a doctor • Therapy and antidepressants can help

  27. How to Lose Weight… Eat healthy & Exercise More

  28. Dieting Safety • Do not lose more than 1 pound per week • Do not get any skinnier than a BMI of 20 (most people look and feel GREAT with a BMI of 25) • Avoid “fad” diets • Don’t skip meals or go hungry • Talk to your doctor first! Good diets aren’t temporary—they are lifestyle changes that you can maintain forever

  29. Should Kids Diet? • Dieting interferes with puberty • It’s normal and healthy for kids to gain fat before a growth spurt • Kids who diet have an increased risk of: • Developing an eating disorder • Being obese as an adult • Depression If you are eating healthy and getting plenty of exercise, don’t worry about your weight until you are an adult

  30. Fad Diets Dangerous diets that promise easy weight loss

  31. How Can You Identify a Fad Diet? • If they are selling a product • If it isn’t intended to be a lifelong diet • If it says that exercise isn’t needed • If it blames one food, or says one food will make you skinny • If it promises “spot reduction” • Beware of magazines, books, and websites 99.99% of them are QUACKERY

  32. Why are Fad Diets dangerous? • Lose weight too quickly • Don’t get adequate nutrition • Lose muscle and water, not fat • Use dangerous products • Result in you gaining weight once you stop the diet

  33. Examples of Fad Diets • Grapefruit Diet • Atkins Diet • The Raw Diet • South Beach Diet • Green Tea Diet

  34. Assignment • Chapter 6 Lesson 1 pg 150 #2,3,4,5 • Chapter 6 Lesson 2 pg 156 #1-5

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