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The Secret Issues Of
Obesity
by VIRGINIA PORCELLO, Ph.D.
Director, Solutions Weight Management Program
The magnitude of obesity as a problem for
women is well documented. Thirty-five percent of all
American women exceed their ideal body weight by more than
20 percent – the definition of obesity – and a full 50
percent are overweight to some degree. Recent research and
the experience of therapists specializing in the treatment
of eating problems reveal that between 25 and 35 percent of
these women were sexually abused as children and as many as
60 percent were victims of some form of sexual abuse –
compared to 20 percent of the general population. Clearly,
sexual abuse victims are over-represented among obese women,
but is there truly a connection between the two problems? I,
among others, have found that in most instances there is.
Compulsive eating frequently begins soon after sexual abuse
occurs, and if women were already prone to turn to food to
cope with hard-to-handle feelings, their eating problems
worsen. In addition, the dates women begin their first of
many, many diets often coincide with the time of their
traumatic sexual experiences. And common reactions to sexual
abuse – guilt, poor self-esteem, d-+istorted body image,
anxiety and a sense of powerlessness, to name a few – are
virtually identical to those long associated with obesity
and eating problems.
The true tragedy of this situation is that obese,
over-weight and diet obsessed women who are also sexual
abuse victims are almost always completely unaware of the
connection. They believe that fat is the real problem that
causes any other problems they might have and that losing
weight is the ultimate solution which will remove all
obstacles from their path, automatically remedying anything
that is troublesome in their lives. They contribute more
than their share to the 10 billion dollars spent each year
on diet aids, 95 percent of which are ineffective. They are
among the 20 million Americans who, on any given day, are
desperately trying to lose weight and experience heartbreak
and frustration when (like 90 percent of all men and women
who successfully lose weight on diets) they gain back their
weight within a year. Every well-meaning move they make,
every diet failure they experience, and the social and
psychological burdens they bear for being obese, add insult
to injury, compounding the pain and anguish they originally
encountered because of sexual abuse.
Women can free themselves of food obsessions and weight
problems. These are the necessary steps:
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Recognize and face your painful past
experience.
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Become more aware of what you eat and
when, what you are feeling and why, and learn to
differentiate physical hunger from emotional appetite.
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Come to accept that you can live through
unpleasant feelings instead of eating over them.
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Develop communication, relationship and
social skills.
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Improve your body image.
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Realize that your life is not a dress
rehearsal and “get on with it” no matter what your
present weight may be.
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