 |
Adolescence: Developing
a Positive Body Image |
 |
|
|
This background piece is provided
as a teacher resource and is a part of our middle school extension
lesson Exercise Your Options For a Healthy Body Image.
|
|
| Our culture seems to
be obsessed with physical appearance -- particularly with body
shape and size. This obsession, combined with pre-teens' and
teens' maturing bodies and social desire to fit in, can lead
to an unhealthy body image. Adolescents and young adults who
spend hours agonizing over their "imperfect" bodies
are missing out on physical, cognitive and emotional opportunities
facing them every day -- opportunities that they cannot afford
to miss. One of the greatest challenges facing teachers of this
age group is to improve upon their students' body image...not
an easy undertaking but one that will greatly enhance your students'
self-esteem, confidence, and interactions with others, long
after their teenage years are over. |
|
| |
|
|
Body Image -- What is
it?
Body image is our personal view and interpretation
of our body, including mental, emotional, historical and physical
components. Another definition of body image is: "A picture
of the body seen through the mind's eye."
|
|
 |
|
What Influences Body
Image?
Body image can be influenced positively or negatively
by outside forces. Societal and cultural norms and mass media marketing
impact our concepts of beauty. Many external influences are so widely
accepted that we don't even realize their influence:
- Culture --
instills and conveys values of our society at large. Beauty in
our society is narrowly defined, especially for women.
- Mass media
-- the images of a standardized beauty fill our
magazines and newspapers, beam from our televisions and entertain
us at the movies.
- Advertising
-- mass media plays upon accepted cultural values
of thinness and fitness for commercial gain. Young adults are
presented with a narrowly defined standard of attractiveness,
an ideal which carries unrealistic physical expectations. Both
boys and girls are told that they should look like a model, but
only one in 40,000 naturally have a model's body type.
|
|
Why is Body Image Important
to Pre-Teens and Teens?
Adolescence is a time when young adults begin
to separate from their parents and develop their own identities.
Acceptance by their peers is of utmost importance. This can make
pre-teens and teens vulnerable to ideals embraced by our culture
and reflected in the media.
Is Body Image Linked to
Our Appearance?
Our physical appearance actually has little
to do with our body image. Self-esteem is probably the biggest factor
influencing our perceptions of our body, and therefore our body
image.
|
|
 |
|
What Are the Health
Risks?
To obtain the fashionable, ultra thin look,
many young women restrict their food intake. Men are affected too;
wrestlers frequently restrict their food intake in order to "make
weight". This occurs at a time when adolescents need energy
and nutrients to support one of the fastest growth rates of their
lives. Calcium and iron are of particular importance during this
time. More than half of adult bone calcium is acquired during adolescence.
Children ages 9-18 years need 1300 mg of calcium a day -- that's
equivalent to four 8 oz. glasses of milk! Inadequate calcium intake
during this growth period can have lifelong consequences, increasing
the risk later in life for osteoporosis.
Poor Body Image Can
Also Play a Role in the Development of Eating Disorders.
- Anorexia nervosa, which generally starts
between 12-18 years of age, is characterized by restrictive food
intake, weight loss and excessive exercise. One half to 1% of
adolescent girls develop anorexia.
- Bulimia nervosa, the binge/purge syndrome,
typically develops between 16 and 20 years of age. Approximately
3% of teenage girls develop bulimia.
Eating disorders primarily affect women, but
the prevalence in men is on the rise. In both sexes eating disorders
can have fatal consequences.
|
|
What Can You Do?
The good news is, as an educator you have the
opportunity to significantly impact just how good your students
feel about their bodies and themselves. You are also in an ideal
situation to help those who have poor body images. How?
|
|
Improve Your
Students' Body Image by:
- Increasing their awareness of what body image
is, and the positive and negative influences that are part of
their everyday lives.
- Celebrate the body! Promote acceptance and
pride of all body shapes and sizes. Discuss body pride within
the context of function rather than appearance.
- Celebrate the physical changes that occur
as part of puberty, educate and demystify the body changes that
students are experiencing.
- Promote exercise as a fun, participatory
activity that all body shapes and sizes can enjoy.
- Engage students in creative activities that
promote a feeling of productivity, purpose and accomplishment.
- Acknowledge and promote the value of a variety
of skills and talent, such as creativity, intelligence, emotional
intelligence, athletic or musical ability.
- Promote balanced nutrition including foods
from all food groups.
|
|
 |
| |
Discuss Why
it is Also Important for Young Men to be Aware of Body Image Issues:
- By becoming aware of cultural norms to "objectify"
women, men can help to stop this treatment toward their female
counterparts.
- Males are not immune from eating disorders
and their devastating physical and emotional consequences. Males
involved in sports such as wrestling and long distance running
are especially at risk for developing eating disorders.
- Males need to be aware of distorted body
image and eating disorders, so that they can identify and provide
support to friends or family members who may be struggling with
these issues.
|
|
Be Aware of
Signs and Symptoms of Distorted Body Image:
- Spending a lot of time in front of a mirror,
obsessing about specific body parts
- Weighing oneself multiple times per day
- Hiding one's body with oversized clothing
- Refraining from enjoyable activities because
one feels ashamed or self conscious about one's body
- Talking about the flaws in one's body and
minimizing other qualities such as intelligence, humor, creativity,
athleticism
- Obsessing about food, weight and level of
fitness in private and in public
|
|
Be Aware of
Signs and Symptoms of Eating Disorders:
- Gradual or dramatic changes in food intake
and eating patterns
- Gradual or dramatic changes in body weight
- Highly charged emotional responses to changes
in daily schedule, meals or activity level
- Eating very little at meals but insisting
that one is full
- Eating large quantities of food and then
"disappearing" to the bathroom
- Isolation, irritability, depression
Act as a trustworthy sounding board to your
students
you are much more likely to be aware of a problem
if you open your eyes and ears to your students.
|
|
 |