ED Talk
Posted by: intern Amber
in General
on Oct 20, 2009
Eating disorders are getting much needed public awareness these days. We know much more about the disease thanks to celebrities and models speaking out on their body abuse issues. And great organizations like the National Eating Disorder Association (NEDA) are pushing local and national Government to provide funding for more research and help to young women struggling.
NEDA, the Academy for Eating Disorders (AED), and others are joining forces with the Greek organization Tri Delta in an international 5-day body activism campaign aimed to draw attention to body image issues and the impact of a society that puts increasing pressure on women to be thin. During this 2nd annual event, which is currently running until the 23rd of this week, 'Fat Talk Free' week encourages women to take the word 'fat' out of their vocabulary. Phrases such as, 'I can't wear that, it makes me look fat' or 'I feel fat today' are off limits! (The organization also leads Reflections, a body image education and eating disorders prevention)
If you think that kind of talk is harmless, you are mistaken! Research has shown that fat talk for a mere 3-5 minutes substantially increases body dissatisfaction. With media images and size four models being told they need to lose weight, we need all the positive reinforcement we can get.
I'm quite happy to see that this issue is getting the attention it needs. With more than 10 million women battling an eating disorder (that's four times the number of women suffering from breast cancer), events such as these should be setting up shop everywhere!
Check out this video of our intern Amber Bela Muse talking with ABC news briefly about overcoming anorexia as a minority.
The opinions expressed on the BUST blog are those of the authors themselves and do not necessarily reflect the position of BUST Magazine or its staff.

written by Courtney, October 22, 2009
Some of us fatties have accepted our bodies and call them fat because that's what they are, and fat is just another thing for a body to be, like short or tall or skinny. From my perspective, demonizing the word "fat" is just a step away from demonizing fat PEOPLE. Maybe the problem isn't saying that one feels or is fat. Maybe it's declaring that being fat is so damaging that we shouldn't even talk about it.
As a fatty, when I read this post, I know your hearts are in a place that is right, but what it says to me is "Skinny people who aren't at all fat, OMG, stop acting like you might be the horrible thing that is being fat because you might experience the feelings of shame that are forced on fatties. And you totally don't deserve that because you're SO NOT FAT."
Just a lone fatty's perspective.
written by Nicole J., October 22, 2009
I am a person who has been 10-40 pounds overweight my entire adult life. And you know, when I'm taking good care of myself, I really don't care what the scale says or what pant size I fit in. So maybe we should focus on our health and less on clothing sizes and arbitrary numbers on a scale? Just an idea.
written by susan, October 22, 2009
written by bjorn Roche, October 22, 2009
written by Bevin, October 22, 2009
There are those of us who have worked to develop a life where we don't put up with negative body talk. I like to use the TriDelt challenge (minus the fatphobic elements, of course) to live my life. It really helps.
I don’t think Fat is a bad thing, I have highly nuanced Fat activist politics and I believe in body autonomy. Bodies come in all sizes, mine happens to be fat, and I have chosen to live my life to the fullest regardless of what the society I was raised in tries to make me believe.
In the words of my hero, Heather MacAllister, “Imagine how much time you would have if you stopped worrying about how fat your ass is.”
written by karen, October 23, 2009
It's interesting that even when the news is trying to be good, they still manage to end up this way. It is as if they didn't even realise they were doing it, but it looked extremely obvious to me. I work in the film industry, so I may notice how videos are produced more than other people.
I'd be interested to see if anyone else saw this.
written by heather, October 23, 2009
written by rajka, October 23, 2009
written by Rachel H., October 23, 2009

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