by beautiful liar » 4/5/2006, 12:20 am
To combat the assertion that bodybuilders die of steroids, which is different than malnutrition I have to say that actually, people with bigorexia (and similar disorders) usually are also bulemic. They carefully control their diet because they are trying to acheive a certain look - but this leads to binging and purging in an attempt to bring a balance. By overworking the body the end result is usually the same amount of malnutrition that acompanies any eating disorder, as well as the weakened heart and early heart attacks that are symptomatic of those conditions in their extreme stages.
Men and women are under the same pressues. We react as human beings to external pressures, each one of us differently. Yes, hormones play a role in the formulation of emotions, but to say that estrogen causes females to be more emotional, I'd argue that socialization plays a larger role in any percieved gender differences. We see woman's body image as a bigger issue because it has the spotlight, while the question of body image should be applied equally to all. Everyone deals with an image of their body; hundreds of thousands of people of both genders deal with disorders directly related to that. Furthermore, people with eating disorders, both men and women, tend to be obsessive, compulsive, or both. Studies have drawn parallels with obsessive compulsive behaviours and eating disorders (in which I'm including bodybuilding disorders for all intents and purposes).
I think part of the problem is that men's disorders tend to have less advocates, and therefore less media attention. Therefore, people assume that women are in more danger from them. This is simply not true.
As to the assertion that women are more emotional - well this is not necessarily true. It always depends on the individual. The way we emote is determined by a complex series of hormones, of which the sex hormones are being proven to be less influential over. If, as you say, women were more emotional because of the estrogen and other female hormones, mood disorders would most likely be the sole territory of women. It is simply not true.