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Ten Things Parents Can Do to
Prevent Eating Disorders
Examine closely your dreams and goals for your children and other loved
ones.
Are you over-emphasizing beauty and body shape?
-
Consider your
thoughts, attitudes, and
behaviors toward your own body and the way that these beliefs have been
shaped by the forces of weightism and sexism. Then
educate your children
about
-
the genetic basis for the natural
diversity of human body shapes and sizes, and
-
the nature and ugliness of prejudice.
Make an effort to maintain positive,
healthy attitudes & behaviors. Children learn from the things you say
and do!
-
Examine closely your dreams and goals for
your children and other loved ones. Are you over-emphasizing beauty and body shape?
-
Avoid conveying an attitude which says
in effect, “I will like you more if you lose weight, don’t eat so
much, look more like the slender models in ads, fit into smaller
clothes, etc.”
-
Decide what you can do and what you
can stop doing to reduce the teasing, criticism, blaming, staring,
etc. that reinforce the idea that larger or fatter is “bad” and
smaller or thinner is “good.”
-
Learn about and discuss with your sons and
daughters (a) the dangers of trying to alter one’s body shape through
dieting, (b) the value of
moderate exercise for health, and (c) the
importance of eating a variety of foods in well-balanced meals consumed
at least three times a day.
-
Make a commitment not to avoid activities
(such as swimming, sunbathing, dancing, etc.) simply because they call
attention to your weight and shape. Refuse to wear clothes that are
uncomfortable or that you don’t like but wear simply because they divert
attention from your weight or shape.
-
Make a commitment to exercise for the joy
of feeling your body move and grow stronger, not to purge fat from your
body or to compensate for calories eaten.
-
Practice taking people seriously for what
they say, feel, and do, not for how slender or “well put together” they
appear.
-
Help children appreciate and resist the
ways in which television, magazines, and other media distort the true
diversity of human body types and imply that a slender body means power,
excitement, popularity, or perfection.
-
Educate boys and girls about various forms
of prejudice, including weightism, and help them understand their
responsibilities for preventing them.
-
Encourage your children to be active and
to enjoy what their bodies can do and feel like. Do not limit their
caloric intake unless a physician requests that you do this because of a
medical problem.
-
Do whatever you can to promote the
self-esteem and self-respect of all of your children in intellectual,
athletic, and social endeavors. Give boys and girls the same
opportunities and encouragement. Be careful not to suggest that females
are less important than males, e.g., by exempting males from housework
or childcare. A well-rounded sense of self and solid self-esteem are
perhaps the best antidotes to dieting and disordered eating.
By: Michael Levine, Ph.D., and Linda Smolak, Ph.D
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