Peer
Pressure & Dieting
By: Diana Green
Peer
pressure occurs when a group of people or
just one person can make an individual feel uncomfortable,
leading them to make decisions that they may not otherwise
decide to make if they did not have influences in their
life. This can affect the way a person thinks, dresses,
looks, speaks or eats. The person who gives in and decides
to change their lifestyle usually feels that they must
conform to other attitudes or behaviors to feel part of
the norm.
When peer pressure involves the way a person
eats, this can result in drastic consequences. When a person
feels an intense urge to change their eating habits to fit it,
they may develop habits that can turn a healthy body into a
poor bill of health. This is seen when individuals attempt to
diet in order to fit into an image that they have dubbed as
ideal. Many people associate peer pressure with teens, but
adults often face the same obstacles when they come face to
face with weight issues brought on upon their
peers.
Peer pressure not only comes from family and
friends, but can come in the form of other outside influences.
For example, today’s society pushes for a thinner world. People
cannot escape the “in-their-face” reminders of how attractive a
thinner image appears to others. This is prominent every time
you open up a magazine, revealing the latest models or watching
your favorite sitcom and spotting the “hottest” television
star.
Peer Pressure and Dieting Can Lead
To
1) Low Self-Esteem
When a person is constantly hearing about
their weight from family and friends, it may result in low
self-esteem. Feelings of low self-worth, guilt and
unattractiveness may develop that may prompt the individual to
diet in order to please the people around them, as well as
themselves.
2) Depression
Peer pressure to diet and make drastic
lifestyle changes, a person may feel depressed because of their
failed attempts to lose weight or that they are not up to the
standards of those they are surrounded by.
3) Anorexia
Anorexia nervosa deals with the strong fear
of being or becoming fat. People who practice this lifestyle
wish to maintain an emaciated body weight. There are about 50%
of anorexia nervosa patients who engage in self-induced
vomiting and/or the abuse of laxatives.
4) Bulimia
When a person suffers from bulimia nervosa,
they participate in reoccurring cycles of binge-eating. After
binge-eating, they engage in some form of purging, which
includes such methods as vomiting, abusing laxatives and/or
abusing diuretics. This is their attempt to prevent weight
gain.
5) Poor Body Image
If a person is feeling peer pressure to diet,
whether or not they are of healthy or unhealthy weight, may
develop a poor body image of them. This can lead to unhealthy
practices when they attempt to
diet
. If someone keeps hearing
over and over again that they need to diet, then they may
feel that something is wrong with their image and that
what others say is the truth.
|