Guys, stop with the orthorexia already!
Replies
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SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »court_fritch26 wrote: »Coming from a farm family and being a farmer myself I really can't handle hearing any more uneducated anti-GMO statements and talking about how this "new process" is so harmful blah blah blah when GMOs have been around for more than 30 years and have been linked to less illness than organic (which can carry parasites and disease) not that organic doesn't have it's own merits, agriculture is agriculture, but what people fail to realize is that there is a higher demand for food & fuel (which demands more crops) on less land than farmers have ever had access to. We create this technology to feed, clothe, and fuel the world and produce at 5x the volume of the past on 20% less land than we had 80 years ago. Other than comments like that, I don't care if people are vegan, vegetarian, gluten free, or whatever they like, I just hate the seemingly anti-agriculture and anti-farmer outlook that some people have developed. We grow it with nothing but love for the environment and love for our community and those we are hoping to feed.
Sounds like this might be a subject for another thread, but I agree with you to a point. My issue with the GMO companies (Monsanto in particular) is their business practices and government influence, not the products themselves. But I'm not sure how that links to orthorexia.
That's a fine line I guess. One would think that GMO's would be on the hit list of foods to avoid for those with orthorexic tendencies, but I do agree that it would make a great & interesting thread of its own accord.
Possibly...from what I understand of the illness, the labels of "good" or "righteous" (or bad and evil) foods don't always make sense, and are often derived from whatever bro-science diet-of-the month has appealed to the person...so one could just as easily say that ONLY GMO foods are worth eating, as all other foods are "outdated dinosaurs"...which might seem silly to you or I, but I'm sure it would make perfect sense to a scientist or technophile who has this issue.
Excellent point! Hmmm, how would you feel about starting a GMO thread? Hehe.0 -
Ha! I'm not anti-GMO, so I'm probably a dissenter from the majority. Still, there's a lot of posters here who have brains and know how to use them, so it might be less controversial than one might think.0
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SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »This thread has gone way off topic. Orthorexia is not about preaching your personal diet to other people, or being annoying. It's about having a gripping, life-altering fear of stepping outside of the dietary bounds you've set for yourself. Incidence of orthorexia seems to be on the rise, according to the original article and others like it, and my question was whether the current culture of making oneself a special snowflake by touting food "sensitivities" is a contributing factor.
No, but isolating people and labeling them a "special snowflake" for not doing things the same way someone thinks they should probably is.
So you don't feel that a culture has developed which encourages people to restrict certain foods/food groups for reasons that have more to do with the mental gratification of distinguishing themselves than with any actual physical issue?
Nope. We have bigger issues to focus on.
Do you see the humour in your statement?
Nope
I suppose you don't have bigger issues to focus on then?
I bigger issue is people's OBSESSION with judging others in the way that they eat. Judgement of people is a bigger issue and would account for the reason why many people join this site in the first place.
True, but that goes both ways. The gentleman I mentioned before who brings up Twinkies with every post goes out of his way to judge anyone who mentions eating sugar or processed foods. He's quite harsh with them, in fact. Perhaps he would feel better if he just ate a Twinkie.
But regardless, if my understanding of orthorexia is correct, is the orthorexic who is doing the judging...they assign moral equivalencies to dietary restrictions, and they judge themselves and others as "good" or "bad" according to those restrictions...and even punish themselves for slipping up. So I can definitely see how an obsession with judging others would be a contributing factor.
As yes, that may be true. We all judge ourselves and it worsens as we receive external judgement.
Being the thread starter, may I ask why you joined the community?
Sure. I'm interested in nutrition, and am attempting to recomp. MFP has the best database and app for tracking.
So self image issues didn't play a part in your joining of MFP? Because if they didn't, then you are a very rare member.
I wouldn't mind dropping 10-15 lbs in the process, but I'm more interested in building the muscle at the moment. I'm sure everyone deals with some sort of self-image issue at some point.
Most people deal with a lot of self image issues. On MFP just about everyone does. Not everyone admits it, but they are there. Point I have is this... We do not need MORE labels for people. We do not need more judgement of *kitten* that doesn't matter. Sometimes extremes are the only things that work for people, and everyone that is on here needs support. Not resistance. We need to mind our business, stay in our own lane. If people are doing it wrong, they will figure it out. And those who are doing it because of something in their head.... Then, again, who are you to judge; and how would you be able to tell the difference? We all have the same goals, and we all take a different route to get there. And that's not just nutrition, that's life. Not everyone is going to think like you do, and the world would be boring if they did.0 -
SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »This thread has gone way off topic. Orthorexia is not about preaching your personal diet to other people, or being annoying. It's about having a gripping, life-altering fear of stepping outside of the dietary bounds you've set for yourself. Incidence of orthorexia seems to be on the rise, according to the original article and others like it, and my question was whether the current culture of making oneself a special snowflake by touting food "sensitivities" is a contributing factor.
No, but isolating people and labeling them a "special snowflake" for not doing things the same way someone thinks they should probably is.
So you don't feel that a culture has developed which encourages people to restrict certain foods/food groups for reasons that have more to do with the mental gratification of distinguishing themselves than with any actual physical issue?
Nope. We have bigger issues to focus on.
Do you see the humour in your statement?
Nope
I suppose you don't have bigger issues to focus on then?
I bigger issue is people's OBSESSION with judging others in the way that they eat. Judgement of people is a bigger issue and would account for the reason why many people join this site in the first place.
True, but that goes both ways. The gentleman I mentioned before who brings up Twinkies with every post goes out of his way to judge anyone who mentions eating sugar or processed foods. He's quite harsh with them, in fact. Perhaps he would feel better if he just ate a Twinkie.
But regardless, if my understanding of orthorexia is correct, is the orthorexic who is doing the judging...they assign moral equivalencies to dietary restrictions, and they judge themselves and others as "good" or "bad" according to those restrictions...and even punish themselves for slipping up. So I can definitely see how an obsession with judging others would be a contributing factor.
As yes, that may be true. We all judge ourselves and it worsens as we receive external judgement.
Being the thread starter, may I ask why you joined the community?
Sure. I'm interested in nutrition, and am attempting to recomp. MFP has the best database and app for tracking.
So self image issues didn't play a part in your joining of MFP? Because if they didn't, then you are a very rare member.
I wouldn't mind dropping 10-15 lbs in the process, but I'm more interested in building the muscle at the moment. I'm sure everyone deals with some sort of self-image issue at some point.
Most people deal with a lot of self image issues. On MFP just about everyone does. Not everyone admits it, but they are there. Point I have is this... We do not need MORE labels for people. We do not need more judgement of *kitten* that doesn't matter. Sometimes extremes are the only things that work for people, and everyone that is on here needs support. Not resistance. We need to mind our business, stay in our own lane. If people are doing it wrong, they will figure it out. And those who are doing it because of something in their head.... Then, again, who are you to judge; and how would you be able to tell the difference? We all have the same goals, and we all take a different route to get there. And that's not just nutrition, that's life. Not everyone is going to think like you do, and the world would be boring if they did.
So, are you suggesting that a nutrition-related subject shouldn't be discussed on a nutrition-related site in case someone got offended? I'm not sure I'm following you.
Again, I haven't seen any judgement in this thread other than a few folks saying that friends on their Facebook feeds spout some annoying food-related nonsense...which judgement are you referring to? Or did you mean that post in response to someone else?
(Oh yes...and I did say the Twinkie guy probably needs a Twinkie so he can quit obsessing about everyone else eating Twinkies, but he was just the first example that came to mind of this kind of behavior...and he wasn't mentioned by name. I don't even know his name. There's probably more than one of those guys. )0 -
SnuggleSmacks wrote: »Ha! I'm not anti-GMO, so I'm probably a dissenter from the majority. Still, there's a lot of posters here who have brains and know how to use them, so it might be less controversial than one might think.
I figured you weren't from your posts. I have a similar opinion to yours regarding GMO's and I'm sure there are many others that do as well.
Anyhow, regarding orthorexia, I find it interesting that it is more prevalent in a certain demographic group, equally affecting both males and females over 30, with a higher social status & income level. (From what I read, at least). Your thoughts? Just curious.0 -
SnuggleSmacks wrote: »Ha! I'm not anti-GMO, so I'm probably a dissenter from the majority. Still, there's a lot of posters here who have brains and know how to use them, so it might be less controversial than one might think.
I figured you weren't from your posts. I have a similar opinion to yours regarding GMO's and I'm sure there are many others that do as well.
Anyhow, regarding orthorexia, I find it interesting that it is more prevalent in a certain demographic group, equally affecting both males and females over 30, with a higher social status & income level. (From what I read, at least). Your thoughts? Just curious.
It's like someone else mentioned earlier. Lower income brackets worry more about how much food is on their plate. Higher income brackets worry more about how the food looks on the plate. Perhaps having a culture of plenty with food security for a broader range of the population makes it easier to afford such food foibles? Like, I guess if one were poor enough to only afford the most basic foods, then turning your nose up at some of it might be considered a luxury?
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SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »This thread has gone way off topic. Orthorexia is not about preaching your personal diet to other people, or being annoying. It's about having a gripping, life-altering fear of stepping outside of the dietary bounds you've set for yourself. Incidence of orthorexia seems to be on the rise, according to the original article and others like it, and my question was whether the current culture of making oneself a special snowflake by touting food "sensitivities" is a contributing factor.
No, but isolating people and labeling them a "special snowflake" for not doing things the same way someone thinks they should probably is.
So you don't feel that a culture has developed which encourages people to restrict certain foods/food groups for reasons that have more to do with the mental gratification of distinguishing themselves than with any actual physical issue?
Nope. We have bigger issues to focus on.
Do you see the humour in your statement?
Nope
I suppose you don't have bigger issues to focus on then?
I bigger issue is people's OBSESSION with judging others in the way that they eat. Judgement of people is a bigger issue and would account for the reason why many people join this site in the first place.
True, but that goes both ways. The gentleman I mentioned before who brings up Twinkies with every post goes out of his way to judge anyone who mentions eating sugar or processed foods. He's quite harsh with them, in fact. Perhaps he would feel better if he just ate a Twinkie.
But regardless, if my understanding of orthorexia is correct, is the orthorexic who is doing the judging...they assign moral equivalencies to dietary restrictions, and they judge themselves and others as "good" or "bad" according to those restrictions...and even punish themselves for slipping up. So I can definitely see how an obsession with judging others would be a contributing factor.
As yes, that may be true. We all judge ourselves and it worsens as we receive external judgement.
Being the thread starter, may I ask why you joined the community?
Sure. I'm interested in nutrition, and am attempting to recomp. MFP has the best database and app for tracking.
So self image issues didn't play a part in your joining of MFP? Because if they didn't, then you are a very rare member.
I wouldn't mind dropping 10-15 lbs in the process, but I'm more interested in building the muscle at the moment. I'm sure everyone deals with some sort of self-image issue at some point.
Most people deal with a lot of self image issues. On MFP just about everyone does. Not everyone admits it, but they are there. Point I have is this... We do not need MORE labels for people. We do not need more judgement of *kitten* that doesn't matter. Sometimes extremes are the only things that work for people, and everyone that is on here needs support. Not resistance. We need to mind our business, stay in our own lane. If people are doing it wrong, they will figure it out. And those who are doing it because of something in their head.... Then, again, who are you to judge; and how would you be able to tell the difference? We all have the same goals, and we all take a different route to get there. And that's not just nutrition, that's life. Not everyone is going to think like you do, and the world would be boring if they did.
So, are you suggesting that a nutrition-related subject shouldn't be discussed on a nutrition-related site in case someone got offended? I'm not sure I'm following you.
Again, I haven't seen any judgement in this thread other than a few folks saying that friends on their Facebook feeds spout some annoying food-related nonsense...which judgement are you referring to? Or did you mean that post in response to someone else?
(Oh yes...and I did say the Twinkie guy probably needs a Twinkie so he can quit obsessing about everyone else eating Twinkies, but he was just the first example that came to mind of this kind of behavior...and he wasn't mentioned by name. I don't even know his name. There's probably more than one of those guys. )
Also, it isn't about arbitrary labeling. Orthorexia is being discussed and put out there in the behavioral sciences as a new eating disorder along the lines of anorexia or bulimia.
People do love labeling themselves and others, but to say that the orthorexic "label" is the same as someone labeling themselves or others as "paleo" is, to me, not understanding what orthorexia is.
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Drs. are finding an increase in ED as a result of people's obsessions with "healthy" or "clean" eating. Anything can be unhealthy if not done in moderation or when it becomes a rigid approach.0
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herrspoons wrote: »This topic is interesting. It starts out about orthorexia, then branches off a bit, then gets full of people getting a bit butthurt about being perceived - usually by themselves - as orthorexic. Which is kind of funny and sad at the same time.
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Shall we just cut to the chase? There is no need to exclude any food group or particular food if you do not have a medical condition that justifies this. Equally, there is nothing to stop you doing so for whatever reasons that you choose. That's your call as long as you then don't start rabbiting on about how it's the divine plan and that all you sugar/meat/fat/whatever eaters are doomed.
I think you'll find the issue began with the OP equating orthorexia to people who post about their diet on facebook, specifically using examples of things that range from fads to prescription. It was when people disagreed that those posts were signs of orthorexia or in any way encouraging it that it all went downhill.0 -
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herrspoons wrote: »This topic is interesting. It starts out about orthorexia, then branches off a bit, then gets full of people getting a bit butthurt about being perceived - usually by themselves - as orthorexic. Which is kind of funny and sad at the same time.
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Shall we just cut to the chase? There is no need to exclude any food group or particular food if you do not have a medical condition that justifies this. Equally, there is nothing to stop you doing so for whatever reasons that you choose. That's your call as long as you then don't start rabbiting on about how it's the divine plan and that all you sugar/meat/fat/whatever eaters are doomed.
I think you'll find the issue began with the OP equating orthorexia to people who post about their diet on facebook, specifically using examples of things that range from fads to prescription. It was when people disagreed that those posts were signs of orthorexia or in any way encouraging it that it all went downhill.
I didn't interpret it as the OP equating posting about food choices on FB and orthorexia so much as the OP wondering if this behavior becoming more prevalent might explain why there appears to be a rise in orthorexia.
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SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »This thread has gone way off topic. Orthorexia is not about preaching your personal diet to other people, or being annoying. It's about having a gripping, life-altering fear of stepping outside of the dietary bounds you've set for yourself. Incidence of orthorexia seems to be on the rise, according to the original article and others like it, and my question was whether the current culture of making oneself a special snowflake by touting food "sensitivities" is a contributing factor.
No, but isolating people and labeling them a "special snowflake" for not doing things the same way someone thinks they should probably is.
So you don't feel that a culture has developed which encourages people to restrict certain foods/food groups for reasons that have more to do with the mental gratification of distinguishing themselves than with any actual physical issue?
Nope. We have bigger issues to focus on.
Do you see the humour in your statement?
Nope
I suppose you don't have bigger issues to focus on then?
He obviously does have bigger issues to deal with, like dealing with other people issues they have with other people's issues
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SnuggleSmacks wrote: »SnuggleSmacks wrote: »This thread has gone way off topic. Orthorexia is not about preaching your personal diet to other people, or being annoying. It's about having a gripping, life-altering fear of stepping outside of the dietary bounds you've set for yourself. Incidence of orthorexia seems to be on the rise, according to the original article and others like it, and my question was whether the current culture of making oneself a special snowflake by touting food "sensitivities" is a contributing factor.
No, but isolating people and labeling them a "special snowflake" for not doing things the same way someone thinks they should probably is.
So you don't feel that a culture has developed which encourages people to restrict certain foods/food groups for reasons that have more to do with the mental gratification of distinguishing themselves than with any actual physical issue?
Personally, I do, but I don't actually think that contributes to orthorexia any more than calorie counting is responsible for anorexia. I think people probably have preexisting tendencies (perhaps related to something like OCD) that can get triggered, but if it weren't orthorexia it would probably be something else.
I admit that's just a suspicion and I could be wrong, though.
The essence is, as you said, the fear, so everyone getting up in arms about how people are attacking their dietary choices are kind of missing what orthorexia even is.0 -
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court_fritch26 wrote: »Coming from a farm family and being a farmer myself I really can't handle hearing any more uneducated anti-GMO statements and talking about how this "new process" is so harmful blah blah blah when GMOs have been around for more than 30 years and have been linked to less illness than organic (which can carry parasites and disease) not that organic doesn't have it's own merits, agriculture is agriculture, but what people fail to realize is that there is a higher demand for food & fuel (which demands more crops) on less land than farmers have ever had access to. We create this technology to feed, clothe, and fuel the world and produce at 5x the volume of the past on 20% less land than we had 80 years ago. Other than comments like that, I don't care if people are vegan, vegetarian, gluten free, or whatever they like, I just hate the seemingly anti-agriculture and anti-farmer outlook that some people have developed. We grow it with nothing but love for the environment and love for our community and those we are hoping to feed.
Did I miss something? When did this become a bash the bashers of GMO thread?0 -
theoryofempire wrote: »I'm gluten free due to a medical diagnosis (celiac). I actually roll my eyes at the people who rant and rave about gluten free diets. A sugary gluten free cupcake is no healthier than a sugary regular cupcake. And honestly, a lot of the gluten free prepackaged stuff is a shhhhht storm of chemicals.
People who follow fads will always follow them. In a few years, drinking beer instead of water will be better for you, and the mass majority will not question it.
Not my body, not my problem lol
So much yes! I am in the same boat, have been diagnosed and have to follow a gluten free diet that also eliminates a host of other food groups due to food allergies.
It kills me when people like my sister in law attempt to eat gluten free just to "lose weight". Ughh, most people don't understand that the calorie amounts in pre packaged gluten free foods are generally higher than "regular" foods. stop treating it as a quick fix to lose weight! It won't work!0 -
herrspoons wrote: »This topic is interesting. It starts out about orthorexia, then branches off a bit, then gets full of people getting a bit butthurt about being perceived - usually by themselves - as orthorexic. Which is kind of funny and sad at the same time.
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Shall we just cut to the chase? There is no need to exclude any food group or particular food if you do not have a medical condition that justifies this. Equally, there is nothing to stop you doing so for whatever reasons that you choose. That's your call as long as you then don't start rabbiting on about how it's the divine plan and that all you sugar/meat/fat/whatever eaters are doomed.
LOL are you surprised that it got de railed and then came back around full circle?
you should know better my friend….:)0 -
Does anyone have peer reviewed studies about orthorexia? I didn't think it had been clinically established yet. If it hasn't, how can we discuss prevalence or epidemic status with any clarity? I apologize if I am wrong on it's status.0
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You're 100% right. It has not been clinically established. It is not in the DSM.
One man invented the term...I'm sure the media attention it got has helped the sales of the book he wrote on the same topic. LOL!0 -
herrspoons wrote: »herrspoons wrote: »This topic is interesting. It starts out about orthorexia, then branches off a bit, then gets full of people getting a bit butthurt about being perceived - usually by themselves - as orthorexic. Which is kind of funny and sad at the same time.
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Shall we just cut to the chase? There is no need to exclude any food group or particular food if you do not have a medical condition that justifies this. Equally, there is nothing to stop you doing so for whatever reasons that you choose. That's your call as long as you then don't start rabbiting on about how it's the divine plan and that all you sugar/meat/fat/whatever eaters are doomed.
I think you'll find the issue began with the OP equating orthorexia to people who post about their diet on facebook, specifically using examples of things that range from fads to prescription. It was when people disagreed that those posts were signs of orthorexia or in any way encouraging it that it all went downhill.
Posting about diet on Facebook is just annoying and a good excuse to hit the unfriend button. Luckily, none of my remaining friends are that tiresome.
Like I said, people should do what works for them but keep the broscience to themselves.
I'm torn on this one - I tend to give more slack to my FB friends that are at least trying to do something to improve their health, even I it is misguided fad BS dieting. I'm more disappointed in the ones that are content to be unfit.0 -
court_fritch26 wrote: »Coming from a farm family and being a farmer myself I really can't handle hearing any more uneducated anti-GMO statements and talking about how this "new process" is so harmful blah blah blah when GMOs have been around for more than 30 years and have been linked to less illness than organic (which can carry parasites and disease) not that organic doesn't have it's own merits, agriculture is agriculture, but what people fail to realize is that there is a higher demand for food & fuel (which demands more crops) on less land than farmers have ever had access to. We create this technology to feed, clothe, and fuel the world and produce at 5x the volume of the past on 20% less land than we had 80 years ago. Other than comments like that, I don't care if people are vegan, vegetarian, gluten free, or whatever they like, I just hate the seemingly anti-agriculture and anti-farmer outlook that some people have developed. We grow it with nothing but love for the environment and love for our community and those we are hoping to feed.
So tell me, do you use farmersonly.com?0 -
herrspoons wrote: »herrspoons wrote: »This topic is interesting. It starts out about orthorexia, then branches off a bit, then gets full of people getting a bit butthurt about being perceived - usually by themselves - as orthorexic. Which is kind of funny and sad at the same time.
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Shall we just cut to the chase? There is no need to exclude any food group or particular food if you do not have a medical condition that justifies this. Equally, there is nothing to stop you doing so for whatever reasons that you choose. That's your call as long as you then don't start rabbiting on about how it's the divine plan and that all you sugar/meat/fat/whatever eaters are doomed.
I think you'll find the issue began with the OP equating orthorexia to people who post about their diet on facebook, specifically using examples of things that range from fads to prescription. It was when people disagreed that those posts were signs of orthorexia or in any way encouraging it that it all went downhill.
Posting about diet on Facebook is just annoying and a good excuse to hit the unfriend button. Luckily, none of my remaining friends are that tiresome.
Like I said, people should do what works for them but keep the broscience to themselves.
I'm torn on this one - I tend to give more slack to my FB friends that are at least trying to do something to improve their health, even I it is misguided fad BS dieting. I'm more disappointed in the ones that are content to be unfit.
I'd totally give props to a FB friend trying to eat right, and yes, being excited and posting about it. IFF they start telling me how to eat (like 5 of my herbalife loving "friends") I'd ignore, and ultimately "unfollow". I can't fathom unfriending someone for eating right (as they see it).0 -
Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »herrspoons wrote: »herrspoons wrote: »This topic is interesting. It starts out about orthorexia, then branches off a bit, then gets full of people getting a bit butthurt about being perceived - usually by themselves - as orthorexic. Which is kind of funny and sad at the same time.
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Shall we just cut to the chase? There is no need to exclude any food group or particular food if you do not have a medical condition that justifies this. Equally, there is nothing to stop you doing so for whatever reasons that you choose. That's your call as long as you then don't start rabbiting on about how it's the divine plan and that all you sugar/meat/fat/whatever eaters are doomed.
I think you'll find the issue began with the OP equating orthorexia to people who post about their diet on facebook, specifically using examples of things that range from fads to prescription. It was when people disagreed that those posts were signs of orthorexia or in any way encouraging it that it all went downhill.
Posting about diet on Facebook is just annoying and a good excuse to hit the unfriend button. Luckily, none of my remaining friends are that tiresome.
Like I said, people should do what works for them but keep the broscience to themselves.
I'm torn on this one - I tend to give more slack to my FB friends that are at least trying to do something to improve their health, even I it is misguided fad BS dieting. I'm more disappointed in the ones that are content to be unfit.
I'd totally give props to a FB friend trying to eat right, and yes, being excited and posting about it. IFF they start telling me how to eat (like 5 of my herbalife loving "friends") I'd ignore, and ultimately "unfollow". I can't fathom unfriending someone for eating right (as they see it).
Completely off topic, but the "unfollow" feature is the best thing to happen to social media. 100% less annoyance with none of the "unfriend" drama.
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Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »herrspoons wrote: »herrspoons wrote: »This topic is interesting. It starts out about orthorexia, then branches off a bit, then gets full of people getting a bit butthurt about being perceived - usually by themselves - as orthorexic. Which is kind of funny and sad at the same time.
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Shall we just cut to the chase? There is no need to exclude any food group or particular food if you do not have a medical condition that justifies this. Equally, there is nothing to stop you doing so for whatever reasons that you choose. That's your call as long as you then don't start rabbiting on about how it's the divine plan and that all you sugar/meat/fat/whatever eaters are doomed.
I think you'll find the issue began with the OP equating orthorexia to people who post about their diet on facebook, specifically using examples of things that range from fads to prescription. It was when people disagreed that those posts were signs of orthorexia or in any way encouraging it that it all went downhill.
Posting about diet on Facebook is just annoying and a good excuse to hit the unfriend button. Luckily, none of my remaining friends are that tiresome.
Like I said, people should do what works for them but keep the broscience to themselves.
I'm torn on this one - I tend to give more slack to my FB friends that are at least trying to do something to improve their health, even I it is misguided fad BS dieting. I'm more disappointed in the ones that are content to be unfit.
I'd totally give props to a FB friend trying to eat right, and yes, being excited and posting about it. IFF they start telling me how to eat (like 5 of my herbalife loving "friends") I'd ignore, and ultimately "unfollow". I can't fathom unfriending someone for eating right (as they see it).
Completely off topic, but the "unfollow" feature is the best thing to happen to social media. 100% less annoyance with none of the "unfriend" drama.
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Paleo and gluten-free seem to being getting out of hand. Fructose-free is just plain stupid - seriously, you're NEVER going to eat fruit again?
Wow, never heard of fructose-free before, but there were a few months where I didn't eat fruit because I read all these articles proclaiming "sugar is evil!"
Eventually I got over that nonsense. Bananas and berries are the only fruits I like (and apricots but those are expensive/unavailable), but now I eat them almost every day. Plus that GoGoSqueez fruit/vegetable applesauce stuff (I know it's marketed for kids, but it's so convenient and delicious!)
Then there's raw veganism which is the other end of the spectrum...honestly looking at those raw vegan Youtube channels my teeth hurt just thinking of eating all that acidic fruit.
I honestly think a lot of these are just masked eating disorders. A woman in my writers' group did this "juice cleanse" and got super skinny and she's always convincing all her friends to go on it and going on about how she feels so much healthier and lighter now and constantly going back on it for 30 days at a time. She posted a few days ago raving about how one of her friends went on the cleanse for 30 days and lost 22 pounds. I was just thinking "that is NOT healthy." But because it's "natural organic juice!!" people get tricked into thinking it's some magical cure-all. In reality they are probably taking in like 1000 calories a day or even less, and it's the same as any other super low-calorie diet with the same dangers.0 -
I should figure out how to unfollow.
I've been unfriending people and telling them why.0 -
benjaminhkohl wrote: »I am definitely sick of everything getting slapped with "gluten free" labels now. Very few people have a gluten intolerance anyway. But I can't help but laugh when I see a carbonated energy drink labeled "gluten free". It's basically just the "low fat!" / "no carbs!" of this decade.
I ordered tacos at a local restaurant near me and asked for corn tortillas instead of flour. The server responds "you mean gluten free tortillas?" No. I mean the corn tortillas that happen to be gluten free. Drives me crazy.
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Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »herrspoons wrote: »herrspoons wrote: »This topic is interesting. It starts out about orthorexia, then branches off a bit, then gets full of people getting a bit butthurt about being perceived - usually by themselves - as orthorexic. Which is kind of funny and sad at the same time.
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Shall we just cut to the chase? There is no need to exclude any food group or particular food if you do not have a medical condition that justifies this. Equally, there is nothing to stop you doing so for whatever reasons that you choose. That's your call as long as you then don't start rabbiting on about how it's the divine plan and that all you sugar/meat/fat/whatever eaters are doomed.
I think you'll find the issue began with the OP equating orthorexia to people who post about their diet on facebook, specifically using examples of things that range from fads to prescription. It was when people disagreed that those posts were signs of orthorexia or in any way encouraging it that it all went downhill.
Posting about diet on Facebook is just annoying and a good excuse to hit the unfriend button. Luckily, none of my remaining friends are that tiresome.
Like I said, people should do what works for them but keep the broscience to themselves.
I'm torn on this one - I tend to give more slack to my FB friends that are at least trying to do something to improve their health, even I it is misguided fad BS dieting. I'm more disappointed in the ones that are content to be unfit.
I'd totally give props to a FB friend trying to eat right, and yes, being excited and posting about it. IFF they start telling me how to eat (like 5 of my herbalife loving "friends") I'd ignore, and ultimately "unfollow". I can't fathom unfriending someone for eating right (as they see it).
Eh, depends on what one means by being excited and posting about it. I'm not on FB that much and I'm fortunate enough that no one I follow posts minutae about their dietary habits. (This does not mean they are unhealthy--several like to post about their marathons and the like, which maybe would bug others, but I find interesting.) Anyway, if they were to start posting about their eating habits I'd find that pretty weird and somewhat socially inappropriate and wonder what the point was, but chances are there are millions of things posted on FB per day I'd wonder that about. I don't post about my own eating habits on FB, even when excited about something I'm trying, so the idea that that's a normal response to trying to eat healthy seems weird to me. (I do post stuff about my eating and expect it from friends here--not to evangelize a particular way of eating, however, although quite often to exchange ideas with someone whose general way of eating is similar to mine in some way--since it's related to the purpose of the site.)
I do know plenty of people offline who have trendy dietary restrictions and like to go on about them at the smallest excuse (and some who have dietary restrictions I don't consider fad-like, like veganism, some of whom do the same). I also consider this rather socially inappropriate, but not the biggest thing in the world--people describing it as annoying are basically right, IMO, and saying it's annoying DOES NOT, rather obviously, mean that you don't think people have the right to eat as they like. As I have said quite often, I have my own ways of eating, but I just don't think that means that everyone I happen to be eating with is interested in hearing me go on and on about them.
I do think it's reasonably obvious that when someone posts endlessly about the evils of (fill in the blank) or why it's so much better to eat in a particular way or the like that they aren't just trying to live and let live--it's them doing the real judging--which is why the reaction here is so funny.
It's not all that new, though. The most common eating restrictions have just changed.
Edit: To be an equal opportunity crank, though, I also know people who feel compelled to go on about their dietary habits in a somewhat different way--to list the things they don't eat because they are picky, about which they seem as proud as those who claim they don't eat stuff because they are so healthy or have so many weird health issues that everyone of course is dying to hear about. To me these really seem like basically the same stuff, and I suspect the pickiness stuff can approach orthorexia like behavior too--if you get fearful of trying new things or the like. I'm actually much less patient (well, in my head--I never say anything) re extreme pickiness (again, if someone feels compelled to go on about it; I don't care if people just don't like things obviously, most everyone doesn't like certain things) than I am of most health-based dietary habits even the most silly. Exceptions would be things that seem actively unhealthy, like cleanses, which are beyond annoying to disturbing.0 -
benjaminhkohl wrote: »I am definitely sick of everything getting slapped with "gluten free" labels now. Very few people have a gluten intolerance anyway. But I can't help but laugh when I see a carbonated energy drink labeled "gluten free". It's basically just the "low fat!" / "no carbs!" of this decade.
I ordered tacos at a local restaurant near me and asked for corn tortillas instead of flour. The server responds "you mean gluten free tortillas?" No. I mean the corn tortillas that happen to be gluten free. Drives me crazy.
Most have wheat flour added to soften their texture.
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lemurcat12 wrote: »Anyway, if they were to start posting about their eating habits I'd find that pretty weird and somewhat socially inappropriate and wonder what the point was, but chances are there are millions of things posted on FB per day I'd wonder that about.
That said, I'd much prefer to see food and marathon posts over the stupid "Oh look, my kid tied their shoe!" (Your kid is 8.)
"Oh look, our kid drank their first full bottle from their dad!" (Your kid is 5, bottle, seriously?)
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