Jump to content



Photo

Is eating "PURE" Food a disease itself?


  • Please log in to reply
16 replies to this topic

#1 Rogerdodger

Rogerdodger

    Member

  • TT Member*
  • 26,877 posts

Posted 05 September 2008 - 09:54 PM

LINK
Orthorexia: Obsessing Over Health Food
Eating Disorder Stems From Too Much of a Good Thing
An obsessive compulsive disorder
By JOHN STOSSEL and MIGUEL SANCHO
Sept. 5, 2008

A New Kind of Eating Disorder
It's no surprise that a lot of Americans watch what they eat. Counting calories, nutrients and fat grams is practically a national pastime.
But what happens when people go over the line, and the pursuit of healthy eating actually becomes unhealthy?

For Johnny Righini, a 26-year-old from California, eating a nutritious lunch is a painstaking ritual.
"Sometimes it takes days to prepare meals, because I have to sprout things, ferment things," he said. "I am constantly thinking about what I am gonna have for my next meal."

Charlotte Andersen, a 29-year-old Minnesota mother of three, says she went through the same thing.
"It really turned into a huge problem, and I think that there are a lot of other people out there that have this issue," she said.
Food took over her life. She compulsively catalogued everything she ate.
"I was obsessed with things like macro-nutrient ratios, numbers, charts," she said.
She realized she had a problem when she started paying more attention to food than to her own children.

A New Kind of Eating Disorder

What Righini and Andersen are struggling with is a kind of an obsessive compulsive disorder focused on health food called "orthorexia." The term was coined by Dr. Steve Bratman, author of the book "Health Food Junkies."
Bratman spent years in the health food movement, but became one of its critics after he realized he had started to become orthorexic.

"I suffered from a psychological obsession with food," he said. "When I was involved with this, it took up way too much of my life experiences when there were other things I could have been doing."
Orthorexia is different from anorexia, Bratman said.
"Anorexics seem to always think they're fat," he said, but "orthorexics know they're thin, but they want to be pure."

For people like Righini and Andersen, orthorexia is "a disease disguised as a virtue," Bratman said, because society approves of health consciousness. Americans spend millions on diet books hawking things like macrobiotics, the Zone, the Blood-type diet. And dieting is OK, up to a point.
MORE
Posted Image
Kate Finn, an orthorexic, died before getting treatment.

Edited by Rogerdodger, 05 September 2008 - 10:00 PM.


#2 OEXCHAOS

OEXCHAOS

    Mark S. Young

  • Admin
  • 22,025 posts

Posted 07 September 2008 - 09:39 AM

There's always a new way to categorize whack jobs. So long as they don't call it a "silent killer" or an "epidemic" I think I'll be able to take it. M

Mark S Young
Wall Street Sentiment
Get a free trial here:
http://wallstreetsen...t.com/trial.htm
You can now follow me on twitter


#3 Rogerdodger

Rogerdodger

    Member

  • TT Member*
  • 26,877 posts

Posted 07 September 2008 - 03:18 PM

Whack Jobs?
Eating healthy, washing your hands, locking your door, shopping, and storing things are all normal activities.
Yet each of these activities can become excessive compulsive disorders.
(Think Jack Nicholson in "As Good As It Gets.")

The people like this whom I have known come from all walks of life and are often well educated.
I've seen it in Lawyers, Geologists and R.N.s. as well as your local "Bag Lady."

#4 OEXCHAOS

OEXCHAOS

    Mark S. Young

  • Admin
  • 22,025 posts

Posted 08 September 2008 - 07:14 AM

Whack Jobs?
Eating healthy, washing your hands, locking your door, shopping, and storing things are all normal activities.
Yet each of these activities can become excessive compulsive disorders.
(Think Jack Nicholson in "As Good As It Gets.")

The people like this whom I have known come from all walks of life and are often well educated.
I've seen it in Lawyers, Geologists and R.N.s. as well as your local "Bag Lady."


OCD affects all manner of folks of all walks of life. But it's still wacky behavior. That's all I'm saying. I shouldn't make light of it, as it would be hell if any of my family were any crazier than we are.

What I get tired of is the constant over-dramatization of every disorder, and the constant re-categorizing of every sub, sub, subset of well known problem. Usually for money, and often yours and mine.

M

Mark S Young
Wall Street Sentiment
Get a free trial here:
http://wallstreetsen...t.com/trial.htm
You can now follow me on twitter


#5 Rogerdodger

Rogerdodger

    Member

  • TT Member*
  • 26,877 posts

Posted 08 September 2008 - 11:59 AM

Usually for money, and often yours and mine.


You mean the doctor cited in the story who is selling a book? LOL!

Big money in diet books.
But also big money cook books.
You gotta love it. :D


PS: Why do you think we call such "Whack Jobs" "health nuts"?
Cause they drive everybody around them crazy with their OCD.

Edited by Rogerdodger, 08 September 2008 - 12:09 PM.


#6 maineman

maineman

    maineman

  • Traders-Talk User
  • 1,987 posts

Posted 08 September 2008 - 04:39 PM

Usually for money, and often yours and mine.


You mean the doctor cited in the story who is selling a book? LOL!

Big money in diet books.
But also big money cook books.
You gotta love it. :D


PS: Why do you think we call such "Whack Jobs" "health nuts"?
Cause they drive everybody around them crazy with their OCD.


New patient comes into the office and says, "You don't believe in this stuff, do you?" and hands me a 2 page computer printout of the herbs, supplements, minerals, and god knows what they take every day. It's a non-starter. A doomed "doctor-patient" relationship from the get go. After 20+ years in the office I have not figured out a catchy retort to this, so I tell them the truth. I reply, "When we are in church we can talk about what I may or may not "believe" in. But in my office I am only going to tell you what we know - so far - based on the best currently available scientific research. If you can live with that approach I'll be happy to be your doctor".

Most "health nuts" leave and go from doctor to doctor (not sure what they really want).

What is even odder are the mixed couples - where one spouse comes and gets traditional medical care but the "unseen" spouse stays home. Then I have to hear about the really strange meals, shopping forays, and ruined nights out where arguments broke out over some food. The obsession over self-directed food/supplement stuff is extremely widespread. The vastness of it continues to amaze me every day.

mm
He who laughs laughs laughs laughs.

My Blog -Maineman Market Advice

#7 Rogerdodger

Rogerdodger

    Member

  • TT Member*
  • 26,877 posts

Posted 08 September 2008 - 11:01 PM

And now for something completely different:

This must be true. It was on the internet:

I know somebody who had a persistent headache.
Somebody helped him with a urine enema and space-time-motion therapy
of Dr. Bhavasar.
Free DVD of Dr Bhavasar is coming.


He has cured heart transplant in a 7 year old boy without surgery in
the middle east.
A brain dead person but heart beating at 20% he brought up to 40%
and then the person spoke on national television in India.



OK now that IS WHACK-O!

#8 OEXCHAOS

OEXCHAOS

    Mark S. Young

  • Admin
  • 22,025 posts

Posted 09 September 2008 - 09:50 AM

And now for something completely different:

This must be true. It was on the internet:

I know somebody who had a persistent headache.
Somebody helped him with a urine enema and space-time-motion therapy
of Dr. Bhavasar.
Free DVD of Dr Bhavasar is coming.


He has cured heart transplant in a 7 year old boy without surgery in
the middle east.
A brain dead person but heart beating at 20% he brought up to 40%
and then the person spoke on national television in India.



OK now that IS WHACK-O!


Is that health care or German porn?

(ew!)

M

Mark S Young
Wall Street Sentiment
Get a free trial here:
http://wallstreetsen...t.com/trial.htm
You can now follow me on twitter


#9 stocks

stocks

    Member

  • Traders-Talk User
  • 4,550 posts

Posted 11 September 2008 - 01:59 PM

Wisconsin Man Eats 23,000 Big Macs

http://www.clipsyndi...90432?wpid=1904

My hero.
Coming soon, "The Big Mac Diet"
-- -
Defenders of the status quo are always stronger than reformers seeking change, 
UNTIL the status quo self-destructs from its own corruption, and the reformers are free to build on its ashes.
 

#10 Rogerdodger

Rogerdodger

    Member

  • TT Member*
  • 26,877 posts

Posted 11 September 2008 - 03:12 PM

2 a day. But holds off on fries. Walks 10 miles a day. He's skinny. He should sue.