We know women are affected by body image issues. But of course they’re not alone. Why would they be? Men are surrounded by taut bodies and rock-hard abs as much as women are surrounded by small hips and shrinking waistlines.
But the difference is mostly in one factor: women want to be smaller, men want to be bigger.
Bigorexia. Muscle dysmorphia. Call it what you will but the essence is this: when some men (women, too) in its grip look in the mirror they see a scrawny, lean physique that needs to be sculpted. And then sculpted some more. And even when they’ve got muscles bulging out of places you didn’t know muscled bulged, it’s never enough.
The biggest man mountain in the world won’t see what the rest of the world sees.
Insight on SBS featured a panel of young men, some not even 18 yet, on its ‘Massive Obsession’ show this week who were stuck in the cycle of muscle building, way beyond just ‘keeping fit’.
Just like women, men can’t turn to many places that don’t feature unrealistic – in many cases, impossible – images of bodies that ‘look better’. Like this:
See, it’s everywhere.
Anthony Nguyen is 14.
He started working out when he was 11 because he had the wrong body shape, he says.
“I started getting serious when I was 13 becuase of my body shape … the Asian race, they are really judgmental. They judge people’s sons a lot and say ‘oh, he’s so skinny’. So I started training and now I try and waste myself during those training sessions,” he says.