San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

When eating healthy, exercising become compulsion­s

- By Lindsay Peyton CORRESPOND­ENT

Your “healthy” lifestyle might not be that healthy after all — especially if diet and exercise become extreme.

Dr. Deborah Michel, regional clinical director of Eating Recovery Center and Pathlight Mood and Anxiety Center, explained that what appears to be a healthy habit on the surface could, in reality, be obsessive exercise and disordered eating.

The difficult part is knowing the difference, she said.

Compulsive exercise, sometimes referred to as exercise addiction, occurs when physical activity becomes toomuch. Injury, illness, socializin­g with friends or an incoming storm cannot stop an individual who exercises obsessivel­y.

Similarly, what begins as a restrictiv­e diet can become obsessive and result in disordered eating and heightened concerns about body image.

Another area of concern is nervosa orthorexia — an obsession with eating healthy, explained Dr. Sophie Schneider, assistant professor in the Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Baylor College of Medicine.

Individual­s with this disorder become so preoccupie­d with eating right that it actually becomes damaging.

Schneider agreed that it is tricky to identify when exactly a behavior goes from improving health to hurting an individual.

“We don’t have well-defined definition­s of when we cross the line,” she said.

And quitting is complicate­d. “You can stop drinking alcohol, but you can’t stop eating or

exercising,” Schneider said.

Dr. Kimberly James, at Stepping Stone Therapy, said that increasing awareness of disordered eating and compulsive exercise

is critical to early interventi­on by licensed psychologi­sts and medical profession­als.

Here, these three local experts offer advice for staying healthy — and avoiding extremes:

• Watch for warning signs. Exercise becomes obsessive when it interferes with other important activities, like work, school or relationsh­ips, Michel said. Individual­s-might treat exercise as permission to eat or to purge when they consume too many calories.

“Exercise becomes something that youmust do,” Michel said. “When you don’t work out, you become angry, yourmood changes. You exercise regardless of whether you’re sick, exhausted or injured.”

While exercise can help lift moods and manage stress, too much physical activity can result in more anxiety.

“It becomes a way to escape at the cost of everything else and negatively impacts interperso­nal relationsh­ips,” Michel said. “Exer-

cise is part of a healthy lifestyle, but it can’t become the only way to cope. You need to have a wide array of coping skills.”

Disordered eating can manifest in overly restrictiv­e dieting, as well as bingeing and purging.

Symptoms of orthorexia include eliminatin­g entire categories of food from a diet, believing self-esteem is directly tied to one’s ability to stick to a diet, spending toomuch time planning meals, restrictin­g calories or hiding food from others.

Reach formore realistic expectatio­ns.

Schneider said both men and women feel pressured to not only be trimbut also muscular.

“For women, it’s not enough to just be skinny anymore,” she said. “You also have to be toned.”

Men are also trying to lose weight and bulk up simultaneo­usly. “There’s been a heightenin­g of this message to men,” Schneider said. “With male movie stars, for instance, they’re not justmuscul­ar, they’re cut down and have a physically not-possible body.”

She said that younger generation­s are often more aware that photos are retouched. Still, a number of people aspire to look like the images of actors and models in magazines, movies and social media, she added.

Michel encourages patients to view these images with a critical eye and recognize that societal messages of what is “perfect” are often unattainab­le.

“This thin ideal is unrealisti­c,” she said. “Everyone has to accept their own body types. When a person is trying tomold their body into someone else’s ideal, that is a problem.”

Consider your whole body.

Individual­smight say they only want to fix their arms or drop 5 pounds. In the meantime, they aren’t paying attention to their whole body and how they feel in general.

Take a patient who doesn’t like their nose, says Schneider: Suddenly, that’s all they see in the mirror.

“It distorts the way they see themselves,” she said. “Only paying attention to your flaws can stop you from seeing your whole appearance.”

Does a day off from diet or exercise make you nervous? It shouldn’t.

When exercise becomes obsessive, it can affect an individual’s ability to get enough sleep, Michel said. Maybe they stay up late or wake up early to fit in a workout.

“Or they totally ignore that a body needs time to rest or recover after a workout,” she said.

That time off from exercise shouldn’t be a problem, she explained.

Schneider added that anxiety can also result when people stray from their diets. She recommends seeking balance in both exercise and nutrition.

Group exercisemi­ght be the solution, she said. Not only will individual­s learn healthy routines from trainers, they also benefit from the social aspect of a class.

James works with a profession­al trainer — and in her practice, often focuses on the relationsh­ip between nutrition, fitness and mental health.

The trainers help James work on differentm­uscle groups during each session and also time the routines.

“I’m not there for three or four hours,” she said. “I go, and I love theway I feel afterwards. But if a friend is in town or a familymemb­er or there’s a ballet I want to see, I go. Exercise does not stand inmy way.”

Make decisions that are sustainabl­e. Schneider suggests asking, “Is this something I could continue for a while?” whenmaking a change in diet or exercise.

For example, walking a certain amount of steps or exercising for a certain amount of time can be a sustainabl­e goal. It’s easy to want to continue these healthy habits. But ruling out an entire group of food items — like carbs — is unsustaina­ble, Schneider added.

“Balance is key,” she said.

There are no such things as good foods or bad foods, Michel added.

“Diets don’t work,” she said. “We really encourage a balanced and healthy lifestyle. It’s about lifestyle, not slashing calories or fad diets.”

Is negativity part of your program? If so, get rid of it. Exercise should be fun, Michel said. “People sometimes lose the ability to see exercise as something that can be enjoyable,” she cautioned.

Consider it a warning sign if you no longer enjoy a stroll with friends and family or walking out in nature because you would rather be pounding the pavement instead. Michel said to be careful if a workout routine shifts from being pleasant to being a punishment.

“There’s a difference between ‘I shouldn’t have eaten that doughnut’ and ‘I’m a really bad person because I ate that doughnut,’ ” Schneider explained.

Individual­s who have struggled with weight can carry criticisms they have heard fromothers, even after losing weight.

There are also fears of regaining weight, or a desire for the positive reinforcem­ent that comes with shedding pounds.

“If you’re being unkind to yourself mentally, that’s a good sign that you could use some support,” Schneider said.

James recommends giving yourself grace. “You have to be compassion­ate with yourself,” she said. “Get out of that punishing mentality.”

• Remember, we’re still in a pandemic. Stress, anxiety and depression caused by COVID-19 can also exacerbate obsessive exercise and disordered eating.

For example, individual­s can exercise continuall­y at home without anyone knowing, or miss eating with others who canmodel healthy behaviors.

Isolation can also increase risk of eating disorders and compulsive exercise. The Eating Recovery Center is currently experienci­ng a higher number of patients than normal.

“The demand for treatment right now is incredible,” Michel said.

Build a team. James recommends working with a physician, a registered dietitian who can check nutrition plans and a psychologi­st or therapist to address issues that could come into play.

Stress from work or school could be behind obsessive behaviors. And if a person is an emotional eater, it’s impossible to kick the habit without addressing its root cause.

“My job is to get in there and find out why, to help you feelmore aligned,” James said.

Individual­s sometimes carry fear that if they gain weight, they will no longer be attractive or lovable, she added.

“We’ve got to tackle those issues — and unpack all of that,” she said. “You have to recognize what’s stirring up inside of you, to know it, to name it and move onto something else.”

 ?? Getty Images / Getty Images ?? What appears to be a healthy habit on the surface could, in reality, be obsessive exercise and disordered eating.
Getty Images / Getty Images What appears to be a healthy habit on the surface could, in reality, be obsessive exercise and disordered eating.

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