Anonymous wrote:Sorry OP. No matter how long you stay at the gym, you will never be thin and fit. Stop hating...you know they're not anorexic. That doesn't even make sense.
Keep your fat ass at home.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with PPs that we need a definition of what you think of as anorexic to really give an opinion. I'm very thin but am not at all anorexic. When I was nursing, I was down to 98 pounds at 5'5 with visible bones. I wasn't working out at all, but I imagine I might fall into your category at the gym. It would have been very hurtful to have been called out at the gym when they didn't know my personal and medical situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eating disorders -- including compulsive exercising -- have the highest death toll of any psychiatric illness. It is not the same as being over weight. A gym absolutely knows if someone is coming in for 6 hours a day or showing signs of compulsive exercising. And they have every right and responsibility to step in.
110 pounds may be super thin but I think with people with anorexia we're talking 80 pounds. Sure someone who is very thin could just be very thin and should be left alone but once someone gets down to emaciated -- and there is a big difference between 110 and 80 -- its another thing entirely. Gyms would step in when someone with a racing heart rate in aerobics class insisted on continuing, or if someone passed out and then got up and wanted to go on. These are private businesses and they have every right to do what they want including looking out for the health of their members.
I call BS on the whole concept of thin shaming and especially on comparing it to fat shaming. There is no way that in our culture thinness is considered shameful. And we're not talking about thinness anyway. I'm thin (and have suffered nothing because of it. Get real). Eating disorders are illnesses and are different.
And by the way, there are stories of gyms stepping in and saving lives. Gyms are particularly well placed to inquire and help someone with an eating disorder.
Are there that many 80 lb emaciated women at the gym (each and every random gym), fainting during every aerobics class? I figured OP was referring to 110 lb women, who must be more common.
Anonymous wrote:OP, they only look anorexic to you after you see yourself in the mirror after working out for 2 hours (and seeing no results).
Anonymous wrote:Sorry OP. No matter how long you stay at the gym, you will never be thin and fit. Stop hating...you know they're not anorexic. That doesn't even make sense.
Keep your fat ass at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I posted this a few months ago - http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/381336.page
I have not seen that woman come back. That person was positively anorexic. Not skinny, and not lean like an elite runner, but truly skeletal. You don't have to be skeletal to be anorexic, but that person really was just skin and bones.
PP is right that gyms are in the business of making money, and they are not in the business of health. It's sad, but it seems like a lot of gyms have one of these people.
So should gyms require a medical clearance to join? For every anorexic woman there are 10 people who are extremely overweight or smokers or have some other issue that puts them at a higher risk when working out. Should gyms also not allow a 300 pound person not to join because their weight puts them at a higher risk of having a heart attack on the treadmill?
It's tough and I see both sides. But I don't think it is as easy as "gyms are in the business of making money and should care more about health instead"