Health

A Man’s Mission to Raise Awareness About Eating Disorders

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Jason Wood, 38, recalls being taught in a high school health class that eating disorders normally only happen to women, and that people have to be thin to have one. Around then, at age 15, Wood says he started to diet and exercise and became obsessed right away.

At the time, Wood thought he was just being healthy. He had no idea that men could develop eating disorders. But his obsession escalated over time, and about two decades later, he was diagnosed with an unspecified eating disorder.

Wood says he used to be picked on by some of his classmates about his body, which led him to try to lose weight. “I was labeled the fat kid as soon as I walked into class and often called humiliating names about my weight,” says Wood, who lives in Michigan and now serves as the director of community engagement with the National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders (ANAD).

When those same people around him saw he was losing weight and started to praise him for it, that fueled his disordered relationship with food and exercise, says Wood.

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