Page 10 THE BATTALION MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1980 Local Local groups give support, advice to overeaters who lack will-power By SALLY J. DREYFUS OA members help each other It takes the stomach 20 minutes to $11, witha weekly fee of $5. Battalion Reporter No magic formulas, no pills or drugs and no simple solutions are available for losing and controlling weight. For many overweight people, weight control, weight loss and weight maintenance are difficult, if not impossible achievements. Some people can’t diet alone. Sev eral groups in the Bryan-College Sta tion area give help and support. One such group is Overeaters Anonymous. OA has a 12-step prog ram based on the Alcoholics Anony mous recovery program. The alcoholic in AA is there to quit drinking. The overeater goes to OA to quit overeating. “I’ve come to OA meetings before, wiping away the cookie crumbs from my mouth as I’ve walked in the door,” one OA member said. “None of us are perfect, ” she said, “and if we slip-up we just get back on the program.” solve compulsive overeating prob lems, to be cured from their “dis ease.” Abstinence from compulsive over eating, OA says, is most important in an overeater’s life. This means “staying away from all eating be tween planned meals and from all individual binge foods.” An overeater said, “If I can be ab stinent for one minute, that minute leads to an hour, one hour leads to one day, one day leads to one week, one week leads to one year. Every minute that I am abstinent, helps Another weight loss method avail able in College Station is through registered dietitian, Frances Henry. “I try to teach people how to get along with their diet,” she said. “A lot of overeaters are cooking right, but they’re eating three por tions instead of one. You can eat the things you like as long as you do it in moderation,” Henry said. tell the brain it’s frill. “To lose weight, people need to push away from the table and eat slower,” she said. The $20 first visit to Henry in cludes a consultation about a pa tient’s weight problem and working out a suitable diet. Each visit there after is $10. Weight Watchers in Bryan- College Station has about 200 mem bers attending weekly meetings, concentrating on retraining eating habits rather than on counting calories. “We try to make people aware of their bad eating habits and we try to change them,” Pat Hennessey, man ager of the Weight Watchers in the Bryan-College Station area, said. Ruth, a Weight Watchers lectur er, said, “We even run camps for overweight kids. Weight Watchers is for men, women and children with different overeating problems.” Weight Watchers’ initial fee is ' (D . ^ Cepheib Variable presents V “Fvqer Zelazny \ TWsbay, Nlavcwber 11 7:00 Tree 701 JvyiSScr with TAMVI ID. UNIVERSITY CENTER SCHEDULING NOTICE APPLICATIONS FOR MEETING ROOMS IN THE UNI VERSITY CENTER COMPLEX FOR RECOGNIZED STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS, CLUBS, AND GOVERN ING BODIES WILL BE ACCEPTED FOR THE 1981 SPRING SEMESTER (JAN. 19 - MAY 15) IN THE SCHEDULING OFFICE, 2ND FLOOR, RUDDER TO WER BEGINNING AT 8A.M., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1980. APPLICATION FORMS MAY BE OBTAINED IN THE SCHEDULING OFFICE, 2ND FLOOR, RUD DER TOWER. THIS WEEKEND, YOU’RE AS GOOD AS HOME ON GREYHOUND. With convenient, economical Friday departures and Sunday returns. Weekends this school year can be the best travel time ever with going-home bargains from Greyhound. And, as always, whenever you go Greyhound, you get the comfort, convenience, and reliability we’re famous for. Just check the schedules below for the Greyhound routes going your way. Most schedules stop at convenient suburban locations. Call your local Greyhound representative for information,and you’re as good as home. TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY Friday Sunday Lv College Station 4:00 PM Lv Houston Greyhound Term. Ar Houston Greyhound Term. 6:10 PM Ar College Station 5:30 PM 7:45 PM Schedules operate every weekend with the exception of holidays, exam week, and semester break. Prices and schedules subject to change. Some service requires reservations. GO GREYHOUND And leave the driving to us. The Nutri-Medic weight loss program is based on a high protein, low carbohydrate diet with vitamin supplements. At the first (free) consultation, the overeater fills out a questionnaire on eating habits and medical history. Potential clients are shown before and after pictures of previous clients and given a guarantee that they will lose the amount of weight they want in a specified amount of time. A $70 lab test determines any medical problems that may deter the client from losing weight. A weekly fee of $35 is charged during weight loss and for a six-week maintenance program following weight loss. Although the organizations for weight loss use different methods, they agree on basic guidelines. First, the overeater must want to lose weight and permanently change his or her eating habits. The overea ter needs to retrain old eating pat terns through behavior modification groups or individual counseling. “Originally these techniques were used to treat alcoholism and phobias. But there is mounting evidence that behavior modification is more effec tive than traditional methods in a variety of disorders. Its application to the treatment of obesity is a late development, but a fruitful one,” according to Albert J. Strunkard in the “Eating Patterns and Obesity.” Second, a doctor should be con sulted before beginning any kind of a diet. Third, maintenance of weight loss is stressed. Disease hits ‘model’ families Anorexics examine illnes U-Lock-lt 10x20 $22 to $30 10x10 $20 693-2339 1 I By BETH YOUNG Battalion Reporter She was the model daughter. They were the ideal family. One disease affected them all. Untold thousands suffer from anorexia nervosa — self-starvation — each year and don’t realize it. De spite a mortality rate of between 15 percent and 21 percent, few people know about the disease and fewer understand it. A background look at the disease describing symptoms, treatments and other general information is helpful in making the public aware anorexia nervosa exists, possibly in epidemic proportions since one of every 200 girls in the United States gets the disease. However, by looking at the victim and the part families play, people can AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: , Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 13400 S. College 823-8051 Anorexia nervosa ex ists, possibly in epide mic proportions since one of every 200 girls in the United States gets the disease. Storage Space FOR RENT Secure • Well Lighted Varlout. Sizes • Behind U-RENT-M In College Station The Storage Station 693-0551 Oldsmobile Cadillac Honda SALES - SERVICE “Where satisfaction is standard equipment" 2401 Texas Ave. 779-3516! see and possibly identify with some aspect of the disease. Two Bryan-College Station women agreed to talk about their dealings with the disease. Due to the sensitivity of the subject, their names have been changed. Betty realized she was an anorexic in the seventh grade. It continued for seven years; she lost 30-35 pounds. Jane began dieting over Christmas vacation of her freshman year at Texas A&M University. She went from 137 pounds to 82 pounds, a 55- pound loss in less than a year. After seeking professional help for nine months, she is recovering. Though both girls suffered from the same eating disorder and had Texas Sum erj FREE FRENCH FRIES FREE FRENCH FRIES With order of best burger in| town & drink. Southside Center 330 Jerey Coupon good thru Nov. 14 B’NAI ffRlTH HILLEl* FOUNDATION Igor Tufeld Soviet Jewish Student talks about the plioht of Jews in the U.S.S.R. Nov. 12, 7:30 P.M. MSC Room 206 OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Sponsored by the Hillel Club and Network SENATE VACANCIES OFF-CAMPUS (Grraduate OFF-CAMPUS Undergraduate WARD III) College of Medicine — AT LARGE Education — Graduate Business — Graduate ^ Liberal Arts — Junior Applications being taken at the Student Gov- enrment Office, Rm. 216 MSC, thru Friday. similar symptoms, they each had dif ferent dieting reasons, eating pat terns and effects from the disease. While reasons for dieting differ for each person, the editors of the Com prehensive Textbook of Psychiatry say that for some, extreme dieting is a way to gain attention, express an ger or combat one’s family. Betty says a desire for male atten tion made her diet. “All the skinny girls were getting the attention of all the guys,” she said. “I wanted some of that attention. I thought that if I lost enough weight, I’d get it. “Being a perfectionist,” she con tinued, “I dieted the best I could. Maybe too good. ” Jane feels that homesickness and her family caused her to want to diet. “I was so popular in high school and I was just one of the crowd at college,” she explained. “At Christ mas, my mother told me that I was fat, so I decided to change that, hop ing it would change my college life. Boy, did it.” Jane says her doctor said she needed something to control and dieting was her only mode of self- control. Editors of the Textbook say the desire for acceptance and attention plays an important part in the diet ing. Patients want attention so much that they do not want to recover and are pleased with their condition. The editors say anorexic’s eating patterns vary greatly. Some go on diets and lose their appetites while others never had big appetites. In describing her eating habits, Betty says she ate like a bird. “I kept exercising non-stop,” she explained. “If I ate over 500 calories a day, I had to do extra exercises to get rid of the extra calories.” Normal calorie intake is between 1,500 and 2,000 calories a day. Bryan psychiatrist Barney Davis says this is typical behavior. “There are girls who will eat a salad and then go run a mile,” he said. Jane’s eating patterns revolved around not eating anything fat tening. T used to eat anything,” says Jane, but now I eat dry salads and broiled meats. For awhile, I would eat a bowl of oatmeal in the morning and that was it for the day. I drank coffee for energy and to keep warm.” An article in Science Digest, March 1980, describes these eating patterns and hyperactivity as “bodily punishment.” According to doctors in an article in the East Texas State University Special, December 1979, anorexics will do anything to keep from gaining weight, including taking laxatives and making themselves vomit. I tried to make myself vomit once, says Jane, “but that was too gross. I d rather not eat or exercise it off.” Anorexia nervosa victims can be nefit from realizing the problem, learning from it and helping others. \ou “Even after I started s doctor,” Jane said, "Iwsi about eating. I became J with school and was do\ if I failed at anything. t Now I’m not so up continued. I eat morekl | vpoor f ercise about the samebi fh e Aggi p 'B.r Jor Z f „ »* m »' Betty said she IlnalW cWi bone isn t beautiful. 0US t O n. “I’m scared ofanorexiali f irs t to me again," she says,1*i L s on i v be myself and accept nd j a i] t p )e am , ipped th< While Jane says that n . reason for dieting was topi ' mother, Betty gives her|* dit for helping cure her. [I “They showed me pictorB: bad I looked and made mt:| said. Whether the family helpfi i the victim is an unanswee r\ tion. s£ The editors of the Teitl i £ that there is no uniform t)| rent, although they areusia ; gh protective. Food was prok 1 : lial concern early in the vitt [' Davis agrees, saying tk: Ln point the family might hau \\\ food. “Also,” he says,’ll might have been squelckeij family, not being given ii ence.” ’ Burns DuBose, CoIle{t| psychologist, says anoremfep difficult on the family anak "Interpersonal relationship! teriorate,” he says. The Textbook editors sap I and malnutrition are powtii I 1 “For awhile, Iw| eat a bowl of oabt in the morning that was it for thw I drank coffe( energy and to l warm. spicuous behaviors used la f family and friends. Parents play an import® treatment. . > “It’s necessary to get* I involved in therapy, SJ ! “and to focus away from » The Textbook editors si| the time the disorder is» parents become oyercontt oversolicitous, bribing weight any way P osslble ' 5. Davis says the family«« .1 nxrr but doesn’t understand. weeks shame them into eating 15 thing to do, he says. An inside look at the wj | the familial roles in f well as a general know disease, can lay the understanding anorexia can affect anyone, even daughter in the BEAT THE HELL OUT OF ARKANSAS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7 : 30 p. m. ANIMAL HUSBANDRY 13,1980 pavillio* sign up rm2l6 MSC for info. 845-1515 MSC tabi hies a (Monc not ye playin CRO Count II) at Road accept so pie INTJ teams sons s this yi and sj will hi basi planni be hel White If you Dave INTI a log ( winnii award Intrar over c Mk live Ch mai los Mi, con our Out this pic Me car