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How this man’s obsessive weight loss journey turned into body dysmorphia 

East Idaho News
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IDAHO FALLS - When Madhu Krishna Murthy walks into a room, he turns heads. He’s fit, looks good and oozes confidence.
But if you ask Murthy if he considers himself attractive, the answer might surprise you.
“No. When I get in front of the mirror, I hate myself. There is a flaw here and a flaw there and so many problems,” Murthy tells EastIdahoNews.com.
The 29-year-old, 150-pound engineer wasn’t always a chiseled Adonis.
When Murthy moved to America from India in 2016, he was overweight and unhappy while trying to adjust to a new country and culture. He was also coming to terms with his sexuality and announced he was gay, something he could have been punished for in India. He wanted friends and began looking on dating apps for men to meet.
“That’s when I started feeling very conscious about my body because most people here, at least in the gay community, have a certain body standard or things that are perceived as attractive,” Murthy explains. “That was the first time I started hating myself for how fat I had become because before that, I knew I was a little fat but it was ok.”
Murthy felt social pressure to get in shape and physically, a walk down the street was exhausting.
Three years ago, in January 2018, he wanted to make a change so he joined a gym.
RELATED | ‘I became obsessed with it.’ Women share their eating disorder battles and why they finally got help
“For the first two weeks, I made sure I was going to the gym regularly at least 3-4 times a week. Then I started moving into eating at least one healthy meal a day,” Murthy recalls.
Within weeks, he was only eating healthy food and he was working our 2-3 hours a day. Six months later, his weight had dropped from 190 to 137 lbs.
“I was weighing everything (I ate) and adding up the calories and making sure I was at a calorie deficit,” he says. “If I had two chips I felt incredibly guilty about it and I realized that shouldn’t be a thing but at that point, I was seeing results and losing a lot of weight so I wanted to keep doing it.”
All Murthy thought about was food and exercise. He missed hanging out with friends so he could go to the gym and if meals or snacks were served at social events, he’s stick with bottled water.
“I was eating around 1,200 calories a day and was burning some 2,000 a day so I almost had a 1,000 calorie deficit. I had zero energy and zero motivation to do anything else,” Murthy says. “I was knit picking apart my own body and it became an obsession. It’s still an obsession for me. Every time I saw myself in the mirror, I was like, ‘You still have that last bit of fat so let’s get rid of that.'”
Murthy admits he has body dysmorphia - a mental disorder in which you can’t stop thinking about perceived or real flaws in your appearance. Men are uncomfortable talking about the issue. EastIdahoNews.com spoke with several over the past month but Murthy was the only person willing to share his story publicly.
Body dysmorphia is sometimes called “bigorexia” because guys want to focus on building their muscles. It often starts in the teenage years and can become an addiction. Some men go so far as having pectoral implants, liposuction or calf implants.
“I think It’s affected men for a long time but it’s been considered a ‘women’s disease,'” says Liz Stephenson, a certified eating disorder counseling specialist in Rexburg. “I see quite a bit of it in the LGBTQ community where there is a desire for their bodies to look good to their male counterparts but I also see it in high school students where sports can be a contributing factor.”
Comparing bodies to others has only been amplified with instant access to social media, dating apps, photo editing and filters.
“We want to feel good about ourselves but we compare ourselves in these extreme ways and then that makes us feel inadequate,” Stephenson says. “Then we try to feel better inside by doing something on the outside and what we really need to be doing is working on feeling good on the inside and then we’re happy on the outside.”
Murthy knows he’s obsessed with his body and says the feedback he gets posting photos of himself on social media is like a drug.
“I’m gonna be honest. The attention I got when I first posted my shirtless pic was huge and I think that’s pretty much what kept me hooked to this entire thing,” he says. “The attention you get - it just gets to you. Suddenly you’re in the spotlight, you’re very important and all these people find you so attractive and you get to the point where you’re like, ‘Oh yeah. I’m attractive.'”
But eventually, those highs turn into lows and that leads Murthy back to the gym. He knows he has a problem and is taking steps to deal with it.
See the entire story here: www.eastidahonews.com/2021/03...

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4 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 19   
@stephaniep104
@stephaniep104 3 года назад
He seems like such a nice person..and I love his honesty!!
@flyme2009
@flyme2009 3 года назад
i never check my weight, i run, i go to gym, i feel good about my self, i eat what ever i want coz we got one life. never regret in life. the most important in life is to be healthy not six pack
@emiiimm7436
@emiiimm7436 3 года назад
exactly!!!!!!
@flyme2009
@flyme2009 3 года назад
@Sunkissed Nubian how many people have died trying to get six pack? They don't enjoy life such eating delicious food. All they think about six pack never enjoy eating whatever they love to eat.
@Admin-qy4zi
@Admin-qy4zi 5 месяцев назад
@@flyme2009 I know Jermaine brother. Most people justify us having to kill ourselves. In order to look good by calling it discipline. They don’t seem to realize what moderation is
@raysha9932
@raysha9932 3 года назад
Wow love this we dnt talk about men and their issues like this I’m so glad you did this piece.
@Swist1213
@Swist1213 3 года назад
I'd like to eat a cookie, too, and not feel guilty. I can really identify with that.
@honeybunch5765
@honeybunch5765 3 года назад
God yes! I am ok now but for the better part of my adult life I was really obsessed about what went into my mouth. It was all about control because I had no control over certain bad things that happened to me. Having that much diccipline and control over my weight gave me a false sense of security.
@getfitordietrying619
@getfitordietrying619 2 года назад
Great video glad to see this issue is real . Before I found out about it. After losing -170 pounds I thought I would be super fuckin happy but that seemed to dimmed down now
@marciaferguson9536
@marciaferguson9536 3 года назад
He looks great♥️
@MK_1Ultra
@MK_1Ultra 2 года назад
Trust I lost 50lbs and I still feel 300lbs. I feel ugly. Fat and I obsess about food and diets/exercise
@Admin-qy4zi
@Admin-qy4zi 5 месяцев назад
Same here brother
@dyingbreed7740
@dyingbreed7740 3 года назад
East Idaho News is the best news org in the country.
@stephaniehowe0973
@stephaniehowe0973 3 года назад
Mahdu you are a Good looking young man. Period
@honeybunch5765
@honeybunch5765 3 года назад
Many more issues than just his body image though. Gorgeous gay man, I hope he starts to love himself.
@KeithAGass
@KeithAGass 9 месяцев назад
I don't give an F! Madhu can top me.
@LaxmannDhotre
@LaxmannDhotre 3 месяца назад
KEITH!!
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