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In recent decades, awareness surrounding the issue of eating disorders has increased exponentially. \r
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Fifty years ago, very few doctors knew about eating disorders or how to treat them, but a steady campaign of awareness and education has brought the problem into the light. \r
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However, while our society now does a better job of identifying eating disorders among women and girls, it still has a long way to go in doing the same thing for men.
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Jeremy Gillitzer

My name is Jeremy Gillitzer and I am a 34 year old male who has struggled with a serious eating disorder for 23 years. I have been in and out of treatment …

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Source: www.realx3mforum.com

Date Published: 2/13/2022

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Jeremy’s Journey- A Male’s (Fatal) Battle with Bulimia and …

MINNESOTTA, USA: Frail Jeremy Gillitzer is one of the thinnest men in the world after battling extreme anorexia and bulimia for a shocking 25 Years.

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Source: eatingdisorders.com

Date Published: 8/3/2021

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JEREMY GILLITZER: A SHADOW OF HIS FORMER SELF …

Jeremy started a blog in the hopes of meeting other males with eating disorders, but he soon fell in with an online sisterhood of anorexics. They offered …

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Source: www.2medusa.com

Date Published: 2/9/2022

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Assignment 2 – Jeremy Gillitzer – melissawale – WordPress.com

Before his passing Gillitzer posted regularly on his blog about his progress and his health and is very open as to why he’s either on a high or …

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Source: melissawale.wordpress.com

Date Published: 7/7/2021

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“I went from hunky model to 6 stone anorexic” | Closer

Jeremy Gillitzer was once a male model with stunning looks and a six-pack. But now his body is so ravaged by anorexia, he can barely stand without passing out.

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Source: closeronline.co.uk

Date Published: 7/5/2022

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And Every Man, Too?

You might think that in writing this blog, I think that only women are … Recently, Thomas wrote an article* dedicated to Jeremy Gillitzer, …

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Source: everywomanhasaneatingdisorder.blogspot.com

Date Published: 9/23/2022

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Jeremy Gillitzer – GayNSpunk

Posts about Jeremy Gillitzer written by gaynspunk. … As stated in my previous blog posts, the pressure placed upon gay males to be …

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Male Models and Eating Disorders

Jeremy Gillitzer died from an eating disorder five years ago. He was just 38 years old, but his body looked and felt 50 years older, …

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Source: www.eatingdisorderhope.com

Date Published: 3/22/2021

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eating disorders | My Blog

Jeremy Gillitzer had battled eating disorders for almost his entire life (since the age of 12). Despite the fact that he wanted so badly to …

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Date Published: 12/29/2021

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Wasting away: Men's eating disorders on the rise
Wasting away: Men’s eating disorders on the rise

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  • Author: 10 Tampa Bay
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  • Date Published: 2019. 7. 11.
  • Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0a9RO_KTp4w

Jeremy Gillitzer

General Bodybuilding Discussion > Članci

Jeremy Gillitzer

(1/1)

Selim_Black:

Sinoc na tv vidim reportazu o covjeku koji koji boluje od anoreksije… “nista narocito” pomislim, kako je to vec “moderna” bolest. Ali onda prikazuju snimke istog covjeka kako je izgledao dok je bio zdrav sto mi je i privuklo paznju. Naime, covjek je bio profrsionalni foto model sa nesto izrazenom muskulaturom. (dao bih ne znam sta da ja izgledam kao sto je on izgledao :D) ovo je jedini tekst koji sam uspio pronaci na netu… ima i par slicica.

My name is Jeremy Gillitzer and I am a 34 year old male who has struggled with a serious eating disorder for 23 years. I have been in and out of treatment facilities throughout the United States during most of my adolescence and young adulthood. The length of these hospitalizations ranged in length from 3 months to as long as 18 months. Needless to say, I didn’t have a very fun adolescence.

When I was about 21, I came out of the closet as a gay male and my eating disorder slowly seemed to dissipate. I no longer felt as strong of an urge to binge and purge all day. I slowly stopped this behavior, began to gain weight, and met new friends. This reprieve from the eating disorder lasted about 5 years. I really thought I would never have to deal with this nightmare again. However, this behavior began again and pretty much lasted until the present.

Currently, I am struggling with binging and purging on ice cream several times per day (I go through a gallon per day), compulsively exercising sometimes for up to five hours per day, depression, anxiety, social anxiety, and body dysmorphia. I sound like a great date, huh? Not to be a buzz kill, but this is the reality of my life. Lately, I have been feeling like I don’t care if I live or die.

I started this blog because I want to find other males who struggle with similar issues. I know there are other men who struggle with eating disorders, but they are very reluctant to admit this because of society’s perception that this is a “woman’s” disease. Another reason for this blog is because I am in the process of writing a book about my experiences as male struggling with an eating disorder. Most of the book will include my experiences in the treatment facilities since I spent an inordinate amount of time in them. The book will also include details about my pathetic daily routine of literally eating and throwing up all day from dawn to dusk, my food hoarding problem that resulted in my evcition from my apartment on two occasions,and my coming out as a gay man.

ima i par slicica prije i poslije oboljenja…

Selim_Black:

strasno…

TeH FiLiP:

ti bi dao neznam sta da izgledas kao on??(one slike pre naravno) pa daj ok fino je gradjen al ovde ima dece bolje gradjene od njega kada je bio model 😀

Remetik:

Meni je na svim slikama anoreksican… 😀

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Jeremy’s Journey- A Male’s (Fatal) Battle with Bulimia and Anorexia

Jeremy’s Journey- A Male’s (Fatal) Battle with Bulimia and Anorexia

You may not have ever heard of Jeremy Gillitzer, but if not, you missed knowing about anincredibly neat man. A former model, Jeremy struggled with anorexia for years. He died two weeks ago, a shadow of his former self. Weighing only 68 pounds.

Jeremy may have been an extreme example, but more men than ever are suffering from eating disorders. Earlier this year, Harvard researchers released the results of the first major nationwide mental health survey to include eating disorders. It found that men accounted for 25 percent of anorexia and bulimia cases and a full 40 percent of binge eaters. “These disorders are less common in men, but maybe not quite as rare as we once thought,” says Dr. James I. Hudson, the study’s lead author.

I hesitate to use this photo of Jeremy, for fear it may be triggering. However, because he is now dead, I feel more confident in using it. If he were alive, I would be more afraid of using this image as an ideal. My hope is that the fact that he died will make this more powerful.

RIP, Jeremy

Medusa: JEREMY GILLITZER: A SHADOW OF HIS FORMER SELF [Update: REST IN PEACE, JEREMY]

This is NOT a pro-ana site. This site deals with the stark reality and deadly consequences of anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and other eating disorders, pro ana, self-harm/injury, suicide, and depression

Assignment 2 – Jeremy Gillitzer

When researching anorexia in the modelling industry the first person i looked at was of course Isabelle Caro, the famous model who’s Anorexia finally took her life.

I then wondered if there were any male models with a similar story, and there was! I came across the story of Jeremy Gillitzer who was a male model, he had a 29 year struggle with Anorexia and Bulimia and eventually it took his life when he was just 38, he weighed only 88 pounds. Like Caro he wanted to make his illness known to the public in attempt to support others with eating disorders and to bring awareness to the public. Gillitzer did this by writing about his story in the magazine ‘City Pages’ and making the images below public.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Another way Gillitzer supported other people was with his blog :

Before his passing Gillitzer posted regularly on his blog about his progress and his health and is very open as to why he’s either on a high or a low. It was heartbreaking to read especially knowing he has now passed away, but it gave me a huge understanding as to why he ended with with an eating disorder and why he couldn’t recover, this originally starting with bullying from his step father about his weight and then his sexuality, he then became obsessed with exercise and then couldn’t stop losing weight.

This video was made days before his death:

“I went from hunky model to 6 stone anorexic”

by Closer Staff |

Originally published 20 January 2010

Jeremy, 36, has battled the eating disorder for almost 25 years, since being bullied as a chubby schoolboy. His gums are receding from vomiting and his once-fit body is now skeletal. Just a few months ago, 5ft 7 Jeremy weighed less than 6st.

But Jeremy, who’s unemployed, says he’s slowly beating the disorder after receiving help and support from other male anorexics – dubbed “manorexics” – who have followed his struggle on his internet blog.

Last year, Jeremy wrote: “My day is consumed by my disorder, which includes an average of four and a half hours of binge eating and vomiting, and two and a half hours of exercise. But I can’t seem to do anything about my situation.”

Jeremy – who’s currently receiving help at a specialist clinic and now weighs 6st 6lbs – began suffering from the eating disorder when he was 12.

He weighed 9st, around 2st more than he should. “I was bullied at school and called ‘Fatty,’” he explains.

“I started eating a fraction of my meals, but my family didn’t mind because I needed to lose some weight. “But I gradually ate less and less until I was having just a few tiny bites. My parents tried to get me to eat more, but I wouldn’t listen.”

“I was bullied at school and called ‘Fatty’”

Within a year, his weight had dropped to just 4st, and his worried parents took him to a doctor. He was diagnosed with anorexia and sent to hospital, where he was put on a strict eating regime.

He says: “If I didn’t eat or gain weight, I had my number of family visits cut. I stayed for a month and hated it, but I managed to eat enough to gain weight. When I reached 6st they let me leave.” But once back at home, Jeremy started skipping meals and by the age of 14, his weight had plummeted to 4st again.

He recalls: “I would steal laxatives and started making myself sick too. My stepdad begged me to eat and my mum cried, but I’d just lock myself in my room.”

After being taken back to the doctor, Jeremy was sent to an even stricter hospital where he was force-fed and forbidden from visiting the toilet after meals. He’s since lost count of the number of times he’s been hospitalised. Although Jeremy – who by this point was also struggling with the idea he might be gay – gained weight during his hospital stays, other patients would share tips on how to cover up anorexia.

“I even threw up in the washing machine and ran it through the rinse cycle, so no one would know I’d been sick,” he admits. At 19, Jeremy moved in with his grandparents to avoid rows with his stepdad and got a job in customer services. Although he weighed just 7st, he was managing to live a more normal life. “I made friends at work and started enjoying myself for the first time,” he says.

“I would always find something to be critical about.” > >

“Slowly, I started opening up about being gay and began meeting men. I told my aunt about my sexuality, which helped me break it to the rest of my family. I was surprised at how well everyone took it.”

When Jeremy was 25, he moved into his own flat and enrolled on a degree course in political science. He also started working out at the gym and his weight increased to 10st. “I became muscular and began to eat a healthier diet. I even stopped bingeing and vomiting,” he says.

A friend then suggested Jeremy should take up modelling. “I’d never thought of it before but I needed the extra cash, so I got some professional pictures done and sent them off to modelling agencies,” he recalls. “I didn’t think I was overweight any more, but I wasn’t totally happy with my appearance.

“I would always find something to be critical about.”

Jeremy was soon signed up and began modelling for ad campaigns and catalogues, but although he enjoyed the photo shoots, he was too insecure to look at the pictures. In a bid to secure more work, he stepped up his exercise routine, hitting the gym for up to five hours a day.

It was at the gym he met his first and only serious boyfriend, who he doesn’t wish to name. He says: “It was the best time of my life. I felt confident and happy, and my eating disorder completely went away. I was 10st and still worried about my weight, but I coped by eating well and going to the gym.”

But when Jeremy’s six-year relationship broke down in 2005, he became depressed and started bingeing and vomiting again. His weight dropped at an alarming rate and within months he was down to just 6st.

“I detest what I see. I have bags under my eyes, my face is gaunt and my hands are calloused from rinsing my vomit down the sink.”

He says: “I didn’t know why my boyfriend left and I was heartbroken. I quit my job and lived on benefits, only leaving the house to buy food.”

Eighteen months ago, desperate Jeremy, who lives in Minneapolis, USA, set up an internet blog in the hope of reaching out to other manorexics. It has now been read by over 23,000 people and many sufferers have written to him about their own struggles. “I can’t look in the mirror any more,” reads one entry.

“I detest what I see. I have bags under my eyes, my face is gaunt and my hands are calloused from rinsing my vomit down the sink.”

Jeremy Gillitzer

Eating disorders.

We have all heard of them before. But do we really understand the full impact that it has upon people?

First of all, what is an eating disorder?

An eating disorder is a mental illness, characterised when “eating, exercise and body weight/shape become an unhealthy preoccupation of someone’s life.” (Eating Disorders Victoria 2012)

Eating disorders are often associated and stereotyped to be diseases that only affect women, but we often forget that men are also susceptible to falling into this trap. Specifically, gay men.

According to Science Daily, 15 per cent of gay or bisexual men had at some time suffered anorexia, bulimia or binge-eating disorder, or at least certain symptoms of those disorders

As stated in my previous blog posts, the pressure placed upon gay males to be aesthetically beautiful is to blame for the body image issues that gay men suffer from, and now the high rates of eating disorders amongst gay males.

Dr. Meyer also claims that “One theory is that the values and norms in the gay men’s community promote a body-centered focus and high expectations about physical appearance, so that, similar to what has been theorized about heterosexual women, they may feel pressure to maintain an ideal body image.” (Science Daily 2007).

Now I want to provide you with an example of a gay man who tragically suffered from anorexia and lost his battle in 2010 – Jeremy Gillitzer. Jeremy was a stunning model with the ‘perfect’ body. I remember when a friend linked me to his documentary ‘Boy Interrupted’, which was about his daily struggles with the binge and purge cycle that I truly became aware of how much a person with an eating disorder suffers on a daily basis.

I encourage you all to view his documentary here.

Male Models and Eating Disorders

Contributor: Leigh Bell, BA, writer for Eating Disorder Hope

Jeremy Gillitzer died from an eating disorder five years ago. He was just 38 years old, but his body looked and felt 50 years older, a withered shell of the head-turning, muscular model he’d once been. If Gillitzer endured his tumultuous life for any reason it was to open the world’s eyes to men and eating disorders.

While women are the subject of most research, awareness, and news stories on eating disorders, societal focus is slowly turning to men’s obsession with food, exercise, and physique. How many men actually have an eating disorder is uncertain because many males aren’t admitting to what most consider a “female illness.” Still, experts estimate males account for roughly one-quarter of the some 24 million people with eating disorders in the United States1.

The Professional Burden on Appearance

Male models, like Gillitzer, have the professional burden to be beautiful, and for men, this means having a body just as chiseled as their face. Images of attractive men, many barely dressed, are increasing in magazines and advertisements, and they’re not only showing more skin, these models are more ripped than ever.

Male models lost roughly 12 pounds of fat, while gaining 27 pounds of muscle over a 25-year period, according to researchers2. The same research found models in recent Playgirl magazines had bodies that were impossible to replicate without the use of anabolic steroids.

How Male Modeling Has Changed

To see this progression, look at Calvin Klein ads for men’s underwear. Mark Wahlberg took male modeling up a sexy notch in 1992 when he stripped down to his skivvies for the designer. Wahlberg was fit, sure, and the ads created major buzz, but compare his body to the latest image of Calvin Klein underwear: Justin Bieber. Bieber is slimmer and the advertisements much more seductive.

Or look at Hugh Jackman playing Wolverine in the X-men franchise. In 2000 debut, he was in great shape, but compare his physique to that of Jackman as Wolverine 14 years later, where you can almost count the sinews of his muscles.

Now, imagine you’re not only the guy seeing at these magazines or movies, but you’re the one who’s in them. ”The actual act of purging relieves anxiety—physiologically, it’s one of the things it does,” said Gillitzer in an interview before he died.

Media Has a New Target for Objectification

Media has long been blamed for the objectification of women, but it’s increasingly objectifying men and focusing more on male’s specific body parts, like bare chests and backs3. So much that researchers apply to men the objectification theory, which has long referred to women. The theory says both in personal interactions and in Western mass media, women find a sense of self in how they look and, as a result, feel like an object seen and judged on physical appearance.

This feeling can lead in men and women to a hyper-focus on looks and constant monitoring of one’s appearance, the Dakanalis research reveals. Men who are unhappy with their bodies and overly monitor their looks may be also be more likely to use harmful behaviors to “reduce the perceived body imperfections and achieve the male shape ideal.”

How This Pressure Fuels Those Vulnerable to an Eating Disorder

Obviously, pressure on one’s appearance alone does not cause an eating disorder — if so every model would have one— but it can certainly fuel a vulnerability to the illness. As ground-breaking researcher on eating disorders, Cynthia Bulik, says: “Genes load the gun, and environment pulls the trigger.”

Simply find on most any men’s health magazine a superbly muscled model surrounded by some of these recent headlines:

“Lean Muscle Fast”

“8-Pack Abs”

“Drop 10% Body Fat”

“Build Bigger Arms Fast

Bearing greater expectations of body fitness, these male models pass on to other men the pressure to be stronger, be leaner, and have a six-pack. It’s not unlike messages women receive from air-brushed, super-thin covergirls, and the resulting feeling is similar in both genders: “My body isn’t good enough.”

Setting the Bar Higher for the “Idealized Body”

Men’s body image decreases when they see images of attractive male bodies4. Media today includes many more of these images of men who are trading body fat for even more muscle definition, setting the bar higher for male models.

The word “metrosexual,” used to describe the guy who dressed well, smelled good, and actually “fixed” their hair, went in 15 years from buzz word to the standard for men, especially urban men. This expectation for men bore a growing market for male skincare products and men’s Spanx.

The Spornosexual

Add to this metrosexual man an athletic, ropy body earned by countless workouts and you have the latest male-model standard: the spornosexual. The term was coined by Mark Simpson, a journalist and author who also introduced the word metrosexual, to define the growing number of provocative, sexualized images of half-naked, super-buff men in mass media.

This trend gives more strength to the environmental trigger of eating disorders in male models, like Gillitzer, and perhaps, to men in general.

Community Discussion – Share your thoughts here!

How do you think the media has affected eating disorders and body image in males?

References:

Cohn, L., Murray, S.B. (October 1, 2014). The facts about males and eating disorders. Retrieved from Eating Disorders Resource Catalogue. Pope, H., Phillips, K., & Olivardia, R. (2002). The Adonis complex: How to identify, treat, and prevent body obsession in men and boys. New York, NY: Touchstone. Dakanalis, A., Timko, C.A., Favagrossa, L., Riva, G., Zanetti M.A., & Clerici, M. (2014). Why do only a minority of men report severe levels of eating disorder symptomatology, when so many report substantial body dissatisfaction? Examination of exacerbating factors. Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment & Prevention, 22(4), 292-305. A. Dakanalis and G. Riva. (2013). “Current considerations for eating and body-related disorders among men,” in Handbook on Body Image: Gender Differences, Sociocultural Influences and Health Implications, pp. 195–216. Nova.

Last Updated & Reviewed By: Jacquelyn Ekern, MS, LPC on April 28th, 2015

Published on EatingDisorderHope.com

eating disorders

As many of you already know, eating disorders are extremely common among those who are a part of the fashion industry. Because the fashion industry normally only shows models who are super thin, whether they are like that naturally or not, that is what society sets as its standard of beauty. There is not a lot variety among models, and because of this some women (and men) do not have a very good self-image. They try to imitate the bodies of models, and some do not go about it in a healthy. Depending on the model they are imitating, it may not be possible to achieve it in a healthy way.

Back to the topic of eating disorders. While a portion of the fashion community may see the result as beautiful, it comes with a heavy cost. There are many people, both models and the average person, who have suffered many health complications due to eating disorders.

Models Who Are Casualties of Eating Disorders

Ana Carolina Reston

Ana Carolina Reston was a 21-year-old Brazilian model who died due to complications from anorexia nervosa. She died on November 15, 2006 and weighed only 88 pounds at the time of her death.

Jeremy Gillitzer

Jeremy Gillitzer had battled eating disorders for almost his entire life (since the age of 12). Despite the fact that he wanted so badly to beat his disease, he lost the battle against it on June 1, 2010 at the age of 36.

Sister supermodels Luisel and Eliana Ramos died with about half a year of each other due to complications from eating disorders.

Models are not the only ones to fall victim to eating disorders. Thousands of everyday men and women battle against these horrible diseases every sing day. Katy and Maria Campbell, who are identical twins and both trained as doctors, have suffered anorexia since around the age of 11 when they heard their father talk to their mom about how they were becoming young women because they were starting to get hips. In 2011, they were 33 and still had not conquered the disorder.

Something needs to be changed about fashion industry. One possible solution to this problem is requiring a minimum weight requirement for models to meet in order to book jobs. Yes, some women are just naturally skinny and they should not be victimized because of the body they were born with, but if a minimum weight requirement were set then hopefully models would have less pressure to be skinny. There also needs to be more education about eating disorders. Pretty much everyone is aware of them, but many people do not really understand how deadly they can be. People took the initiative to go and do research on topics like this and are informed, then maybe the fashion industry will start to feel the pressure and make a real effort to change things.

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