James Chu lost weight not for vanity, but for sports. - Abigail O'Neall
The National Institute on Media and the Family reports that
78 percent of 17-year-old girls are unhappy with their bodies.
Such
figures are more than mere statistics for some students. Take junior Becca
Cavanaugh, for example.
“I like
the way I look, but I feel self conscious sometimes when I’m with my friends,
because I am so tall,” she says.
At 5
feet, 10 inches, Cavanaugh says she’s most insecure about her height during
school dances, where she her head sticks out above her friends’.
At the
other height extreme, junior Anastasia Hedrick – at 4 feet, 10.5 inches – has
accepted her appearance despite cracks from others.
“People say
comments like, ‘ You’re short,’ and I obviously know that,” she says.
Similarly, sophomore Tomasso Casolaro, 4 feet, 11 inches, says middle
school was tough. Friends and his mom helped him through, he says, recalling
that his mom assured him that he was a “late bloomer.” Even though Casolaro
remains shorter than peers, he has accepted his size.
“It’s
not like I’m deformed in the face. The problem was that people judged me
superficially, but once they knew me, the problem went away.”
Being
short has actually helped Casolaro.
“For
last year’s Latin Convention, I was the only one small enough to ride in the
chariot race. I was pulled like a jockey, and the wind rushed through my hair.”
Like
Casolaro, junior Olivia Morrell was once picked on for her appearance. Students
misjudged her, she says, when she lost a lot of weight in a short period of
time.
“In
seventh grade, I started taking Adderall, and it made me drop about 15 pounds
in two weeks,” Morrell says.
“People thought I was anorexic, and it made me upset. I was embarrassed
to say it was a result of my Attention Deficit Disorder medicine.”
But
junior Biz Schaeffler, a field hockey goalie who describes herself as
athletically built, seems unfazed by body image.
“Of
course I’m a little self-conscious; everyone is,” she says. “But after awhile, I’ve come to terms
with how I look. Being skinny is the least of my worries, especially with the
stress of junior year.”
Weight, of course, can also be a concern for
males. Junior James Chu says he ran 7 miles a day to drop 30 pounds freshman
year. Why? Sports.
“Losing weight wasn’t to boost my confidence. It was just to become a
better player for lacrosse.”