Friday, 5 September 2014

Journey through Bulimia - Interview of Nazia Khatun

Growing up, our body changes whether we are male or female, whether we like it or hate it, it is something we cannot change. It is the art of nature. With this comes the awakening of our consciousness and young people, especially teenagers become more aware of what their body looks like. Many embrace this change and many want to make more changes such as their height, weight and body image. Some do this the healthy way through exercise and healthy eating and some do this the dangerous way by developing eating disorders.

Nazia Khatun was one of these young teenagers who disliked her appearance but decided it was time to start making changes at the age of seventeen. Unfortunately it was not the right way for a healthy diet. Nazia is now a grown woman who takes pride in her appearance, walks with a strut and has confidence in herself.


An interview was carried out by Salma Razia Khatun where Nazia explained her eating disorder. How and why she became bulimic and what young people should do now for a healthy looking body.

Before self inducing vomiting, Nazia described how her eating habits were like. “I used to eat anything and everything. Breakfast going to school consisted of fizzy drinks, chocolate bars, crisps. At break time at school, I clearly remember I would eat more than the other girls. One doughnut was never enough. Lunchtime was piled with pizza, pasta, and whatever was available that day for school dinners. The odd times if I had food outside for lunch it would consist of fried chicken and chips or greasy kebabs. By 6pm, without a doubt I would head off to the corner shops to get at least two bars of chocolates, more crisps and fizzy drinks.”
Being at a girls only school made Nazia feel normal and alright being chubby. She was good at sports and felt accepted by her class friends and it helped having a baggy uniform which covered a few pounds. But College had changed this for her.
I saw skinny girls everywhere who looked pretty and their make up was nicely done. They wore nice jeans and tops and then there was me who was in a cap, track suit bottoms and again a baggy hoody. Of course naturally I felt uncomfortable as I was a teenager and at that time hormones are firing away for all reasons. I didn’t get any attention from the boys like the other pretty girls did and a part of me felt very out of place and not attractive all of a sudden. The more unattractive I felt the baggier the jumpers got and every shopping trip consisted of purchasing a cap to hide my chubby cheeks. In essence I wanted to be thin, thin to me meant being attractive and I will get noticed. How wrong was I back then as it lead to a whole load of pitfalls as I grew up.
Surprisingly enough one of my good friends was a male at this period of my life. I clearly remember him telling me he used to purge to lose weight. He explained to me after you eat, you just make yourself sick. I asked how and he replied “by sticking your finger down your throat”. At first I thought this was stupid, but weirdly enough I remember it stayed in my head”.
Bulimia is very common amongst females and around 5 to 15% of males suffer from bulimia This is on the increase and more men are becoming anorexic. Low self esteem and confidence leads to eating disorders. “I was living with so many sisters, some who were slim and petite. Compared to them I felt like King Kong.”

Nazia before and after bulimia.
Before: I was a happy child growing up. I had no hesitation to eat anything and everything. In fact, my parents used to tell me to control my portion sizes and not to eat too much as they were concerned of my size at the time of my age. Of course this gets to you a little but when relatives used to visit and tell me I was “healthy” it used to play in my head. All of my cousins were of decent sizes and shapes. When you don’t know what normal is you carry on with life as it is. I was very outgoing and always in people’s faces.
After: I admit I became so self obsessed. That period of my life, being so caught up with my self image was the mother of all life for me. The more I looked in mirrors the more hate I found for myself. I loathed my chubby face and fat body. I became very anti social and grumpy. I found my relationship with my family becoming tense as I would argue or snap back at even small things. Being tired, hungry and making myself sick became addictive as I saw the weight dropping. I came down to seven stones and I was obsessed with the weighing scales. By now my parents went from the opposite of telling me not to eat trying to force food down me and I would eat but they knew too well what I was doing.”


Then came the day when something triggered Nazia to think twice about her self inducing vomiting.
There was a day where I ate fish and chips and laid down on the sofa. Without even having to even self induce I started to vomit. With it I noticed blood. That was the day I thought to myself this had gone too far. I had been self inducing for almost two years in secret and this was definitely a wake up call. It came to a point where I also noticed that even though I was slim and was a size 10 instead of a size 14, I wasn’t getting any opposite sex attention. So it was a lot to do with the mind and how I perceived myself. However I went from one addiction to another. When I discovered the gym I became self obsessed with that and did everything wrong. I would train for hours on end and knew absolutely nothing about exercising other than what I learnt from magazines. I realised even when I had a six pack and was a perfect size, I still felt I was fat in my head. My obsession with calories and food was on an extreme level. This led to awful Sciatica Nerve damage and a very weak back which still plays up till this day”.

Then and now.
Now I accept myself for who I am and what I am. I had to learn about self love a lot and the power of self love and how it contributed to the rest of my life. Even though I don’t have the six packs and do not train as mad as I used to, I find myself more confident than ever before. As a Trainer now, I am more clued up on how to exercise properly and how to eat properly to main optic health. I used my body as a form of control in the wrong way.
I am not perfect overall and everyday we challenge ourselves to become the best versions of ourselves, and with that comes a lot power and wisdom knowing I had the ability to change and manifest a different mindset to my general well being and health. I haven’t been sick in over three years now and that comes with the knowledge of how to look after myself.
Our health is something we all take for granted until something happens to us.
I run my own business so my lifestyle is very different to the average 9-5 worker. I tend to lead a very balanced lifestyle. I have enough time for family, friends, adventure, love, self time. Generally I find when my health is at peak then all areas of my life is heightened.
There was a point when I became an amateur boxer which was very different for me. I was a young Bangladeshi girl and at the time, it wasn't very common for South Asian girls to take part in physical sports like this. This was the period when my confidence was at its best and its only now at the age of 31 I fully accept my body and am able to thank it for everything I had put it through. Inner confidence is very under rated, and now I have more self belief and do not follow what the media throws at me.


Words of wisdom and tips for the young people who want to get slimmer now.
Avoid reading magazines, they do not create a reality of health and fitness. You will never be able to create the hour glass or waist thin body as they are photo shopped. Another key thing to remember is that no two people will ever be the same so the diet plans and workouts outlined in magazines do not fit in for everybody. If they were so successful we would see all females walking around with the same body shape and if they were realistic plans, no one would fall off the bang wagon. So listen to your body.
You are already beautiful enough, radiant enough, smart enough so be your own trend setter and seek advice before dieting and exercising”.

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