Mon. Nov 18th, 2024
Maddy Moon

A woman developed a dangerous eating disorder after she became obsessed with bodybuilding competitions which stopped her periods and gave her insomnia.

Maddy Moon had what others would describe as the perfect body.

She ate only healthy, clean foods and worked out seven days a week, showing off the results of her hard work in bodybuilding contests.

But inside, Maddy was the opposite of healthy, starving her body and shunning even fruit in a bid to look what she thought was her best.

The 24-year-old was suffering from a little-known eating disorder called orhtorexia – an obsession with eating heathily.

She was already a vegetarian on animal rights grounds and later became vegan ‘to save the planet’.

But when she got to high school she developed body dysmorphia and become fixated on calorie counting which led to other disordered eating patterns, such as purging.

Her problems intensified at college when she picked up body building and started a rigid six-meal-a-day plan on top of working out seven days a week.

At her worst she would only eat when and what her trainer instructed, even when the coach banned her from eating fruit, and even continued to push her body despite contracting pnemonia.

Maddy, from Boulder in Colorado, USA, said: “I started my healthy eating lifestyle with good intentions but found myself getting sucked into a weight loss obsession.

“I had a terrible case of body dysmorphia, and I believed the only cure was to shame myself into working out harder and eating less.

“I fixated on my stomach mostly, I thought I was huge and that everybody noticed me everywhere I went when, in reality, I had a small stomach.”

The blonde beauty realised she could disguise her disordered relationship with food as preparation for body building contest.

But now she has spoken out about the industry which she labels as “dangerous”.

Suffering: At this point, she was training even when she was really ill
Suffering: At this point, she was training even when she was really ill

She added: “Bodybuilding was one of the biggest contributors to my orthorexia.

“I realised I could easily conceal my disordered relationship with food – to the outside world it looked like I was full of self-discipline and willpower.

“Little did they know, I was suffering so intensely.

“I had anti-fruit coaches who wouldn’t ‘allow’ me to eat any fruit.

“One of my coaches told me I was cute but not sexy, and in order to be a sexy fitness model I needed to stop eating fruit and then viola, he said, it would happen.

“Hearing things like that terrified me from straying from my plan, and created a fear of most foods.

“I think all bodybuilding competitions are dangerous. Period.

“In a ‘perfect’ world there would be no more bodybuilding competitions.”

As her orthorexia worsened, Maddy would binge on vitamin C powder just to get a sugar kick.

And the fitness buff refused to stop working out even when she caught Pneumonia.

She added: “There were many days where I would be on the treadmill coughing up a fit, when I really needed to be in bed resting.

“I lost the ability to respect and nourish my body. My obsession with looking perfect was so strong.

“I was constantly on social media, comparing my body to other women’s bodies, jealous that I wasn’t as lean as them, or as fit as them.”

Now: She has recovered from her eating disorder
Now: She has recovered from her eating disorder

As well as experiencing physical side-effects such as loss of menstrual cycle and insomnia, the rigid meals plans and workouts harmed her social life.

She said: “You have to set aside your social life in order to stick with your routine perfectly.

“I had no room for friendships or a boyfriend, so I spent time all of my time with my meal plan, food scale and gym.”

When Maddy stumbled across the term orthorexia a few years ago, she realised she identified with the disorder.

Deciding to take back her life Maddy got a dog, moved to the countryside and cancelled her gym membership.

She now works as a Body Image and Disordered Eating Coach to help others in similar situations.

Happy: She is much healthier nowadays
Happy: She is much healthier nowadays

She added: “I want to enjoy whatever I am eating, but I also want to know that it will nourish my body and give me energy for the day.

“I eat tons of plants, but I also enjoy wine, chocolate and pancakes.

“Sometimes I will love my body, and other times I may find an endless amount of imperfections.

“I don’t believe full recovery is a thing. I believe eating disorder recovery is something you learn to maintain for the rest of your life.

“I still have self-shaming thoughts pop in my head, but now I know how to acknowledge those thoughts and move on quickly.”

Courtesy of: Mirror