Zosia Mamet reveals eating disorder from age 8: Im an addict in recovery

Ive adored Zosia Mamet (shown above with her boyfriend, Evan Jonigkeit) ever since her recurring role on Mad Men. That makes me feel bad because I still havent watched HBOs Girls. (Confession: I really dont feel too bad because so many people have told me not to watch it.) Zosia was so good as a

Zosia Mamet

I’ve adored Zosia Mamet (shown above with her boyfriend, Evan Jonigkeit) ever since her recurring role on Mad Men. That makes me feel bad because I still haven’t watched HBO’s Girls. (Confession: I really don’t feel too bad because so many people have told me not to watch it.) Zosia was so good as a streetwise Mad Men photographer, and I shall always remember her in that way.

Zosia has a regular column with Glamour. She took to the magazine a few months ago to discuss feminism, and she did not embarrass herself like most other starlets. Zosia isn’t afraid to discuss heavy topics. This month’s discussion covers her own eating disorder. Zosia has kept this secret for many years. She wants Glamour’s audience to know that about 30 million Americans suffer from some form of eating disorder. Is the number really that high? (*does mental calculation*) Yes, that seems possible. Zosia says she nearly died from her eating disorder. She believes that it’s incredibly rare to find any woman who doesn’t suffer from sort of body issue. I think she’s correct. Even those of us who pretend to not pay attention to what we eat …. we’re pretty much lying to ourselves. Not everyone is like that, of course. Many of us do pay more attention to the caloric ins-and-outs than we’d readily admit in public. We’re all friends here, and Zosia wants to talk:

The bottom line: “Here’s how I think of my eating disorder: I’m an addict in recovery. We’ve brought other addictions into the light; we’ve talked about them, dissected them, made them acceptable issues to discuss and work out. We need to treat eating disorders just as seriously. (What’s different about eating disorders, of course, is that you can’t just avoid food for the rest of your life. You have to eat to live.) Nobody is addressing the fact that so many women wake up in the morning, look at themselves in the mirror, and, out of habit, attack what they see. Maybe that’s not an all-out disorder, but it’s certainly the seed of one. I read a study once that said that more than a third of casual dieters develop pathological eating habits (and of those, up to 25 percent wind up with an eating disorder). Of course, not all of those people will end up deathly ill, but obsession–and doesn’t every diet require some degree of obsessing?–is a slippery slope. Did you know that only one in 10 people who are suffering gets proper treatment? And that eating disorders have the highest death rate of any mental illness?”

Her disorder: “If you are lucky enough never to have battled this beast, let me tell you what it’s like: I was told I was fat for the first time when I was eight. I’m not fat; I’ve never been fat. But ever since then, there has been a monster in my brain that tells me I am–that convinces me my clothes don’t fit or that I’ve eaten too much. At times it has forced me to starve myself, to run extra miles, to abuse my body. As a teenager I used to stand in front of the refrigerator late at night staring into that white fluorescent light, debilitated by the war raging inside me: whether to give in to the pitted hunger in my stomach or close the door and go back to bed. I would stand there for hours, opening and closing the door, taking out a piece of food then putting it back in; taking it out, putting it in my mouth, and then spitting it into the garbage. I was only 17, living in misery, waiting to die.”

Can we solve the problem? “I can’t talk about all of this without bringing up the world we live in. Our culture delivers a real one-two punch: You want to control something, and then society says, ‘Hey, how about controlling the way you look? Skinny is beautiful.’ Your obsession feels justified. It’s no secret that we live in a country with a warped view of beauty. ‘Skinny’ sells us everything, from vacations to underwear, effectively. But we need to be brave and expose this body type for what it truly is: a figure naturally possessed by, let’s say, a mere 5 percent of women. We must demand that our media figure out another way to sell things to us. It’s not going to be easy. I recently saw an ad featuring a nearly naked, thin model with the words love yourself written across her. Even this attempt at encouraging women to accept themselves was accompanied by an image telling us the opposite! We have to change the ideal.”

[From Glamour]

I’m actually in a bit of shock over Zosia’s confessions. She always seemed like a naturally thin actress, but you never really know what lurks beneath the surface. Zosia says she’s gotten help for her eating disorder and knows it will be an ongoing battle.

Zosia seems like such a cool chick. I still love that she has makeup issues. She wears makeup like I do — it’s a disaster, and I’ve completely given up on the stuff unless it’s a dressy occasion. God, I want to have a drink with this girl. We’d have a grand time, and calories would not count at all.

Zosia Mamet

Photos courtesy of WENN

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