Author Topic: Gen Z men’s fixation with fitness comes at a cost  (Read 110 times)

SF1900

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https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2025/11/28/gen-z-mens-fixation-with-fitness-comes-at-a-cost/

Thomas Steckman, 21,  remembers exactly when going to the gym stopped being a hobby and started feeling like a compulsion. His routine quickly changed to long workouts, extreme calorie cuts, and a fear of undoing his progress.

“I want to  say three or four months, and every month I would raise my calorie intake like 100 calories, and at the time it was working. So I got the solution that was a good thing and I was doing the right thing but towards the end of it, I started noticing that my energy was low and I was very irritable,” said Steckman, who is originally from New York and moved to South Florida to attend Nova Southeastern University as an undergraduate student.

Men in South Florida in the 18-25 age group are chasing physiques that are shaped by fitness influencers, supplements, and a cycle of bulking and cutting. Meanwhile, health professionals and students are seeing troubling signs that mirror the traits of disordered eating.

“Gym culture does not exist in isolation,” said Elliott Montgomery Sklar, a professor in the Department of Health Science at Nova Southeastern University. “Because of social media, gym culture follows you. You take it with you.”

Sklar, whose research focuses on public health and men’s body image, said that young men are absorbing an over-idealized idea of masculinity shaped by the online fitness community. He described body image as an issue rarely acknowledged in men.

“Body image is a gendered topic in our society,” he said. “However that is not accurate, because we’ve all been taught through media and how we’ve been brought up that how we look, if we look good then we’re good.”

Sklar said men are scrutinized in the same way as women, but are discouraged from admitting it. A study published in the International Journal of Eating Disorders found that 22% of men between the ages of 18 and 24 exhibit disordered eating behaviors, including the use of supplements and anabolic steroids and altered diets to gain or loose weight rapidly.

“We’re taught to be strong. And by being strong it’s not admitting weakness. Weakness is having a concern or an issue with your body image,” Sklar said.

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Hulkotron

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Re: Gen Z men’s fixation with fitness comes at a cost
« Reply #1 on: Today at 01:14:54 PM »
Glad I don't suffer from such problems.

Grape Ape

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Re: Gen Z men’s fixation with fitness comes at a cost
« Reply #2 on: Today at 01:23:50 PM »
Everyone's mentally weak due to social media and the internet.
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