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No it is not okay. Starving and binging are very unhealthy for your body.
the reason is many girls struggle with their looks just like I do. It is probably harder to starve yourself than to purge.
Yes because they barf up what they eat and they starve themselves and also eat big amounts of food at one time.
It's more likely that starving yourself in the first place will cause missed periods. As you starve, some processes in your body slow down or stop, including menstruation. If you continue to disrupt your body with irregular eating and your period does not start up again, it is possible that you will never have a normal period again.
Bulimics starve themselves for a time, then binge on huge quantities followed by self-induced vomiting. The acid from their vomiting eventually erodes/eats the enamel on their teeth, their gums and their esophagus. Fatal bleeding can result from this.
Your bulimic.
When you binge drink, you are taking in a lot of alcohol at once. Your body cannot handle this much chemicals being in the bloodstream so it goes into shock. You faint and sometimes even die. You don't just hurt yourself but the people around you. I hope you don't binge drink!
Starving yourself could trigger a binge. After binging some people want to throw up. So, starving COULD be a ticket to Bulimia
Hmmm... I think you can stop binge eating by not skipping your meals, and not restrict yourself from eating junk food. E.g. Eating vegetables, fruits, and all the other healthy food all the time can trigger binge eating on junk food. Keeping your diet balanced is the best way to go :)
You binge on high-calorie high-fat foods like chocolate cake and rich desserts. That's why starving yourself doesn't work usually.
The risks of binge drinking can easily be avoided by simply not binge drinking.
He went off on a drinking binge. The binge of excess did not help the budget.
Binge Eating is quite similar to bulimia, however, it differs from bulimia because its sufferers do not purge their bodies of excess food. They will eat large quantities of food, and do not stop until they are uncomfortably full. Most people with binge eating disorder are obese and have a history of weight fluctuation. Recent research shows that binge eating disorder occurs in about 30 percent of people participating in medically supervised weight control programs.Although Binge Eating does not attract the kind of attention that Anorexia and Bulimia do, it is still apparent that those who binge can cause tremendous amount of damage to their bodies. Furthermore binge eating is a reflection of a deeper imbalance within the sufferer, which may be indicative of a basic breakdown of body and food relationship that if not dealt with can develop from binge eating to other more deadly eating disorders.