In keeping with what we were discussing recently about perceptions of 
self-image. Everyone says this lady is gorgeous, but man was she too bony! I 
get that athletes need to watch their weight, but in this case she proves how 
the skewed mainstream perceptions of female body types is dangerous. Not only 
did she not *look* good when she was thin (though she thought she did), someone 
had to prove to her she wasn't *performing* well because she was too thin. 
She'd sacrificed muscle strength, stability, and overall energy level to keep 
to mainstream perceptions of skinny as beautiful. I still cringe when i see the 
likes of Angelina Jolie, Paris Hilton, Keira Knightley, etc., hailed as 
standards of beauty. At a recent awards show, I listened to people from E! 
magazine, as well as several TV shows, gush about how beautiful Jolie was. All 
could see was a head and big lips perched atop an alarmingly thin body. 

I hope this lady's story gets out to show girls and women that not only do they 
need to ignore the fashion industry's biases, but realize that you can be too 
thin after all in many cases. I mean, her's a world class athlete who can't put 
two-and-two together to realize that reducing her caloric intake might--just 
might--have something to do with her lack of energy? Scary. 

By the way, I've never heard of "Disordered eating" before. Isn't this what we 
just call "not eating enough"? 

*************************************************** 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/17/sports/olympics/17icedancers.html 



ASTON, Pa. — The American ice dancer Tanith Belbin looks at photographs of 
herself from the 2006 Turin Olympics and wants to hide her eyes. 

Skip to next paragraph 

Enlarge This Image 
Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images 

Tanith Belbin and Benjamin Agosto en route to winning the silver medal at the 
U.S. Figure Skating Championships in January of this year. 

Back then, she never thought her legs were too spindly or that her body was too 
chopstick-thin for her to be a strong skater. She thought she looked just fine. 




“Ugh, I was so thin,” Belbin said in a recent interview at Ice Works, the rink 
where she trains with her partner, Ben Agosto . “You could see my bones jutting 
out; you could totally see my chest bone sticking out.” 




Heading into their second Games, Belbin and Agosto, the Olympic silver 
medalists in 2006 , are once again among the favorites to win a medal in the 
competition, which begins Friday with the compulsory dance. What should give 
them an edge this time, Belbin said, is something she would have never dreamed 
could help them: her newly found muscles and curves. 




She can thank one of her coaches, Natalia Linichuk, for that. 

Linichuk and Gennadi Karponosov, who were the 1980 Olympic ice dancing 
champions, began coaching Belbin and Agosto in the summer of 2008, when Belbin 
and Agosto left suburban Detroit for a fresh start. 

Linichuk took one look at the 5-foot-6, 105-pound Belbin and said, “You need to 
gain 10 pounds.” She said more muscle would help Belbin skate faster and more 
fluidly. 




“At first, I said no way, but then I started to understand that it needed to be 
done,” said Belbin, who is from Kirkland, Quebec, but holds dual citizenship. 
“I don’t feel like I had a safe, well-thought-out or well-researched diet until 
the past few years, until Natalia gave me that ultimatum.” 




As it turned out, Linichuk also ended up saving Belbin from a problem that has 
long plagued figure skaters: disordered eating. Often not as severe as eating 
disorders like anorexia and bulimia , disordered eating involves irregular 
eating habits that can be fueled by a distorted body image. Belbin said she had 
struggled with those issues since puberty . 




When she was 16 or 17, Belbin grew several inches and gained weight, which 
threw off her skating technique. As her body matured, she tried to fight it. As 
an ice dancer who wears tiny outfits and is often lifted by her partner, Belbin 
said that every extra pound seemed like 20. 




She never binged, purged or used laxatives, she said, but she restricted her 
calories to the minimum. She would eat a small breakfast, then later snack on 
celery or a few almonds to get her through the day. After practices, she was 
too weak to lift her arms. Once in her apartment, she would stare blankly 
ahead, sapped of energy. 

When she could not control her hunger, she would eat a huge dinner and find 
herself two pounds heavier. It horrified her. 




“I thought I was out of control and that the weight gain must be my fault,” she 
said. “I was like, I’m eating nothing and I’m still not losing weight. I swear, 
I’m not eating anything and I’m exhausted and cranky and stressed and all of 
those things that make you gain weight even more.” 

Agosto, who is from Chicago, said those eating problems were common in skating, 
where pressure is placed on female skaters to be wispy beauties. Because they 
are judged on their looks and performances from a young age, some skaters 
cannot help becoming overly self-critical, he said. 




“I was always worried about her health, worried that she wasn’t eating enough,” 
Agosto said. “But I was almost too close to it to realize how big of a problem 
it really was.” 

As Belbin became thinner, others noticed. In the skating world, rumors about 
Belbin’s having an eating disorder started to spread, said Gerri Walbert, the 
executive editor of Blades on Ice magazine. 

Judges would pull Belbin aside. “They would say to me: ‘Are you O.K.? Are you 
eating enough?’ ” Belbin recalled. “But I never really understood what they 
were implying because they never came out and said that I looked too thin.” 

Belbin’s former coaches Igor Shpilband and Marina Zoueva said they had 
encouraged her to eat more. 

“She was going through really tough stages, when all girls’ weight fluctuates,” 
Zoueva said. “She was a little too thin, so we always tried to work with her on 
that.” 

Belbin tried different types of diets that restricted her protein or her 
carbohydrates . But Linichuk’s order to gain weight changed that. Suddenly, 
Belbin was forcing herself to eat. 

“It was a difficult change, and Natalia knew I would feel uncomfortable with my 
body for a while,” said Belbin, who did not seek professional help for her 
diet. “But I knew it would be worth it.” 




Belbin began reading books about nutrition and eating lunch at the rink. She 
learned to eat foods that would best sustain an athlete’s body. 

She also began training harder off the ice, lifting weights, doing push-ups and 
participating in Karponosov’s boot camps, which involve hard-core skating 
drills to strengthen the legs. 




Karponosov’s skaters would often complain that his drills made their legs so 
muscular that they could no longer fit into their jeans. 

“I was always like, there will never be a day when I can’t fit into my jeans,” 
Belbin said. “But this past summer, I came to him and said my jeans are so 
tight. I never thought I’d see that change in my body. It really, really made a 
difference. It feels good, though.” 




Belbin began marveling at her new body. She had gained 10 pounds. Her waist 
size increased two inches because her core was so much stronger. 

Agosto could see a huge difference in Belbin’s skating. During lifts, she was 
no longer a sack of potatoes, holding on for dear life. She could hold her 
positions much better, and that made it easier for Agosto because she did not 
move around as much. 




Belbin says she wishes she had learned the importance of nutrition long ago. 
She said U.S. Figure Skating officials would have provided a nutritional 
counselor if she had asked them for one. But that phone call “never fit into 
her busy day,” Belbin said. In the end, she preferred educating herself. 




“The message shouldn’t be, go consult a nutritionist; we need more education,” 
she said. “Skaters always sit there and wait to be told what to do, but in this 
case, they need to take the initiative and find out how to eat healthy.” 

For Belbin, that effort has paid off, on the rink and off. In the past, she had 
always declined Agosto’s offers to try rock climbing at an indoor gym in 
Philadelphia, thinking she was too weak to lift her body even a foot off the 
floor. 

But last year, Belbin took Agosto up on his offer. On her second try, she 
climbed straight to the top. 

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