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Search resuls for: "dysmorphia"


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Melissa Eppard is a 46-year-old who was diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer when she was 36. The diagnosis, double mastectomy, chemo, and loss of confidence negatively impacted her sex life. I thought about all the people I knew who had died from breast cancer. For years, my desire and sex life had been like a stalled car. I would never compare my sex life pre-cancer to now.
Persons: Melissa Eppard, Organizations: Service, Upstate, Affordable Health Locations: Upstate Mary
She's relieved to have gone from a 6X to a 1X — but worried about excess skin and her body image. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . A sign on the wall at the weight management clinic inspires me every time I go for my body composite exam. The main reason I lost that initial weight was dental work. I often feel like I haven't lost much weight at all.
Persons: Betsy Smith, She's, , It's, I've, I'd, Smith, Toby, Steph, I'm Organizations: Service, Business Locations: Billings , Montana
States sue TikTok over app's effect on kids' mental health
  + stars: | 2024-10-08 | by ( Dan Mangan | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +5 min
Schwalb's suit alleges a slew of "profound" mental health risks are posed to teens and children by compulsive TikTok use, including depression, anxiety, sleep loss and body dysmorphia. "TikTok knows that its design features make its App more addictive and keep users engaged for longer," the suit in D.C. Superior Court alleges. The complaint also says that in 2019, the company introduced "two new dangerous features": a live-streaming feature called TikTok LIVE and a virtual currency system called TikTok "Coins." TikTok incentivizes users to go LIVE by promising these monetary rewards 'the more popular [their] content becomes.'" The suit says that TikTok "earns substantial revenue" from its Coins, charging commissions of up to 50% on each transaction.
Persons: ByteDance, Brian Schwalb, Schwalb, TikTok Organizations: U.S . House, District of Columbia, CNBC, Washington , D.C, NHL's Washington Capitals hockey, Schwalb, AGs, Senate Locations: TikTok, Culver City , California, New York, California, U.S, D.C, Los Angeles, Washington ,, United States, China, Beijing
From putting your toddler children on your payroll to claiming your car as a business expense, TikTok is chock-full of potentially bad money advice. Yet, financial TikTok, also known as #FinTok, is one of the most popular sources for financial information and tips, particularly among Generation Z. Now, 27% of social media users say they have fallen for financial advice or information on social media that turned out to be false or misleading, according to a new report by Edelman Financial Engines. Edelman Financial Engines polled more than 3,000 adults over 30 from June to July. Heavy social media users, likely younger Americans, may be particularly susceptible to believing inaccurate financial information found there, according to Edelman Financial Engines.
Persons: Jean Chatzky, HerMoney.com Organizations: Edelman Financial, Finance, Edelman
Although originally prescribed to treat type 2 diabetes (Ozempic and Mounjaro), semaglutide and tirzepatide are becoming more and more popular for weight loss. If you are noticing an effect on your mood while using a GLP-1 medication, here’s what might be at play. Antidepressant effectsFor some, using a GLP-1 medication might relieve some anxiety or depression symptoms, Arillotta said. Blood sugarIf you feel like your mood takes a drop while you’re on GLP-1 medications, what and how much you’re eating or drinking might be to blame. “Extremes in blood sugar can impact mood,” said Tara Schmidt, lead dietitian at the Mayo Clinic Diet, an online weight loss program.
Persons: ideation, Thomas Wadden, Davide Arillotta, Arillotta, , Peter Ueda, Amira Guirguis, , Tara Schmidt, ” Schmidt, Guirguis, Giuseppe Floresta, Fabrizio Schifano, ” Guirguis, aren’t, you’ve, Schmidt, “ I’m, Ueda Organizations: Lifeline, CNN, US Food and Drug Administration, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, FDA, neurosciences, University of Florence, Karolinska Institutet, Diabetes, Swansea University, Mayo Clinic Diet, University of Catania, University of Hertfordshire, American Psychological Association, Locations: Italy, Stockholm, Sweden, GLP, Wales, United Kingdom
I’m 36 — when do I have to give up crop tops?
  + stars: | 2024-09-01 | by ( Jacqui Palumbo | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
CNN —As a pre-teen in Y2K, the (small) shadows of crop tops loomed large. In a decade when unforgiving low-rise jeans were the norm — and criticism over women’s bodies perfunctory — crop tops were not casual, easy wear; any softness of the torso was considered an aberration. Now that I’m 36, crop tops have become an unlikely staple in my wardrobe, and I’m reluctant to let them go. Can I still wear crop tops in my forties? I can also keep wearing crop tops for as long as I feel like it — after all, whenever I see a woman a generation ahead of me owning her personal style and at ease with herself, it gives me something to aspire to.
Persons: Keira Knightley, Tommy Hilfiger, Buffy ”, baring, Gwen Stefani's midriff, Ron Galella, Jeffrey Mayer, WireImage, I’m, they’ve, Martens clompers, Julia Fox's, Bauer, Griffin, Jennifer Lopez doesn't, , I’ve, Ashley Graham, Jim Spellman Organizations: CNN Locations: South Carolina, New York City, Chinatown
For many Gen Zers, the generation between the ages of 12 and 27, TikTok is the primary social media platform where they find products to buy. Gen Z doesn't really trust influencers anymoreInfluencers don't hold the same power they once did among younger audiences, some research suggests. Because of limited regulation of the social media advertising space, fraud runs rampant on social media . Some evidence suggests Gen Z is benefiting financially from living at home but may not feel these benefits because of money dysmorphia. This dysmorphia can sometimes be fueled by social media, where wealthy lifestyles are on display.
Persons: , Zers, TikTok, it's, Stanley, Jade Taylor, Gen Z, Influencers, aren't, Gen, Z, Brett House Organizations: Service, Business, New York Times, Times, Yahoo News, Columbia
In fact, Gen Zers — people born between 1997 and 2012 — are more worried about saving than any other generation, a BI survey showed. Nearly half of Gen Zers and millennials have it, according to a recent Credit Karma survey. Money dysmorphia goes beyond wanting to pay off some credit card debt or to contribute more to a 401(k). It's "pervasive worry, vigilance — like an internalized feeling of unsafety with money," Clayman said, even when there aren't pressing financial problems to solve. AdvertisementClayman explained why younger generations are more likely to experience warped views around their finances — and might be more financially stable than they give themselves credit for.
Persons: , Gen Zers —, Amanda Clayman, Zers, dysmorphia, Clayman, Gen Xers Organizations: Service, Business
Being biracial has led me to question my identity a lot; I'm not white, but I'm not Black either — so what does that leave me with? I don't feel like I own this part of my identityPeople I meet for the first time often ask me about my "origins" — it's not something that used to bother me. But the older I get, the more I realize I don't feel I own this part of my identity. Part of my biracial experience comes down to acknowledging that I'm going to look like somebody different in everyone's eyes. AdvertisementLooking and feeling racially ambiguous has sometimes felt othering and occasionally made me feel like I didn't belong either in white majority settings or in Black majority ones.
Persons: biracial, I'm Organizations: Service, Latina Locations: Guadeloupe, West Indies, Southwest, France, Caribbean
The latest money-saving trend taking over is the "no-spend month," which encourages TikTok users to cut out all non-essential purchases for a set period. The no-spend rulesThe "no-spend" challenge can last for a week, a month or even a full year. On its face, "the no-buy challenge is as much pragmatic as it is symbolic," according to Gregory Stoller, a professor at Boston University's Questrom School of Business. "The potential complication with the no-buy challenge is to what extent people are willing to honor their commitment," Stoller said. Rather than hop on the latest extreme fad, "it comes back to setting a budget and setting expectations," Rossman said.
Persons: Gregory Stoller, Ted Rossman, Stoller, Rossman, Paul Hoffman Organizations: Boston University's Questrom School of Business, Finance, Bankrate, CNBC
The Very Online Afterlife of Franz Kafka
  + stars: | 2024-06-01 | by ( Amanda Hess | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Also, “The Metamorphosis” by Franz Kafka, a fat black bug on its cover. The video’s creator is 25-year-old Margarita Mouka — @aquariuscat444 on TikTok, where she frequently posts about Kafka, integrating his work, his likeness and his life story into her online persona of romantic intellectualism. “Franz Kafka becomes an unlikely HEARTTHROB on TikTok — where Gen Zers are swooning over the Czech novelist nearly 100 YEARS after his death,” ran a Daily Mail headline. On BookTok, where a flashed book jacket conveys a glimmer of a user’s inner life, a classic text can leave a durable impression. It plays like a deep cut, reaching back through time to ground a TikToker’s content in a more enduring human experience.
Persons: Ottessa Moshfegh, Sylvia Plath, Franz Kafka, Margarita Mouka —, Kafka, “ Franz Kafka, Zers, , Harry Styles Organizations: Daily Mail, The, Austro Locations: TikTok, Czech, Hungarian
The middle class is more of a club than an income bracketThe ranks of middle-income earners have been shrinking, according to the Pew Research Center. A solid chunk of millionaires consider themselves middle class, despite accounting for just over 12% of American families. And there's good reasons," Lawrence R. Samuel, the author of the book "The American Middle Class: A Cultural History," told Business Insider. "Being middle class is almost like classless. Clinging to at least the mirage of the middle class might be important to upholding more core American ideals.
Persons: , they're, Claire Tassin, Tassin, they'd, ALICE, Amanda, She's, there's, Rakesh Kochhar, That's, Kochhar, Lawrence R, Samuel, we're Organizations: Service, Business, Pew Research, Pew Research Center Locations: America, Texas
But her 80 pounds of weight loss while taking Wegovy has not come without challenges of its own, she said. But she warns that losing weight is not a cure for everything that’s not right in your life. Many people try to lose weight hoping to feel better about their body, only to find that they still don’t once they have lost the weight, Conason said. Conason recommends separating your efforts to improve your body image from any efforts you might take on to lose weight. Since her weight loss, Olivares has found that many of her social interactions begin with a comment about her body.
Persons: Allie Olivares, Wegovy, , , Olivares, ” Olivares, that’s, I’m, It’s, , what’s, Alexis Conason, Conason, aren’t, Genesis, ” Conason, , Ettienne, you’re Organizations: CNN, National Alliance for Eating Disorders Locations: Philadelphia, York City, Miami
My children came out to me one summer; they both started HRT to help with their body dysmorphia. I worry about the dangers of being trans in this world, but I am trying to be courageous. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Both of my kids came out one summerI've always considered myself to be someone who could handle or adapt to anything. While I can't say HRT has been the cure-all, I can say that it has made a monumental change in their self-esteem and their confidence.
Persons: , I'm, We're LatinX Organizations: HRT, Service, It's Locations:
The faces that hold social currency on social media — with fox-lift brows and buccal fat removed — are increasingly bleeding into real life. AdvertisementEven before the remote-work boom, writers noticed social media was shaping the way people looked. The shift from surgical procedures to minimally invasive injections has also made cosmetic work safer and more available to average people. "The gap between the identity we present on social media and the self we see in the mirror is growing," Widdows told me. As more people get cosmetic work done, the rest of us lose touch with what's normal.
Persons: it's, Z, It's, Heather Widdows, else's, Snapchat, Anne, Mette Hermans, Widdows, Gen Zers, Hermans, you've, we've Organizations: American Academy of, New Yorker, University of Warwick, American Psychological Association, Boston University School of Medicine, City University of London, Tilburg University Locations: Instagram, United States, Netherlands
'I have no regrets'Andrea Jones accepted a floodplain buyout for her home in the Charlotte, North Carolina, area. CNBCAndrea Jones, 59, sold her home in the Charlotte, North Carolina, area in a floodplain buyout. On average, federal buyouts can take two to five years, though 80% of the FEMA acquisitions are approved in less than two years. Jones' buyout was delayed by the pandemic, but once she started the process up again in May 2022, things moved quickly. In addition to FEMA, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and many state and local communities fund floodplain buyouts.
Persons: Siders, Andrea Jones, CNBC Andrea Jones, Jones, Andrea Jones Jones, they're, Mathew Sanders, Sanders Organizations: Federal Emergency Management Agency, FEMA, University of Delaware's, Program, CNBC, Finance, Charitable, Congressional Research Service, U.S . Department of Housing, Urban Development Locations: Charlotte , North Carolina
Former bodybuilding influencer Sophie Aris quit due to intense workouts and loneliness. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementA former bodybuilding influencer says the lifestyle, which was full of intense workouts and tracking calories, made her "miserable" and "lonely," so she quit. AdvertisementShe told The Guardian she became entrenched in the bodybuilding influencer world around 2015, and became a competitor in various bodybuilding competitions. Aris said bodybuilding competitively meant saying goodbye to a social life, and dealing with the isolation of it being a very "selfish sport."
Persons: influencer Sophie Aris, Aris, , influencer, Sophie Aris, it's, There's, Lyla, Rae, didn't, what's Organizations: Service, Guardian, Aris
“What we learned doing this project is that a lot of people are not represented in breast cancer media. Although the incidence rate of breast cancer is 4% lower among Black women than White women, Black women are 41% more likely to die from the disease, according to the American Cancer Society. Breast cancer is less common among Asian women than in other ethnic or racial groups, but the disease is the most commonly diagnosed cancer. Eshaana Sheth was 27 when she was diagnosed with hormone receptor positive breast cancer in 2019. Breast cancer is hormone receptor positive when cancer cells have receptors — which the National Cancer Institute describes as binding proteins within the cell — that attach to progesterone or estrogen.
Persons: Vanessa Gonzalez, Gonzalez, ” Gonzalez, “ Marks, , Stephanie Francis, Julia Comita, , ’ ” Julia Comita “, ” Comita, Michelle Kang, Lyssette Horne, ” Julia Comita, ” Young, Eshaana Sheth, United States —, Julia Comita Sheth’s, Sheth, multihyphenate, “ I’m, Mariah Crenshaw, Mariah, Crenshaw, ” Crenshaw, , ” “, Laura Skarzout, , ” Skarzout, Comita, I’d Organizations: CNN, American Cancer Society, National Cancer Institute Locations: Los Angeles, , United States, White, India, LA, New York City, older, Louisville , Kentucky, Amsterdam, Black, Florida, Kentucky
Federal Reserve Bank Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference at the bank's William McChesney Martin building on March 20, 2024 in Washington, DC. Slowly but surely, recessionary talk is dying down and confidence in the Federal Reserve is picking up. Chairman Jerome Powell indicated that with the economy still growing at a healthy pace and unemployment below 4%, the Fed can take a more measured approach when loosening monetary policy. More from Personal Finance:Here's when the Fed is likely to start cutting interest ratesNearly half of young adults have 'money dysmorphia'Deflation: Here's where prices fellMonetary policy is a balancing act, Higgins explained. At least, that is how it has played out in the past, he said.
Persons: Jerome Powell, William McChesney Martin, Mark Higgins, Higgins Organizations: Bank, Federal Reserve, Fund, Finance Locations: Washington ,
Here's what Trump's proposed tariffs could mean for your wallet
  + stars: | 2024-03-13 | by ( Kate Dore | Cfp | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
As President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump secure enough delegates to clinch their party nominations, policy experts are weighing how proposed tariffs could affect American consumers. While the Trump campaign hasn't released many tax policy specifics, he has renewed his support for tariffs, which are taxes levied on imported goods from another country. "I'm a big believer in tariffs," Trump said Monday on CNBC's "Squawk Box," suggesting that he's likely to reinstitute duties if elected for a second term. The Biden administration has maintained some of those tariffs. "Here's an area where the candidates are actually pretty similar — first what Trump imposed and then what Biden maintained," said Erica York, a senior economist and research manager with the Tax Foundation's Center for Federal Tax Policy.
Persons: Joe Biden, Donald Trump, hasn't, Trump, dysmorphia, Biden, Erica York Organizations: White, Washington , D.C, Trump, Finance, European Union, Tax, Center, Federal Tax Locations: Washington ,, China, Mexico
Overwhelming evidence suggests social media has a negative impact on self-esteem. That's not only true for how people feel about their appearance and social status but also their financial wellbeing and economic standing. "Money dysmorphia is kind of like today's version of keeping up with the Joneses," said Courtney Alev, consumer financial advocate at Credit Karma. Not surprisingly, money dysmorphia is even more prevalent among younger generations, according to Credit Karma. Many of those who experience money dysmorphia have above-average savings, Credit Karma also found.
Persons: That's, Credit Karma, Courtney Alev, dysmorphia, Carolyn McClanahan, Karma, Alev Organizations: Credit, Finance, Planning Partners Locations: Jacksonville , Florida
New York CNN —Social media companies are soaking up the billions in advertising dollars that once flowed to legacy media companies — a trend that continues to accelerate despite an ever-growing mountain of evidence indicating the Silicon Valley titans govern their ballooning kingdoms with little regard for how their products negatively impact society. Time and time again, companies like Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, Snapchat and others have been caught allowing harmful content to exist on their platforms. The committee heard testimony from the heads of the largest tech firms on the dangers of child sexual exploitation on social media. To be fair, brands would likely prefer to advertise on the platforms of responsible media actors versus the risky world of social media. But Big Tech offers these brands much more effective targeting, while boasting a larger and younger audience than legacy news organizations.
Persons: BuzzFeed, You’re, It’s, Meta, , Jeff Horowitz, Katherine Blunt, Mark Zuckerberg, Anna Moneymaker Organizations: New York CNN, Social, Media, New York Times, CNN, YouTube, Times, Meta, Dirksen, Facebook, Big, Big Tech, News Locations: New York, Snapchat, Washington ,
Our generation came of age during the ’90s toxic diet culture. Millennials weren’t taught to fear aging; we were taught to fear fat. And if you had a mother who internalized diet culture and projected it onto her children, the damage could also happen from within the family. Researchers have found that mothers who encourage weight loss or food restriction or even express dissatisfaction with their body weight may lead to their daughters’ becoming more likely to have eating-related problems. As my generation grew up and became more conscious of the impacts of diet culture, we began to openly celebrate and encourage body positivity.
Persons: Millennials weren’t, Z, , I’ll Organizations: Walgreens
AdvertisementThey are crying out about their finances to anyone who will listen — but it could come at a cost. They follow the money, putting paychecks above career steps that were once viewed as aspirational, like management positions or promotions. A job is just a job to Gen Z, who feel like the juice of career progression is not worth the squeeze. "So you just got to be really, really careful with the content you're consuming and the people that you're trusting." This can lead to financial envy and money anxiety, Imam said, as well as something called "money dysmorphia."
Persons: , Abby Ferrell, she'd, Gen Z, It's, Markia Brown, Brown, it's, Imam Organizations: Service, Business
I got Botox because I hated my forehead lines. I was excited when my Botox started wearing offAfter about a month, the Botox started to gently lose its grip. While the lines didn’t stick, I could move my face as freely as I did before. I lost a part of my face I didn’t know I lovedNow, I’m at the end point of my Botox treatment. I’m relieved that I didn’t love Botox, and that I will always feel ambivalent about it.
Persons: , , Um, Nathan Fielder, I’ve, Julia Pugachevsky, Alison Mei, I’m, I’ll Organizations: Service Locations: New York
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