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Men's Health

14 Guys Share Their Least Favorite Body Parts — and How They Became OK With Them

Men's Health
14 Guys Share Their Least Favorite Body Parts — and How They Became OK With Them

14 Guys Share Their Least Favorite Body Parts — and How They Became OK With Them

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May is Mental Health Awareness Month. For too long, men have been silent about mental health and it’s literally killing us. We can change that. Our Healthy Mind, Healthy Body series shines a light on mental health issues that everyone should be talking about.

Guys are inundated with images of "perfect" male bodies. They're everywhere: in movies, on Instagram, in magazines (hell, even in Men's Health). But the truth is, most guys aren't blessed with giant arms, calves of steel, and washboard abs. And even if you log hours and hours in the gym and shovel protein down your gullet like it's your job, here's the brutal truth: most guys just don't look like Mark Wahlberg or the Rock, and most guys never will.

It's easy to feel pressured to achieve a certain look based on the dudes we see crushing it in our Instagram feeds. But even though women regularly have discussions about body image and self-esteem, the truth is that guys rarely talk about that pressure, or how unattainable the ideal male body type really is. Conversations about “body positivity” and “size acceptance” just aren't going to happen at the bar or at your boss's BBQ — even if there’s no doubt that cultural standards for physical attractiveness screw us all up, regardless of gender.

As a result, men are suffering in silence — and the consequences can be deadly. One in three people diagnosed with an eating disorder is male, according to the National Eating Disorder Association of the U.S., and that number is on the rise.

“There’s this drumbeat that muscularity equals masculinity," Dr. Harrison Pope, director of the Biological Psychiatry Laboratory at McLean Hospital in Massachusetts, told Time last year. The end result: more and more young men have been diagnosed with muscle dysmorphia, a mental disorder characterized by an obsessive desire to attain a more muscular physique. Many of these men (an estimated 4 million, in fact) have turned to anabolic steroids to pump up. Such drugs have been linked to everything from hormone dysfunction to premature death.

Moving away from these toxic body standards begins with making a choice to see things differently, starting with the reflection in the mirror — be it toned, wobbly, or anything in between. The 13 guys below were willing to open up about their own struggles with their bodies. Despite experiencing varying degrees of body hate throughout their lives, what they all have in common is the desire to move beyond it.

"My body is mine. It’s one I’ve fought hard to have, so I’m going to work just as hard to love it.”

From Men's Health

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