Bag of Bones

By: Emma Fabian (View Profile)

I woke up feeling like an old lady this morning, but in a good way! My aching arms and stiff legs are evidence that the body pump class I endured yesterday did what it’s supposed to.

All those tedious front raises, silly squats, and boring bicep curls weren’t performed for purely aesthetic ends. No, vain as I am, I was planning ahead. Body pump is a weight-bearing exercise and as such, certifiably bone-building. That weekly hour of health club clock-watching is my way of protecting against osteoporosis when I’m older—my way of dealing with any damage I may have done.

Now that I’m forty (and absolutely not middle-aged!), I wonder if the decade of dedicated dieting I did in my teens and twenties did any long-term harm. I mean, how much goodness could there have been in the endless porridge-made-with-water suppers I made myself?

Osteoporosis means porous bones. It affects eight million women in the U.S.—the vast majority of whom are over fifty. But although osteoporosis is thought of as an older person’s disease, the latest thinking is that its roots lie much earlier in adolescence.

It makes sense. Our bones are living tissue consisting of a hard shell harboring a honeycomb structure. This honeycomb amasses to be dense and strongest in our twenties. But as we age, the holes inevitably become wider and weaker.

How much weaker depends on factors we cannot control—like our genes, and if we have another debilitating disease—and factors we can, such as diet and exercise.

Calcium is often called the skeleton’s building block and the amount we consume (or not) in our youth is a big determinate of future bone strength. Drinking and smoking to excess are detrimentally influential too. Osteoporosis can be a silent affliction that builds up for many years, and the evidence may hit without warning, when a bone is so frail it suddenly fractures.

Frail isn’t a word normally associated with young women, but in this age of epidemic childhood obesity, it’s a link that exists. Obsessions with dieting and competitive celebrity see-through sizes are pushing a generation of vulnerable dieters to eating disorders—the likely legacy will be premature osteoporosis. Maybe it’s always been this way?

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