Illustrations: Simone Noronha

The Pandemic Is Heightening Diet Culture for Men

Men aren’t part of the body positivity movement, but they need to be

Virginia Sole-Smith
Elemental
Published in
15 min readMay 13, 2020

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The first time I hung out with Ryon Odneal, he ordered the chipotle avocado chicken wrap at our local diner, and the waitress knew before he could say it: “Without the wrap, right?” He laughed. When his lunch arrived — a pile of chicken, lettuce, avocado, black beans, and cheese smothered in chipotle sauce — he gestured to it. “At the height of my anorexia, I was eating maybe 1,200 calories a day,” says Odneal, a 28-year-old photographer who also manages a luxury eyewear store in Beacon, New York. “That’s, like, right here on this plate, right?” He was proud. This felt like recovery.

But when I talk to Odneal two months later by phone in April, each of us at home in our respective quarantine bunkers, it’s a different story. “I’m living off almonds, pretty much,” he says. It’s a dangerous panic response and he knows it. During the first few weeks of the coronavirus pandemic, with his normal routine upended and his beloved CrossFit gym closed, Odneal responded, as so many of us did, by turning to comfort foods. “It was emotional,” he says. “I had this fear of, what if this gets really bad and food is not available? I should eat now, before I’m down to one tuna can a day.” But that quickly turned into what felt like…

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