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Posted: 2023-03-22 20:01:13

James Smith is a supremely fit personal trainer, but struggled with body issues throughout his 20s. 

"I was going through a phase of my life where training became the most important thing to me," he says.

"My job was incredibly average and my relationships were incredibly average … the one thing I could focus on was training in the gym."

But no matter how hard he trained, he started to plateau before reaching his "physique goals".

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'I only planned to do one cycle'

James turned to steroids.

"Why would I train a year for something when I can do it in three months?" he told himself.

"I only planned to do one cycle," he says, "then I recovered and thought … one more, then the third time.

"All of the physiques that I'd been aspiring to started to look like the physique that I was obtaining through taking steroids."

And he wasn't the only one to notice the difference.

"There aren't many drug use and abuse issues where you get complimented or rewarded for addiction," he said.

James Smith benchpressing 30 kilogram dumbbells
James used to be a lot bigger on steroids, but he's much healthier and happier now.(ABC News: Geoff Kemp)

Men struggle with body image issues too

In Australia, the number of men experiencing body dissatisfaction has risen from 15 to 45 per cent over the past 25 years.

Studies show that up to one in four people experiencing eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa or bulimia are male, and almost half of the people experiencing binge eating disorders are male.

Muscle dysmorphia is another eating disorder that is on the rise among men.

Scott Griffiths is a senior research fellow at the University of Melbourne's School of Psychological Sciences and an expert in body image, eating disorders, muscle dysmorphia and anabolic steroid use.

"I think of it like reverse anorexia," Dr Griffiths says when describing muscle dysmorphia, and most sufferers are boys and men.

"The body type they're trying to achieve is lean and muscular," he continues, describing big biceps and a six-pack.

"They are often objectively large and muscular, but if you asked them how they feel about themselves, they would say 'too skinny' or 'overweight' – there's a gulf between what they are and how they see themselves."

There are other body image concerns among men too, like baldness, penis size and even height.

"There are leg lengthening surgeries that very few men will try to have done, but more common are things like shoes that have lifts concealed in them," he says.

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