Model Who Survived On 500 Calories A Day Reveals What She Looks Like Now She Eats Normally

By :

An American model has revealed how her body changed under the pressure of fashion and her new, healthy transformation is amazing.

Advertisements

Liza Golden-Bhojwani was once voted into the Freshman model class of 2013 by Vogue – but her high fashion success came at a high price.

The international model, who now lives in India, was consuming just 500 calories a day and surviving off steamed edamame beans to walk shows at Paris Fashion week and be ‘the size I needed to be’.

Advertisements

The strain took its toll on the young woman, who was under a strict diet and exercise regime that led her to fainting spells.

Showing strength and independence, Liza decided to stick to her training but go it alone.

Advertising

Years down the line, she has shared a transformation photograph with her Instagram followers, showing how healthy and happy she is now she has embraced her ‘true self’.

Liza recalled her desire to stay the size required by the fashion industry:

Advertisements

I thought to myself, I can still be this thin, but I’ll just eat a little more so I don’t feel so horrible.

Well, eating a little more turned into eating nearly a bag full of almonds, which then turned into eating full size meals, which then turned into a full blown binge. I was craving every single food you could imagine and I was giving in to every craving even though I knew this was such an important time in my career.

Liza walked New York Fashion week and London Fashion Week, explaining she ‘could see the pounds starting to show both in the mirror and on the measuring tape but I kept quiet obviously not wanting to sabotage myself.’

Having gained an inch around her waist, Liza managed to book shows for Milan Fashion Week where she walked the Dolce & Gabbana catwalk, where she received criticism online for looking ‘fat’.

By Paris Fashion Week, Liza ‘went on many a casting with one exclusive option being on my schedule, but after meeting the client I knew the reason for me not nailing the gig, my size…’

Advertisements

By the time the following season came around, Liza had gained and extra inch on her waist, becoming healthier and happier. She ‘had seriously just given up on my short lived high fashion career’, saying she ‘simply could not hack it’.

Liza recalled her devastation, saying:

I don’t know why of all people I was just unable to keep up with the diets and the regimes. I thought I was weak minded, I didn’t care enough, or maybe I just didn’t want it enough. I beat myself up for a long time, playing it over and over again in my head how I completely failed. So much was right there in front of me, and I just let it go because I could not let go of my worst enemy, FOOD.

Not one to give up, Liza decided to return to fashion and ‘get in shape again…but in a much healthier way.’

After ‘working her ass of in the gym’ and eating between 800 and 1200 calories a day, Liza was the fittest she’d even been, but, sadly, it wasn’t good enough for the high fashion industry.

Liza explained the emotional trauma, saying, ‘I was really in a bad state of mind, negative, depressed, overly emotional. I was miserable.’

Advertising

After a little soul-searching back in India, Liza was refreshed and ready to work with her body to achieve her fashion dreams.

She said:

I was struggling to lose weight again, and one day I just thought… why am I fighting against my body? Why don’t I just go in the same direction? Stop forcing my own agenda and just listen to my body. And that’s what I did, slowly slowly I was coming into my true body form. My natural self, not my forced self.

Liza has learned to love her body, ‘Not perfect, not show ready or VS ready, not the best, but it is mine and my soul is happy.’

She now models for so-called plus sized fashion brands – as well as those who don’t discriminate against or pigeon-hole women for their body shapes.

Advertising

Liza works out five times a week, for her own happiness rather than to keep her career and she eats what she wants without guilt.

After a career-long struggle Liza has realised:

Maybe I wasn’t made to be on the covers of magazines and shooting the biggest and best brands, but I was made for a reason. I do deserve to be happy and feel fulfilled. We all do.

Liza’s story has been met with floods of support from other women who have experienced eating disorders, self-esteem issues, and who are everyday suffering the burden of influence from the narrow modern perception of beauty.

Liza concluded, ‘Maybe I was made to share this story and spread the message of body love to all the women out there struggling.’

The model is breaking down the body barriers constructed by fashion – looking and feeling fantastic as she does.

Take a bow.