An Eating Disordered Life

Ranked #8,372 in Healthy Living, #140,510 overall

Eating Disorder Recovery is possible

The meal-time battle over eating started when I was fairly young. I was a picky eater, which only complicated things further.

It also didn't help that my parents were of the belief that children ate what was put in front of them. It wasn't open for discussion; it was put in front of you and you cleared your plate or you sat there until you did.

My mother took this to the extreme, and meal times became an even bigger battle.

I spent the rest of my childhood and early adult life hiding the behaviors that had become a part of my life. For the most part, I was successful but eventually things spiraled out of control and I found myself faced with a choice.

Find An Eating Disorder Specialist

For treatment advice or referrals, call the National Eating Disorders Association's 24-hour information and referral helpline at 1-800-931-2237.

Eating Disorders And Identity

For many battling eating disorders; the disorder is so inter-twined with who they are that they can't imagine their life being any other way.



Loading

Eating Disorder Myths

Myth #1: You have to be underweight to have an eating disorder.

People with eating disorders come in all shapes and sizes. Many individuals with eating disorders are of average weight or are overweight.

Myth #2: Only teenage girls and young women are affected by eating disorders.

While eating disorders are most common in young women in their teens and early twenties, they are found in men and women of all ages.

Myth #3: People with eating disorders are vain.

It's not vanity that drives people with eating disorders to follow extreme diets and obsess over their bodies, but rather an attempt to deal with feelings of shame, anxiety, and powerlessness.

Myth #4: Eating disorders aren't really that dangerous.

All eating disorders can lead to irreversible and even life-threatening health problems, such as heart disease, bone loss, stunted growth, infertility, and kidney damage.

Should I Recover?

Loading

You Have A Choice

I remember the day those words were said to me by an eating disorder specialist. I also remember thinking that he was wrong; that I had spiraled downward for so long that this is all there was.

How could he possibly believe that I was still in control? His next words, regardless of if they were true or not, held the appropriate shock factor.

"If you don't stop what you are doing to yourself; you will be dead within a year"

To my way of thinking, there was only one obvious choice to be made. I was a wife and mother and my family needed me.

Recovering from an eating disorder is one of the most difficult things I've done. It is also one of the most personally satisfying.

I'm no longer a slave to the scale. In fact, I no longer own one!

Ways To Stay Motivated

Recovery Is Difficult

Loading

Recovery Quotes

Loading

Recovery Stories

Loading

Online Resources

Approaching Someone With An Eating Disorder

Eating Disorders -- Anorexia, Bulimia, Binge Eating Disorder, Compulsive Overeating. Eating Disorders definitions, signs and symptoms, physical dangers, online support and much more.

Eating Disorder Recovery

Recovery and Resources for Eating Disorders

National Eating Disorders Association

Information and referrals to specialists.

What You Can Do

The Something Fishy Website on Eating Disorders

Eating Disorder News

Demand for Child and Adolescent Eating Disorders Care Prompts Eating Recovery ...
Denver, CO, May 30, 2012 - In response to an increasing demand for child and adolescent eating disorders care, Eating Recovery Center, an international center for eating disorders recovery, has expanded its Partial Hospitalization Program for Children ...
Demi Lovato Addresses Her Bipolar Disorder
Demi recently opened up about being diagnosed as Bipolar in 2010 while seeking treatment for a number of harrowing personal issues - self-mutilation, eating disorders, substance abuse - and how releaved she was to discover a scientific reason for her ...
'Desperate Housewives syndrome'
Australian women are succumbing to "Desperate Housewives Syndrome," an eating disorder in middle-age, driven by the desire to look as thin as the celebrity stars of shows such as Desperate Housewives. Everywhere we look, from the fictional character of ...
Christian Conference Addresses Eating Disorders, Body Image, Sexual Abuse and ...
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., May 30, 2012 /Christian Newswire/ -- Many women today struggle with numerous challenges including eating disorders, trauma and body image issues. Research indicates that three out of four women have eating issues and one out of ...

What's Your Story?

  • alliemae Jul 15, 2010 @ 5:47 pm | delete
    great lens! you've given me some ideas to add to my lens (focused on EDs/awareness)
  • AddaptAbilities Sep 15, 2009 @ 3:56 pm | delete
    A lovely, compassionate lens.
  • ChapelHillFiddler Aug 20, 2009 @ 5:08 am | delete
    I'm visiting around at the sites of my WiWon team mates this morning. This lens is rich in important information. They hadn't "invented" this condition when I was young. I met my first anorexic one summer when I was in high school - I remember thinking she must be fatally ill, she looked so ghastly, but at lunch time she would only eat an apple, even though she said "my stomach hurts." When I was a freshman in college there was an anorexic dancer who had to leave school for a couple years. When she came back she wasn't a skeleton any more, but she never could dance again - she had permanently wasted away her muscles.
  • kimmanleyort Aug 13, 2009 @ 7:26 am | delete
    It's so important to tell stories like this from personal experience. You will probably have no idea how many people you will help. Thank you for sharing you story.
  • boutiqueshops Aug 8, 2009 @ 10:55 am | delete
    Wonderful lens, Tam! Thank you for the courage to make this lens. May it reach those who need to see it. Blessings for your success! Sylvia
  • Load More

Macs Bio

Loading

by

Macs

Hello and welcome! My name is Tammi, but you can call me Tam to keep it simple.
I'm married and currently living in Washington. We have 3 cats and a dog;...
more »

Feeling creative? Create a Lens!