Posts Tagged ‘Eating disorders’

National Eating Disorder Awareness Week: Hope, Help and Healing

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

To raise awareness and encourage healthier habits, the National Eating Disorder Association named this National Eating Disorder Awareness Week — 7 days every February when this country turns its attention to eating habits that negatively impact the lives of millions of Americans each year in the form of the following eating disorders:

  • Anorexia
  • Bulimia
  • Compulsive overeating
  • Binge eating

In support of this movement to raise awareness, I will devote every blog post this week to the subject of eating disorders, starting today with an excerpt from my blog for PBS’ series This Emotional Life. It includes an excerpt from my book, Hope, Help and Healing: A New Approach to Treating Anorexia, Bulimia, and Overeating, from which I will be pulling material all week long.

“The key to an eating disorder lies in relationships, usually the closest of them all – relationships within the family. As noted in my book Hope, Help & Healing for Eating Disorders: A new approach to treating anorexia, bulimia and overeating:

”The behaviors surrounding an eating disorder are the result of a relationship – perhaps several relationships – tilting off the mark. You may be able to pinpoint immediately where and when your life diverged from what you wanted it to be. Or maybe you can trace a slow slide from the ideal to the real.’ [Read more, including Emily's story...]

For more information, click here to learn what you can do to support National Eating Disorder Awareness Week.

Blogs and TV Series on “This Emotional Life” for PBS

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

For the next 2 years, PBS is focusing on a campaign to examine the role happiness plays in our lives — what makes us happy, who makes us happy, and why … or why not?

In association with the campaign, PBS is featuring a number of blogs on its website, touching on a variety of subjects that are tied to our emotional lives, from stress and depression, to addiction and PTSD. Eating disorders are among these issues and I am honored to be invited to blog on the subject.

You can read my first blog post now, Eating Disorders: The Path to Whole-Person Healing, and others to come in the weeks and months ahead.

On the website you may also watch excerpts from “This Emotional Life,” a 3-part TV series that aired January 4-6, 2010 in to mark the launch of PBS’s 2-year campaign to explore our emotional lives:

Part I: Family, Friends and Lovers — a look at the importance of relationships and why they are central to our emotional well-being.

Part II: Facing Our Fears — a look at emotions that are commonly regarded as obstacles to happiness, such as anger, anxiety and despair.

Part III: Rethinking Happiness — a look at how critical happiness is to our well-being and, yet, remains an elusive goal for many of us.

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Resolving Relationships: Katie’s Story, Part I

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Katie came to work with me originally because of depression and an eating disorder. Her mother was concerned because, at twenty-three, Katie was obese. She had a good job but was plagued by high absenteeism that threatened her employment. When she was at work, she was meticulous and thorough. But there were just too many days when she couldn’t seem to make it in. Her weight never seemed to go down. It would plateau for a time, but then Katie would have a “down time” and up it would creep.

Her mother wanted Katie “fixed” so she could be happy, attractive, and able to enter into a dating relationship, which somehow had eluded her during all of her high school and most of her college years. These were things Katie wanted also. She thought if she was more self-disciplined and went on a diet, this long-awaited relationship was sure to follow. What Katie came to realize was she couldn’t have a healthy new relationship until she worked through some old, unresolved ones.

When Katie was eight, her parents divorced. At the time, Katie was both devastated and relieved. She was devastated at the loss of her life as she knew it and relieved at an end to the yelling and fighting between her parents. Over and over again, her mother told her this was for the better. Her mother assured her they would all be much happier. Katie attempted to adjust as best she could, learning how to act when she visited her father and doing her best in school so he’d be proud.

The older she got, the more strained her relationship with her father became. He remarried and started another family. It was more difficult to go over to visit because Katie and her sister no longer had him to themselves. They became just another kid in the home, except they weren’t really like the other kids who actually lived there. It didn’t seem right to her that she spent less time with him than his stepdaughters did.

In middle school, it got even worse. Katie began to make excuses for why she didn’t want to go see him. Her mother completely took her side and intervened on her behalf. As much as she thought she really didn’t want to see him, it devastated her once again to realize he didn’t try very hard to change her mind.

From that point on, her relationship with him faded out to obligation and form. There were obligatory holiday get-togethers and cards around her birthday, but that was about it. Katie moved on with her life — or so she thought.

Inside Katie was furious at being abandoned so quickly, so effortlessly by someone she’d once loved with all her heart. She thought he had loved her but decided his love was mainly one of convenience. When it was convenient for him to love her and have a relationship with her, he did. When it became more difficult, he jettisoned her like so much excess baggage. That’s how Katie came to feel about herself — excess baggage. If she was “convenient,” she was lovable.

Stung by this view of herself, Katie turned to something else convenient to love; she turned to food. With food, she found a relationship she could control. Food was always there, always satisfying — at least for the moment. Whenever she felt fearful or stressed or inadequate or angry, she could always eat to feel better.

Tomorrow: Katie’s Story, Part II

SOURCE: Chapter 7: “Why Can’t We All Just Get Along?” in Every Woman’s Guide to Managing Your Anger by Gregory L. Jantz, PhD., founder of The Center for Counseling and Health Resources Inc.

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