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AUGUST 30, 2010 12:05AM

I Can’t Write About My Eating Disorder

Rate: 19 Flag

I am the feature blogger of the week at the Blogger Body Calendar project. I wrote like eight posts until I wrote the one below. I chose to cross-post because it was hard to write and I feel safer here. But I hope that you will click the link to check out the project and buy a calendar. PS. I apologize for any typos. It was hard to keep rereading.

I can’t write about my eating disorder. I thought I could. I have been in recovery since 2001. I eat pizza and cake and three meals a day plus snacks. I don’t hate how I look. I don’t wish I was thinner. I like my weight and have stayed within five pound for the past nine years except during my pregnancies and postpartum periods. And I only know my weight because I go for yearly physicals.

I wanted to write about my struggle and triumph over anorexia. Because I think that the worst part of an eating disorder is the isolation. Me and my head and my food and my WILL. Falling asleep in the middle of the day because I don’t have enough calories to stay awake. Counting ribs to calm my anxiety. My pseudo-recovery back then consisted of hiding in stalls on other floors of my college dormitory until the bathroom was empty so I could vomit. The string of therapists and medications and diagnoses. The inpatient treatment facility that kept extending my stay.

I wanted to write about crying during my first yoga class in treatment because connecting my mind and body in a way I had denied for five years was unbelievably overwhelming. So was giving away my “skinny” clothes a year after finding recovery. I spent days and hours praying to a God I did not understand to help me to eat and love my body until I did. And I have spent my days since then reaching out to others at different points of their recovery to give and get support.

I wanted to write about my immense disappointment in the recovery field for not giving a solid community to the eating disordered. That those who are still active in their disease have more forums to discuss staying sick than those who are well. But I also remember that the only reason I could stay at my treatment facility beyond 30 days was because a lone insurance operator took pity on my story and added my treatment center to their network. Because otherwise the insurance company had not a SINGLE inpatient facility covered. That most doctors weigh us and hug us but don’t really know how to help us.

I wanted to write about how disheartened I am by the media’s portrayal of eating disorders as a symptom of a magazine instead of as a disease. My desire for bigger breasts may be a symptom of what sells. My desire to not eat for years until I was so underweight people thought I had cancer. That is not in the magazines. Crossing that line did not make me pretty or trendy.  And who saw me? I hardly left my house.

Because when I was in the throes of my disorder, all I wanted was to not feel. To not deal. I hated how much life hurt. And I was looking to stop it. To control it. So I chose my body for my “it.” And I tortured it forgetting that it was MY BODY. I was hurting myself to hurt myself to hurt myself. And sometimes to hurt you. To show you how hard it was to live in all this crazy in my head.

I wanted to write about how I believe that it is easier to blame society for eating disorders than it is to help the eating disordered. We are so frustrating and stubborn and crazy. And while I currently don’t buy the magazines stuffed with stories about how I am not good enough, I could have never made that choice had I not begun eating and living and feeling again.

I believe in the Blogger Body Calendar because I think our society is warped in its view of women and of bodies and of health. But I don’t believe this calendar will save a single woman already in the grips of an eating disorder. I pray that our charity can do that. I pray that the pediatricians and internists and psychiatrists can do that. I pray that my story can do that.

Because today I am beautiful and whole. I love the shake of my butt when I dance. I love that my nails grow and my periods are regular. And I love that I never sucked in during my calendar photo shoot. Because I can even love the curve of my belly.

I know, deep down in my soul, that the thinner I crave is not even the thinner I see. It is deep and dark. My thinner is about disappearing.

And I want to take up space today. I have things to say and do and feel and write.

I have people to love. I can’t do that if I’m not here.

Remember that the project which inspired this post supports the National Eating Disorder Association. So even if you aren’t psyched about seeing me naked in November, you can buy a calendar just for the charity. And then spend the rest of the time cutting off all the heads of the bloggers and switching their bodies. And giggling.

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I almost never post or comment here, but this moved me to say Brava! What brave writing (and living). I will go check out the calendar and the cause. rated.
Thank you for helping me to understand. I never could before. Now I see that there's little difference between you, wanting to make your pain go away by not eating, and me, wanting to make my pain go away by overeating. I like the idea of the calendar, too, and will check out the link.
This needs to be sent out far and wide. So many young people struggling silently with this.
I have long understood that eating disorders are more about control and pain and wanting to disappear- either in body or into food. You can have "disordered" eating on any end of the spectrum. But, as you say, there is little impact to be had when tv and magazines count every ounce as a personal vice. Good for you for holding out for health, and taking up space here on Open Salon. We have all the room you need.
Wow! One of the bravest, most honest pieces I have ever read on this or any other site. I hope you'll write a book. You got to me. I started to understand. I think you could do great good!
R
This was so insightful. Thank you for sharing.r
Thanks for sharing and being open and honest. You seen to be in a good place. I've been suffering from anorexia for twenty-three years and can't seem to accept my body nor stop wanting to be thinner. I've had good stretches and bad times but overall I am chronic. (I've written two posts - Catching Anorexia and Rejecting Anorexia). We are hard to help; we are often help-rejecting, preferring instead to stay mired in our misery. I just don't know.
Wow, thank you for sharing this. I'm glad you've gotten to a place where you can even write about such a traumatic time at all. Rated.
thank you so much for your kind words and encouragement. It's wonderful and overwhelming (in a good way!)
I checked out the Blogger Body Calendar...what a wonderful idea. I appreciate your blog and relate all too well. Thank you.
Its brave to put it in print.
I do not mean this to be condesending to you at all...
I am incredibly proud of your for your honesty and stength. Your
post made me cry for my own selfish reasons will never heal...
raw wounds of losing my bestfriend of 22 years to anorexia/bulemia. It started when we were 13 and didn't end til August of 08. We were 29 when it finally won. I am ashamed to admit the enabling support I gave to her through out our friendship. I cried, begged, and covered up the problems at 75lbs and cheered, encouraged and pretended everything was getting better at 110lbs. I can still remember the weeks at a time spent hibernating in self hatred in our apt. Its the worst addiction and mental imbalance possible. I cheer your recovery and pray that your bravery in telling your storey and the project you are supporting will save just one girl from herself.
Thanks again!
I have suffered through them all my life. Some people get it , others don't.
NO matter if I cured myself, the gremlins are always in the back of my mind.
Rated with hugs
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Beautifully written. Thank you.
One more comment - A new post tonight, "The Epic Struggle to Remain a Reasonable Size" (http://open.salon.com/blog/kwolf/2010/09/03/the_epic_struggle_to_remain_a_reasonable_size) offers a compelling argument for finding solutions to this that are not self -destructive. With that, I'm hoping its author, Kristin Wolf, will soon become acquainted with the Blogger Body Calendar site.