Early Inspiration in Eating Disorder Recovery
Eating Disorders define a person’s life. An eating disorder requires
intelligence, strategy, commitment, endurance, strength, organization
and secrecy, money, acting skills, ability to influence, persuade and
manipulate others repeatedly. I’ll go Into more requirements to sustain
an eating disorder in another post.
An inspiring question that often helps an individual get on
her healing path is this:
"If I used all the time, energy, skills, strategizing, intellectual and
emotional involvement I devote to my eating disorder to something else,
what could I do in life?"
This is often a staggering question, and people are shocked by
the answer that occurs to them. Answers come in many forms, usually in a
low murmuring voice with a hand over the mouth where I can barely hear
and actually need to ask for repetition.
support myself and my children."
"I could write my book….make my film…..design
my clothes…..start and run my business…..
create a school….."
who has been living a limited life controlled by all that an eating
disorder involves.
And maybe those possibilities are real. The point is that when a
person genuinely looks at everything she does, thinks, feels, says in
a day that involves her eating disorder and then thinks about what she
could do what that energy and those skills if she were free she gets a
glimpse of a new world.
world if she were free.
She doesn’t know what she would do or how, but she gets an
emotional and physical sensation of freedom, just for a moment.
She gets a sense of what might be possible if all her resources could
be channeled toward something that would make her life worth living.
Sometimes people ask that question of themselves, and the revelation
leads them to psychotherapy. Sometimes people need to be asked.
When I bring that question to people with an eating disorder I see
faces change. Eyes fill with tears. Voices quaver, so afraid to speak what
seems too good to be true A feeling of bewilderment and hope permeates
the room. This momentous shift in awareness and sense of possibility
always touches my heart.
It’s a long road between that moment and full recovery, but that
moment of awakening can be the start of a deep and rich healing journey.
Joanna Poppink, MFT, psychotherapist eating disorder specialist, Los Angeles, CA
bulimia, anorexia, compulsive overeating recovery: www.poppink.com
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