Psychotherapy. This takes place
in a private place and enables you to talk about yourself, relieving your
anxieties and emotions in a bid to learn the basis of these sentiments without
judgement. The exploration delves deep into the sub-conscious of your mind to
uproot revelations- something we are rarely forthcoming to do without coaxing. People
will seldom admit to needing help or finding comfort in someone else at the
risk of seeming reliant on this source. Reluctance to expose ourselves to
someone we barely know leaves you requiring to build a trusting relationship
between you and your therapist before any rummaging can be made. This
particular connection with a therapist can take months to construct, whereby
until you feel ready, you will not fully disclose all the information by
withholding the brunt of your angst and divulging the bare minimum. Therapy can
be regarded as a relationship between you and the therapist, as they will
become someone you feel you can trust so the sessions are often focused on an
engagement with the therapist other than just plain old treatment. With most
psychological issues, there is no single cure that will work reliably time and
time again, unlike a physical pain which can disappear by popping a pill. A
trained therapist must adapt their way of helping each individual via trial and
error techniques, as no two patients are alike, finding benefits within the
various treatments. What makes therapy so different for each case, is that no
one person will be the same or will seek solace from a therapist for the same
reason no matter how similar their background situations might be. Due to the
slightly different approach each therapist undergoes with treatment, some
patients will prefer to shift through different therapists, whilst other find
it more useful to stick to the one they feel most at ease with. With each
patient that undergoes treatment, a therapist will learn something new, as a
successful recovery is achievable mostly by experimental practices. With
Anorexia Nervosa, due to the diverse causes by which someone may develop the
disorder, it is tricky to produce the correct method of treatment straight
away. Rarely will a proposed treatment be effective on the first attempt,
therefore reinforcing that there is no ‘quick-fix’ method to recovering from
Anorexia.
Anorexia Nervosa is a serious mental illness that leads its sufferers to control their food intake and exercise obsessively. As a sufferer, I am exploring my reasons behind developing Anorexia at the same time as challenging the social prejudices around it.

Aspects of Recovery
19 March 2012
12 March 2012
Aweighting Recovery
Expectations. Whether it is what
we want to do with our lives or what others would wish upon us, the need to
fulfil our deepest desires leads to an inevitable requirement to succeed. Taking
the shortest path is usually the easiest option in the trouble-free seeking way
of life our society has adopted. Though it may be the quickest way to reach the
top it is very often by far the least painless way. We must unknowingly sacrifice
a lot along the way and the making of rash decisions leaves us more often than
not in regret, as we have not contemplated the outcomes or impact of taking
such a leap. Rushing to reach the top would be accomplishing our dreams as
quick as possible but when you take stock and look around, you realise that in
taking the easy route you have lost a lot more than you have gained. I try not
to be pessimistic but the typical warning of the higher you climb the further
you have to fall does hold some logic, however I believe you will only fall by
climbing hastily causing you to lose your footing and to stumble to your defeat.
In taking it steady and earning your way to the top, only then do you feel
worthy of that prime position. The comfort of knowing it is deserved leads to a
determination to stay at the top surrounded by those who supported you along
the- perhaps longer and more turbulent but more successful- way. When suffering
from Anorexia Nervosa, pushing yourself towards the goal of recovery when you
are not fully ready, leads to a foreseeable relapse.
The constant opposing thoughts
which are like forceful repelling magnets in your mind make the step to
attempting recovery very tough. After the first meeting with the consultant who
officially diagnosed my Anorexia, he revealed the harsh truth that my rate of
weight loss had surmounted to a terrifying 1Kg per week; fatal when at a BMI (body mass index) of
14.8. My primary ‘increase your calories as quick as possible’ approach to
recovery was due to not being endorsed in my Kavos holiday with my friends
‘unless there was evidence of her starting to gain weight’. I increased my
calorie intake from the dangerously low amount to an acceptable 1800 within a
matter of a couple of weeks after the meeting. My dad, who had been away to
America for a week when I first augmented my regime, was ecstatic to come back
to me eating at a regular pace and an acceptable portion of food (only acceptable
compared to what I had been previously consuming). Some would say that this overnight change was
miraculous but it was just an exterior, a ‘healthier’ front I was putting on in
order to go on my holiday. In actual fact, had people been able to read my
mind, they would have seen the turmoil I was in. Despite fervently declaring
that I wanted to get better and knowing that I WANTED to put on weight, I was
very aware that I was not ready for the actual process required for weight
regain; this being a diet of the recommended 2500 calories a day. This
contradicting factor led me to question my motivation to get better. The idea
of eating so many calories repulsed me, whereas any rational person would revel
in the ability to indulge in ‘forbidden’ foods. I had made a snap decision
clouded by my stubborn determination to not be incarcerated at home during the
summer; this decision was detrimental due to its hastiness. In the confines of
the meeting rooms with my dietician I would agree to reintroduce a particular
food to my strict diet, when in my heart of hearts I knew this was a complete
lie. Lying was easy when the meetings were one to one and so my parents had no
idea about the meal plan set for me by my dietician. This made it subsequently
simple for me to pretend to my dietician that I had been following through with
the plan at home, hiding the hand-written plans at the back of my food diary
never to be frequented. My need for independence made consenting to adhere to a
meal plan easier said than done.
05 March 2012
Anorexolympics
Competition. This is a basic instinct
within every living organism in the struggle for survival. Like a true
masochist, Anorexia Nervosa relishes in out-competing and dominating everything
it can get its iron grip around and will become a very sore loser. Should you
try desperately and take hold of its ominous presence, it will fight tooth and
nail to regain its control over you- never giving up. Although I have
previously scorned the notion that Anorexia is borne from the media and was
dubious of their allegiance, I cannot completely eradicate the fact that with
all the information we have access to nowadays, it feeds the cut-throat nature
of the illness by encouraging the spawning of this disorder. Our health
concerning food and exercise has become such an obsession within our culture that
people will share very openly their own day to day regimes, creating a world of
opportunity that I as a sufferer could compete against. Whether it was the
portion size and calorie intake or amount of exercise someone partook in, I
would feel an urgent need to compare myself to others in order to make sure I
was eating less or doing more physically, getting irrationally jealous if I
wasn’t able to do ‘better’ than them. This was my way of making sure that I was
a winner, when in actual fact I was losing myself in the illness and letting it
take me over. My sixth form common room hoarded the girls in and was a hostile
place where discussions orientated solely around exercise and dieting; it was a
breeding ground for competitive behaviour and eating disorders. There is a lot
out in the world that can spike the addiction of Anorexia, which I came to
realise when I was in the trance created by the disorder.
The internet is full of resources
for Anorexia to satisfy its craving for competition. I personally found it a
valuable source where I could gain all sorts of information in order to be able
to compare my own diet. With the world of different diets available to the
public soaring to an uncountable quantity, it was very easy for me to plug ‘*
calorie diet’ into my search engine and be presented with an insane amount of others’
‘exemplary’ regimes. What I failed to allow myself to notice when I would click
on such a link, was the warning that these low-calorie diets should be executed
under supervision of a GP and for a period of no longer than 2 weeks at a time.
I would block out any caution by convincing myself that I was doing myself no
harm, even though I was clearly becoming dangerously ill. I cannot call my particular
calorie target a diet in any way shape or form, as I can now see that no one
can sufficiently live off what I was consuming. I would use these online
‘diets’ as a guideline and barrier to how much I could allow myself to have and
under no circumstances should I have more than what was online. Upon reading a
very low calorie diet and acknowledging I was having less, I would feel giddy
with happiness for no justifiable reason.
27 February 2012
Skeletons In the Closet
Biographies. There is always a
chapter in any life story whereby someone must overcome some sort of hurdle-
some would call it the climax of the tale. Each and every one of us is rarely
immune to that hump in the road but the enormity of it and the way we navigate
ourselves through it changes from person to person. I cannot say that one issue
is greater or more worthy of sympathy than another, as we can only judge what
we feel is an obstacle by situations we have previously experienced, therefore
a problem that may seem quite minor to one, could be a huge dilemma to another.
I have learnt through the consequences of my illness not to be so judgemental
of people and my primary school motto ‘do onto others as you would have done onto
you’, has never held such a strong relevance in my eyes. In my attempt to
counteract the constant pessimistic feeling of having reached rock bottom, I
try and believe that there is bound to be someone worse off than me. I have advised
others many a time with this same overly repeated guidance. In spite of this I
am extremely hypocritical in the way that I cannot heed my own advice, as the magnitude
of the alien feeling achieved from looking on the bright side of life is just
too daunting to me. I therefore am looking back to how far I have come compared
to when I was first dabbling in the Anorexia and the potency of its comforting
nature by finally admitting to all the embarrassing and terrifying situations it
has put me through. I have avoided it up until now, but it is time to bare all the
pinnacle moments of my chapter.
Before I begin reciting the
physical symptoms of my plight with Anorexia Nervosa, I must emphasise that
these all occurred either during my relapse or during my exams in the summer of
2011. I have thankfully mostly recovered from these vicious side-effects.
20 February 2012
The Slippery Slope
This week I have written a very different post than I have done so far, therefore have decided to post it in a different page that you can access via the link at the side of this page under 'pages' profile or from the link below...
The Slippery Slope
The Slippery Slope
13 February 2012
Would I Lie To You?
Denial. Deception, lies, secrets
and excuses are what the parasitic disorder Anorexia Nervosa feeds on whilst depriving
its sufferers of the true and beneficial sustenance- solid food. The illness is
extremely cunning in the way it will fool its victims and force them to be
deceitful to even the most trustworthy of people. In many cases the Anorexia
will leach its way subtly through the mind, benefitting from the control it
gets by creating false pleasures from restriction and over exercising, much to
the detriment of its helpless host. It will therefore often be too late to stop
the disorder, as it has already taken over the logical mind releasing toxic
thoughts and feelings, which invade like a virus in opposition to the person
you used to be. Describing anorexia metaphorically is the only way to convey
the harm it causes, due to the complexity of the human mind. If you try to
explain any emotion such as anger in words, it is near impossible to reveal
what it feels like without saying ‘it’s when you feel angry’. We have ALL at
some point experienced this sensation and therefore it is easy to sympathise
with the person unlike the thoughts fabricated by anorexia. This is why there
is so little known about the disorder, as any verbal description can only lie
close to how it is like to experience it. There will unfortunately never be a
truly effective way of showing a person blessed with the opportunity to never
go through anorexia exactly what it’s like.
Surely I must have known that I
was succumbing to anorexia… -a contemplation often pondered aloud to me. I
question myself a lot at times whether or not I could see it coming and
therefore could have prevented it from becoming an obsession. Although I try to
think of ideas to blame the illness on, there is only one thing at fault-
myself. I feel I can’t hide behind any other theory. Travelling as far back as
the summer of 2007 when I was 14, I remember noticing my body was changing and
there was a subsequent appearance of stretch marks over my thighs. Like many
teenage girls, I obsessed over their apparition, wondering whether I put on
weight in those areas and led myself to believe I had to tone up and so I got
the notorious step-machine. We all have a part of ourselves that creates that
niggling feeling of a need for change and this asset is all we seem to see when
looking in the mirror. Fortunately being relatively young and carefree, I
decided to move on and accept I was going through puberty and so the step-machine
lay in my room gathering dust. However, then came the summer of 2010 when I had
become highly confident in myself, taking pride in my appearance and becoming
conscious of how much I weighed. As previously mentioned I had unconsciously
lost a little weight that year and felt happy with my figure for once and so
over the holidays when I had broken up for dance, I started using my
step-machine to keep fit. My sister and I would take turns on it, encouraging
each other to stay on for half an hour sessions. At the time it was all healthy.
To me it was simply a way of MAINTAINING the weight I was at. My sister soon
got bored of the monotonous form of exercise, but I became curious as to how it
could tone the muscles up on my ‘problem area’ should I continue to use it
regularly. So I did.
06 February 2012
Me, Myself and the Predator
Self. When used as a prefix, this
word can form words that many misconceptions of Anorexia Nervosa describe- self-inflicted,
selfish, and self-centred but to name a few. It is very easy to see why people
would describe any eating disorder as a cry for attention, due to the
consequences and reasons for developing such a malicious illness. Attention
seeking is the last thing on our minds, as anorexia truly thrives on
secretiveness and lying through our teeth to ensure no one interferes with our
control over exercise and food intake. Anyone claiming they have an eating
disorder purely to gain attention is lucky, I seriously would not wish this on
anyone, as anorexia CANNOT be turned on and off at will. In my opinion the idea
that the disorder is self-inflicted however, is one shared amongst its
sufferers. Due to the nature of the illness and the fact it is a mental disease
brought upon us for various reasons, it seems to me that we could have helped
prevent ourselves from succumbing to it unlike a person unfortunate enough to
develop a physical and unpreventable illness much like the big killer cancer.
This inevitably leads to a huge guilt constantly hanging over my head, as I
believe I am at fault for every pain and misery caused within the family and
around me. I don’t want to seem like a martyr and therefore hypocritical in
saying the illness has not made me egotistical, but it feels to me like I am a
huge nuisance to everyone and I can see the frustration people hoard when they
are around me.
Anorexia has a tendency to make
you a different person by heightening the negative attributes you may have. In
my case the fact that I have always striven to be independent in life and reject
any idea I feel has been pressurised or forced upon me, has led me to become an
increasingly stubborn person. This therefore has wreaked havoc on the people
trying to help me recover, as any advice offered is immediately shot down by
me, due to a feeling that this idea has not been made by me. Recovery
unfortunately, can only come from its sufferer and only when the sufferer wants
to and therefore it is very difficult for anyone to interfere with the disease
and offer help. This I have found in particular with both my dietician and dad,
as even the mere suggestion of eating something with more calories will make me
build up my defences and I will refuse this idea without even considering it as
a good piece of advice. Many times I have contemplated increasing an aspect of
my intake, however as soon as a person other than me voices the exact idea
aloud, I won’t want to do it anymore and I have to build up the idea and
courage within myself all over again.
30 January 2012
Euphoric and Addictive Feelings
Sufferer. Notice the term I’ve
used to describe those of us unfortunate enough to develop the vicious mental
illness known as Anorexia Nervosa. The Oxford Dictionary mildly describes it as
a verb where you ‘experience something bad’, but no definition can truly convey
how powerful the meaning of the word really is. The word can pretty much
describe every emotional aspect that comes with anorexia and has never rung
truer in my opinion after the week I have just experienced. After receiving
such positive feedback from my blog, I had lulled myself into a false sense of
security and to me, revealing my notions on feeling weak upon showing
vulnerability from emotion seemed a logical enough step. I felt stronger from
the support everyone was showing. There is an incredible irony therefore, in
the events of the past week where I was attacked verbally by a woman whilst at
work and was directly called an ‘anorexic’ as if I was a vile creature instead
of a human being. No matter how tough I like to appear on the exterior and
nonchalant about my condition, I was unprepared for such a horrible attack and
it hurt. It has made me come to believe that I am weak, I should have been
stronger and not let the woman make me cry; but most of all I should not have
been weak enough to let anorexia take over my mind.
There are many physical and
psychological symptoms that allow anorexia to have the verb ‘to suffer’
describe its victims. This illness traps you in your mind and leads your
logical self to view survival in a different light. Eating is a basic human
instinct and essential in order to live, however despite having studied Biology
A-level and therefore having an advanced knowledge of the body’s requirements
and uses for energy, as a sufferer my illness has imprisoned this, leading me
to see food as an enemy rather than a ‘medicine’ for my recovery. Obviously, no
matter how well written a first-hand account of anorexia may be, the whole
experience is just so hard to describe in words to a healthy person. I have
been asked many times why I can’t just focus my energy and determination into
recovery as opposed to using it in the negative, controlling and restrictive
way I have. I can answer this honestly: when you find something you are good at
(for me restriction) it is ever so hard to give it up, a feeling I’m sure is
shared by many. To me, my relapse this summer after my first attempt at
recovering, became another factor on my mental list of failures. Making a trade
from an aspect I KNOW I am good at and am sure will work to recovery, which has
let me down before, is near impossible. I am very hard on myself and due to the
many failures in my eyes, I tend to search for a quick burst of satisfaction,
very much like the ones I achieve by controlling my food intake. I have however
used my determination to begin the steps to recovery, unfortunately I’m aware
that my heart and soul aren’t completely ready to accommodate the food intake
for weight restoration, no matter how much I would like to appear normal again.
23 January 2012
Sticks and Stones
Regret. The strongest feeling I
had immediately after posting my very first blog. The many who know me
personally will know how much I hate to show vulnerability and in admitting to
having an illness I truly revealed my biggest weakness. I was worried that my
brutal honesty on my ordeal would come back and bite me due to the very nature
of the subject. What I genuinely didn’t prepare for was the overwhelming
support that everyone gave upon reading it and the fact that people actually
gave positive feedback to it. My goal was to raise awareness for everyone out
there and so that when people see someone very obviously in the same situation
as myself, not to avoid them and judge them for what they have done to
themselves, but to lend a little understanding. I don’t want to come across as
bitter but I have been in a place before developing anorexia nervosa where my lack of
understanding led me to be somewhat judgemental of its sufferers. My biggest
fear is that people will treat me differently after my revelation and being
known as the ‘anorexic one’ is the last thing I want. In my recovery I want to
become the Solene I was, the Solene that everyone had got to know and therefore
this bravery comes from the person I used to be before. I won’t let the voice
hide me away anymore.
16 January 2012
The confession
Anorexic- A social taboo subject,
little understood by many people. Although it is obvious by looking at me, I am
facing my demons by being both embarrassed and very scared in admitting to suffering
from this social stigma. Society generally categorises us by this name and
shunning us for our eating disorder due to a common misunderstanding and there
is a shared prejudice amongst many that sufferers are just seeking attention.
Yet we are individuals. We are not ‘anorexic’ we are people like all of you who
SUFFER from anorexia nervosa. This fact being difficult even for ourselves to
understand as we are consumed by the illness and the disorder becomes a huge
part of us, incredibly difficult to separate yourself from. It is important to
distinguish us as people with an illness rather than the illness itself, of
which many are afraid of due to the often frighteningly skeletal appearance of
its sufferers.
The common misconception that people have is led by the naivety around the subject. Never did I have it explained to me fully to me and therefore I distinctly remember my 10 year old self believing that an anorexia sufferer survived only on glasses of water. Wrong. I wish that whilst having been in an all-girls school for the whole of my secondary school life that we would have had the opportunity to learn about the subject. My school was incredibly academically orientated, therefore putting immense pressure on all its students creating the stressful environment in which many girls found ‘comfort’ in an eating disorder to cope. The school failed miserably to deal with this huge issue due to their lack of knowledge surrounding the subject, proven when my year group were all gathered into the school hall after the toilets had been blocked with sick and told to ‘stop being so stupid’. As a society we are also led to believe that the main reason behind the illness is the media and the pressure put on us to look like the airbrushed models we see on the covers of magazines. This is an extremely superficial way of explaining how someone might come to develop an eating disorder. I for one know the main reason for me is control, as you will come to discover as I delve deeper into my story.
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