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Anorexia to Obesity and back again: An adult woman's life journey

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anorexia to obesity and back, weight spinning like a dizzying carnival ride

(Anorexia to obesity to anorexia again becomes a life of spinning like a carnival wheel. It makes you dizzy. It makes life a blur. It looks like a lot of action but gets you nowhere. This is a true story, written in her own words, of a woman getting off that wheel and finding wisdom.)

by Kym, guest writer

My first bout of anorexia came when I was 30.

I grew up being underweight; I believe I didn't get enough nutritional foods, but it had more to do with my parents income than emotional or compulsive behaviors. Starting at the age of 22 , gaining weight hasn't been a problem. Having food available and never having had to learn to restrain my eating, I found myself moving up and up the scale until I reach the “obese” level by the age of 25. 

Anorexia Begins

At 30 I lost weight extremely fast, and I went below my high school weight. With the help of a therapist I gained control of my life.  I gained to a safe weight, but I didn't fully address my issues nor did I learn coping skills, so my weight slowly went up and again I found myself obese.

I recently started a new job and feelings of inadequacy triggered a relapsed back into anorexic behaviors and I'm once more underweight.

Life Lived as a Woman of Many Different Sizes

My experiences have given me the opportunity to move in the world in many different sizes. I've also seen others' reactions to my various weights. As one would expect, I got a lot of praise for losing weight. People were more interested in my weight loss “secrets” than questioning the speed at which the weight was coming off.

Strangers treated me differently too. It wasn't until I was a more “normal” weight that department store sales clerks asked me if I needed help finding things. I also got more greetings and causal conversations when in public.

However, I can't totally blame strangers who ignored me when I was obese; I had internalized hatred for myself, and I didn't believe anyone would want me to interact with them. Society taught me that I had to hate myself when I'm big, otherwise it might appear that I'm OK with being overweight.

At 31 when my weight moved from thin to “so thin that obviously something is wrong, "I found myself being ignored by strangers and sales clerks again. One of my close friends was asked two times if I had HIV. 

Power of Society Disapproval and Approval

By the age of 44 I moved back from anorexia thin to being obese.  I had to get use to society disapproval again. I had gotten used to better customer service and developed confidence that people would reciprocate my greetings. But I moved back into my “fat” woman role which, in some ways, felt more safe.

Currently I'm slightly underweight....just enough to get society approval. My current relapse started at the age of 48 when I started a new job. As I lost weight this time, the praise of my co-workers fed into my ED. Although part of me knew I wasn't eating enough, my ED voice kept telling me that all these people couldn't be wrong.

I still get praise from people who haven't seen me for awhile and from store clerks who confirm my Identity with an outdated drivers license picture. Praising my weight loss reminds me of my ED way of thinking that "thin equals happiness.  Then, since I still have unhappy feelings, I believe that I must not be thin enough. Praise for being thin also reminds me that becoming obese comes easy to me, so I must constantly be in “diet mode” or obesity will catch up and take over.

I'll be 50 soon, and I'm doing what I can protect myself from weight loss praise, mostly by asking folks to not make comments. When I do get praise I remind myself that the people are just trying to compliment me. I say to myself "No, ED,  it's not a sign that more weight loss will bring more praise or that this is a healthy weight for me!!

Self Reflection


I find it interesting that with my experiences from obesity to anorexia and back again, I haven't learned yet that if I don't like myself large, I'm not going to like myself thin, and that gaining to a healthy weight isn't going to make me like myself less than I do now. OK, I will admit getting dressed in the morning is more fun when thin, but only through the hard work of recovery am I going to find a happiness beyond a pair of skinny jeans!

Joanna is a psychotherapist in private practice serving California, Arizona, Florida, Utah and Oregon. All appointments are virtual. Serving adults only with a minimum age of 25. Seniors welcome.

Author of 
Healing Your Hungry Heart: recovering from your eating disorder. 

To schedule a free telephone consultation write: 
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

(Note from Joanna Poppink.  Kym comments regularly on my blog. She is an articulate and courageous woman determined to find her recovery. She said, "sure," immediately when I asked her to write a post about her personal experience.  I'm posting it as a full article. She shares, with great honesty, her emotional experience of moving back and forth through a range of body weight that I believe can provide insight and inspiration to many of you reading on this site.

Thank you, Kym!)

Comments  

hannah
0 # Thank you for your courageous post. Ithannah 2011-01-05 01:57
Thank you for your courageous post. It is a powerful reminder that eating disorders can come in all sizes. It is true that thinner women seem to garner more attention. Is this because we are more proud when thinner and exude more confidence? Best to you and good luck in your journey.
shh
0 # Wow Kym...I've only just come across thishh 2011-06-21 16:39
Wow Kym...I've only just come across this!

It's actually brought tears to my eyes, I guess because there's a sense of relief in seeing that someone else understands how it feels to swing from restricting to a ridiculously low calorie intake and the feeling that losing weight so rapidly means you're "doing good" to eating ridiculously large amounts of calories and piling the weight back on, and the associated shame.

You've been my buddy on this site since I first came here 7 months ago at the start of my recovery journey...and I just want to say thankyou! You're a very special lady! xxxx

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