What People Don't Understand About Binge Eating Disorder
Despite being the most prevalent eating disorder, the misunderstandings about causes and effective treatment of binge eating disorder, many people who are struggling don’t seek help.
Because of this lack of understanding, it can be difficult to find evidence based, effective treatment. Many of our clients here at Reclaim have shared experiences in previous treatment attempts that only drove them deeper into binge eating behaviors, leaving them feeling broken and alone.
Because of this (and many other factors) binging is often steeped in such intense shame, it can be hidden away for years, leaving people suffering in silence.
Reclaim Therapy’s Favorite Coping Tools
So often when folks start working with us here at Reclaim they want tools to manage body image distress, urges to engage in eating disorder behaviors, and ways to cope with anxiety and depression.
We know firsthand that having coping tools at the ready is an important part of this work. And, because we’re humans too, we have our go-to coping tools to use in times of distress and overwhelm.
To help you get some ideas of how to cope when you’re having a tough day, tough moment, tough week, each of the Reclaim therapists wanted to share our favorite tools to use in our own lives.
Body Acceptance: How to Accept Weight Gain
For most people, one of the hardest parts of recovery from an eating disorder and disordered eating is anticipating and experiencing weight gain. Yes, eating disorders and disordered eating behaviors can be tied to so much more than the image and appearance of the body, but fixation on maintaining and achieving a thin, lean, athletic, ‘healthy’, strong (insert latest #bodygoals here) is a common and painful experience for so many.
What Grief Has To Do With Recovery From Binge Eating and Body Image
When you decide to start or re-engage in recovery from disordered eating or body image issues, it can feel like you’re losing a lot.
→ Behaviors (restriction, over-exercise, purging body-checking, bingeing) that really seemed to make you feel safe and contained.
→ An image of yourself that you believed you would achieve through the use of these behaviors.
→ A buffer or distraction from feeling difficult (and oftentimes overwhelming) feelings that your eating disorder or hypervigilance around your body provided.
→ The dream; for dieting to “work”. To be able to control the size of your body without feeling so itchy around food and hateful about your body.
Types of Restriction in Binge Eating Recovery
When starting the *very* hard work of normalizing your relationship with food, being curious about how restriction is playing a role in your eating behaviors is one of the most helpful places to start.
Most people don’t equate restriction with all of the eating disorders, but the truth is that restriction is at the foundation of disordered eating, anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder and orthorexia (along with many other things!).
In the Dieter’s Rebellion Group for women struggling with food and body image, we take a hard look at cycles of behavior around food. And, for most people once they get curious about their own cycle, it’s relatively predictable. Restriction of some sort eventually leads to the “problem” behavior of binge eating.
Let’s flip things on their head for a moment. Let’s shift the lens of the problem off of bingeing. Let’s get curious about how restriction is contributing to your own cyclical behavior around food and your body.
Body Image tips for returning to in person interactions
to be seen, like really seen, after going so long without, is enough to bring on a whirlwind of body image attacks. Between the cultural expectations for bodies to be thin and static, unchanging entities, our own personal body stories and histories with disordered eating, the current climate is the perfect temp for skyrocketing anxiety about your body.
The therapists of Reclaim want to give you some tips on how to navigate this time and hopefully relieve some of the distress you’re feeling as you continue to re-enter your world.
How to Respond to Body Comments
There are endless amounts of memes floating around IG and FB encouraging witty or sassy responses when faced with these comments. I consider this a fight response- when feeling challenged or threatened, some people shift into fight mode.
I simply don’t relate to in-the-moment-sass. I shift to more of a flight response...how can I relieve this discomfort? Can I escape it?! No matter how much I wish it could, my system doesn’t operate in sass or fight. I’m one of those wake up at 3am thinking, “shit!! I should’ve said….”
And I know others feel the same.
10 Tips to Cope with Bad Body Image Days
Struggling with body image is something that most people can relate to. Bad body image days can be enough to knock you on your butt. The intensity of the thoughts, the self-beratement, the never-ending-changing-of-outfits, the endless body checking wondering where in the world *that* came from… and, the strong desire to crawl back into bed so that you can’t/won’t be seen.
The Grief Pandemic: A Global View of Loss and Covid
What a year this has been
Finishing up a day at the office, picking up the kids, heading to the grocery store to pick up dinner, and coming home not realizing that our world would be turned upside down the very next day.
Next came the news alerts, posts on social media, people running to the store for all the essentials, and discussions about how long this pandemic would last.
Our idea of “normal” changed within 24 hours.
The Intersection Between Trauma and Eating Disorders
People’s relationship with food and body can be complicated, to say the least.
Living in a dieting-obsessed culture can be a significant trigger for some people, leading them to embark on the body-project that so many of us know so well-striving for body change and engaging in disordered eating behaviors.
But, many times people begin engaging in these behaviors as a way to cope with overwhelming emotions or experiences.
Online Coaching for Binge Eating
Since opening our doors in 2016 the most common experience we’ve heard from our community is that they just can’t seem to shake the stream of food and body noise in their heads.
Between years of counting, tracking, weighing- revolving their lives around how they could control or compensate for what they’d consumed that day, week, weekend- it has felt like a full-time job.
One epically unfulfilling, working-constant-overtime...job.
A Guide to Overcoming Binge Eating Disorder
If you’re here, you likely know the pain that comes along with binge eating; both emotional and physical. The shame that binge eating is steeped in is upheld by our culture, taught to us at an early age and reinforced over the years everywhere we turn- doctors offices, gyms, social media, and yes- with family and friends. We’re taught that food is to be feared because of its potential impact (the culture’s narrative!) on the body- and when we’re bombarded with messages that bodies should appear and function a certain way- it can feel like there’s no other option but to fear food.
Online Therapy 101: For People Struggling with Disordered Eating, Trauma, and Body Image
For the majority of us, March of 2020 marked the beginning of all things zoom and telehealth. Our phones, computers, and tablets were forced to become our primary way of interacting with healthcare professionals, family, and friends. Although online counseling has been around for a long time, and here at Reclaim Therapy we’ve been offering online therapy in Pennsylvania since 2016, it has now become an increasingly popular option when seeking treatment for disordered eating, trauma, loss, and grief and body image.
An Open Letter About Recovery to Folks Struggling With an Eating Disorder
Dear Brave, Extraordinary Human,
This letter is for you if you’re struggling with your relationship to food and your body.
If you’ve been formally diagnosed with anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder or OSFED, this letter is for you. If you struggle with orthorexia, compulsive/overexercise, dieting cycles, or body image issues, this letter is for you too.
See ya 👋🏼 2020! And my hope for you in 2021.
New Years Eve 2020 is finally here.
A breath of relief for some who are ready to say BYEEE! to arguably one of the hardest years of many of our lives.
And, for others, just another day, another midnight, another new day to come tomorrow.
Wherever you are on the spectrum, I hope you that it’s valid as hell to be there.
Thanksgiving is Looking a Bit Different This Year
Thanksgiving is definitely going to be different this year! For me, it will be the first Thanksgiving in 10 years that I haven’t hosted.
I honestly have mixed feelings!
Some relief that I’m not going to spend the week shopping, prepping, cleaning, hosting, cleaning, dodging family dynamics, cleaning, cooking and cleaning some more.
And, I’m sad that 2020 has looked the way it has, leading us to this point. The burnout, the collective exhale of grief and the ever cyclical question... wtf is actually happening?!
Understanding the Dieting Mentality
Something that's pretty clear for most of us suffering with food and body concerns is that the dieting mentality is something (a force really!) that permeates throughout our lives.
The dieting mentality is a mindset that is planted and driven by our dieting-obsessed culture. Diet-culture operates in black and white, good or bad, focused on numbers, measurements, rules, judgement, guilt and shame.
The dieting mentality is how we’ve internalized those messages and how they influence our relationship with food, our food and movement choices, and our bodies.
The dieting mentality erodes trust in our bodies and replaces it with rules and shoulds that we feel like we have to follow.
If You've Turned to Old Ways of Coping
In times that we feel completely out of control- times when fear, anxiety, grief, trauma and the unknown are heavy and pulsing through our bodies, it's easy to find ourselves turning to old ways of coping.
Hoping, grasping, for a semblance of control in ways that feel contained. Nostalgic. Safe.
In this time of collective trauma, I encourage you to notice.
What I'm Doing to Self-Soothe
I want to validate all of the things you're feeling, .
As we navigate the coming weeks it feels important to have some tools readily available to soothe ourselves.
If you're feeling tight with anxiety, I want you to know that your body, your nervous system, is doing its job.
When we feel our safety and security is threatened, our body's natural response is to move to fight or flight mode. Enter worrisome thoughts, irritability, spiraling thoughts and tension throughout our bodies.
We need this anxiety to activate to help protect ourselves from danger. But, when the intensity of it becomes overwhelming, it can be very hard to make grounded decisions, be with what matters most to us, plan ahead and mobilize to act on those plans.
Genetics and Set-Point Weight Ranges
Because every body has a natural set point weight range.
This is the weight range where your body naturally settles when you’re eating in response to hunger and fullness and moving your body in ways that feel good.
The body is smart. It wants to be where it is genetically comfortable. It wants to maintain its natural weight range, despite our cognitive and cultural desires to be a different weight, or body shape and size.