1995 Newsletters
August 1995
Recovered? What’s That?
Amy Grabowski, MA, LCPC
In the ANAD support group I often say that I have recovered from the spectrum of eating disorders. I am often asked “Aren’t these lifelong illnesses? Is it possible to recover? Will I ever stop worrying about food, eating and weight?”
When I first started to acknowledge that I had an eating disorder, I read everything I found on the subject. I often came across the opinion that eating disorders were lifelong illnesses that could only be controlled and not cured. I went to a 12-step support group which preached to me that I was ill and would have this illness for the rest of the my life. The best one could hope for was lifelong abstinence. This made me feel hopeless. I thought “Well, why even bother trying, if I am going to have this forever.”
Having completely recovered from my eating disorders, I can now say that it is possible to recover fully IF (and its a big “if”) the underlying issues that caused the eating disorder are addressed and resolved.
Now that’s the rub! Some people get to the point where their food is under “control” and decide that they are recovered, even though they have to “control” it every day. They may or may not be aware of some vague feeling of not being completely at ease with themselves: inner emptiness, lack of sense of identity (who am I?), unresolved anger, etc., which they cover up with their new “control” over food. If one considers this to be recovered, then yes, eating disorders are lifelong illnesses.
If, on the other hand, you take a good hard look at what those inner feelings are all about, endure the scariness, pain and anguish of resolving these feelings, then you do not have to use food to cover up these issues. Food then becomes, well, food, something you eat to fuel your body. You can enjoy food and eating, but are not wracked with guilt and self-hatred afterwards. You can eat when you are hungry, eat what you are hungry for, and stop when you are no longer hungry. If one considers this to be recovered, then I do not believe eating disorders to be lifelong.
“But what about relapsing? Don’t I have to be constantly on the lookout for relapsing? What if something “bad” happens to me?”
I often compare having an eating disorder to having a broken leg. If I broke my leg I would have a cast put on it until it healed. At that point the cast would be taken off. The bone would be healed, but it would not be as strong as it was before. The bone would be at risk for being broken again. If the weather was bad, the bone may ache but I certainly would not put another cast on it! I would probably just be gentle with it, and take care of it.
I consider myself totally recovered from my eating disorder: I do not have to think about my food/eating/ weight in order to maintain the weight I am at. If I find myself thinking about these things, then I consider it a “red flag of warning”. I stop and think about what needs am I not taking care of.
These food thoughts are a “friendly” reminder that I am not tending to business. But because I have learned healthy new ways to cope with life’s ups and downs, I take care of myself on a regular basis and so food thoughts are rare.
Just like my analogy of the broken leg, there are times when the “weather is bad” in my life, and I have to be “gentle” with myself. I keep a lookout for what I need and find ways to take care of my needs. But I don’t put the “cast” back on and say I have an eating disorder!
Have I ever been tempted to revert back to old behaviors? Yes, I have had food thoughts but have not wanted to act on them. Even when something terrible happened to me, it was not a struggle to maintain my recovery. Why?
Because the underlying issues have been resolved. Inside I no longer feel like the same person I was before I had the eating disorders.
I will leave it up to you as to whether you consider this a lifelong illness or not. Because ultimately it is up to you as to how far you are willing to take your own recovery. That will then give you your answer.
In the next newsletter I will discuss some underlying issues that need to be addressed for recovery.
____________________________________
After The Dieting is Over
Marianne K. Evans-Ramsay, RD, LD
One of our readers posed this question: I don’t understand the difference between non-dieting and overeating all the time like I already do?
Overeating is a disordered eating pattern which is very different from non-dieting. Overeating is eating in response to external cues, situations or emotional feelings. Eating becomes disconnected from the body’s physical sensations of hunger and fullness. Overeaters tend to feel out of control around food.
Non-dieting is learning to eat in response to physical hunger, fullness and body cravings. Non-dieting reconnects the body’s natural physical sensations of hunger and fullness to eating. Non-dieters feel in control of their food and eating.
To end disordered eating, I support a series of steps. The first step in ending the harmful cycle of yo-yo dieting is to stop dieting. This is a difficult and scary step for most people because it means no more restrictive eating plans. Getting help to do this can make it less intimidating, but is a step towards increasing your well being.
The next step is to begin mending the disordered eating which is the result of years of dieting. Dieting does not teach you how to lose weight, at least not on a permanent basis. Dieting teaches you how to eat to external rules and how to ignore your body’s cues for hunger and fullness.
Mending disordered eating involves normalizing your eating. This is done through a non-restrained internal cue eating style that helps reconnect the experience of hunger with eating. It is relearning to eat in synch with your body’s physical sensations of hunger and fullness.
How to start anew:
1. Eat in rhythm with your stomach. Practice listening for physiological hunger, fullness, and cravings. You do not have to be tied to eating certain types of foods only at certain times of the day or eating because the clock tells you it is “lunchtime”. You do not have to eat what pleases other people.
2. Create a supply of food. To respond to hunger and body cravings you will need to have a wide variety of foods available to you at all times. You can carry these foods with you and also keep a supply at your work place.
3. Learn about and add new foods to your diet. As you add a variety of new foods it is logical that the overall quality and balance of your diet will be enhanced. Try not to be focused on eliminating “bad foods”. As soon as you tell yourself that you shouldn’t have certain foods it will make you want them even more. (The guilt you then feel when you eat them is a sure set up for a binge.)
4. Choose not to weigh yourself. The more you are self-critical about your weight the more you will feel driven to overeat or exercise excessively in
response to the anxiety that this focus causes.
5. Talk about your eating and your body in kinder terms. Describing yourself as having eaten like a “pig” or referring to your “saddle bags” is self abusive. When you can, use neutral words instead of harshness.
6. Work at realistic self-acceptance. Your weight and your body shape are the result of your genetic background and your history with dieting and exercise. Don’t let illusions about achieving an unattainable perfect body keep you from getting on with your life.
____________________________________
- Recovered? What’s That? - Amy Grabowski, MA, LCPC
- After the Dieting is Over - Marianne K. Evans-Ramsay, RD, LD
Recovered? What’s That?
Amy Grabowski, MA, LCPC
In the ANAD support group I often say that I have recovered from the spectrum of eating disorders. I am often asked “Aren’t these lifelong illnesses? Is it possible to recover? Will I ever stop worrying about food, eating and weight?”
When I first started to acknowledge that I had an eating disorder, I read everything I found on the subject. I often came across the opinion that eating disorders were lifelong illnesses that could only be controlled and not cured. I went to a 12-step support group which preached to me that I was ill and would have this illness for the rest of the my life. The best one could hope for was lifelong abstinence. This made me feel hopeless. I thought “Well, why even bother trying, if I am going to have this forever.”
Having completely recovered from my eating disorders, I can now say that it is possible to recover fully IF (and its a big “if”) the underlying issues that caused the eating disorder are addressed and resolved.
Now that’s the rub! Some people get to the point where their food is under “control” and decide that they are recovered, even though they have to “control” it every day. They may or may not be aware of some vague feeling of not being completely at ease with themselves: inner emptiness, lack of sense of identity (who am I?), unresolved anger, etc., which they cover up with their new “control” over food. If one considers this to be recovered, then yes, eating disorders are lifelong illnesses.
If, on the other hand, you take a good hard look at what those inner feelings are all about, endure the scariness, pain and anguish of resolving these feelings, then you do not have to use food to cover up these issues. Food then becomes, well, food, something you eat to fuel your body. You can enjoy food and eating, but are not wracked with guilt and self-hatred afterwards. You can eat when you are hungry, eat what you are hungry for, and stop when you are no longer hungry. If one considers this to be recovered, then I do not believe eating disorders to be lifelong.
“But what about relapsing? Don’t I have to be constantly on the lookout for relapsing? What if something “bad” happens to me?”
I often compare having an eating disorder to having a broken leg. If I broke my leg I would have a cast put on it until it healed. At that point the cast would be taken off. The bone would be healed, but it would not be as strong as it was before. The bone would be at risk for being broken again. If the weather was bad, the bone may ache but I certainly would not put another cast on it! I would probably just be gentle with it, and take care of it.
I consider myself totally recovered from my eating disorder: I do not have to think about my food/eating/ weight in order to maintain the weight I am at. If I find myself thinking about these things, then I consider it a “red flag of warning”. I stop and think about what needs am I not taking care of.
These food thoughts are a “friendly” reminder that I am not tending to business. But because I have learned healthy new ways to cope with life’s ups and downs, I take care of myself on a regular basis and so food thoughts are rare.
Just like my analogy of the broken leg, there are times when the “weather is bad” in my life, and I have to be “gentle” with myself. I keep a lookout for what I need and find ways to take care of my needs. But I don’t put the “cast” back on and say I have an eating disorder!
Have I ever been tempted to revert back to old behaviors? Yes, I have had food thoughts but have not wanted to act on them. Even when something terrible happened to me, it was not a struggle to maintain my recovery. Why?
Because the underlying issues have been resolved. Inside I no longer feel like the same person I was before I had the eating disorders.
I will leave it up to you as to whether you consider this a lifelong illness or not. Because ultimately it is up to you as to how far you are willing to take your own recovery. That will then give you your answer.
In the next newsletter I will discuss some underlying issues that need to be addressed for recovery.
____________________________________
After The Dieting is Over
Marianne K. Evans-Ramsay, RD, LD
One of our readers posed this question: I don’t understand the difference between non-dieting and overeating all the time like I already do?
Overeating is a disordered eating pattern which is very different from non-dieting. Overeating is eating in response to external cues, situations or emotional feelings. Eating becomes disconnected from the body’s physical sensations of hunger and fullness. Overeaters tend to feel out of control around food.
Non-dieting is learning to eat in response to physical hunger, fullness and body cravings. Non-dieting reconnects the body’s natural physical sensations of hunger and fullness to eating. Non-dieters feel in control of their food and eating.
To end disordered eating, I support a series of steps. The first step in ending the harmful cycle of yo-yo dieting is to stop dieting. This is a difficult and scary step for most people because it means no more restrictive eating plans. Getting help to do this can make it less intimidating, but is a step towards increasing your well being.
The next step is to begin mending the disordered eating which is the result of years of dieting. Dieting does not teach you how to lose weight, at least not on a permanent basis. Dieting teaches you how to eat to external rules and how to ignore your body’s cues for hunger and fullness.
Mending disordered eating involves normalizing your eating. This is done through a non-restrained internal cue eating style that helps reconnect the experience of hunger with eating. It is relearning to eat in synch with your body’s physical sensations of hunger and fullness.
How to start anew:
1. Eat in rhythm with your stomach. Practice listening for physiological hunger, fullness, and cravings. You do not have to be tied to eating certain types of foods only at certain times of the day or eating because the clock tells you it is “lunchtime”. You do not have to eat what pleases other people.
2. Create a supply of food. To respond to hunger and body cravings you will need to have a wide variety of foods available to you at all times. You can carry these foods with you and also keep a supply at your work place.
3. Learn about and add new foods to your diet. As you add a variety of new foods it is logical that the overall quality and balance of your diet will be enhanced. Try not to be focused on eliminating “bad foods”. As soon as you tell yourself that you shouldn’t have certain foods it will make you want them even more. (The guilt you then feel when you eat them is a sure set up for a binge.)
4. Choose not to weigh yourself. The more you are self-critical about your weight the more you will feel driven to overeat or exercise excessively in
response to the anxiety that this focus causes.
5. Talk about your eating and your body in kinder terms. Describing yourself as having eaten like a “pig” or referring to your “saddle bags” is self abusive. When you can, use neutral words instead of harshness.
6. Work at realistic self-acceptance. Your weight and your body shape are the result of your genetic background and your history with dieting and exercise. Don’t let illusions about achieving an unattainable perfect body keep you from getting on with your life.
____________________________________
December 1995
Perfectionism, the Perfect Set-Up for Failure
Amy Grabowski, MA, LCPC
In the last newsletter, I promised an article on one of the underlying issues of recovery. At the time it seemed like an easy promise to keep. While working on this issue, I worked on all the other pages first. Except for Marianne’s article, this page remained blank. I found myself avoiding this page. I reworked other articles and pages long after they were finished. Finally I was forced to work on this page. Why was I avoiding it so? It dawned on me that in my mind it had to be a Pulitzer prize winning article; an article that would inspire every reader to make great strides in their recovery. In other words, it was going to be “perfect”.
Oh, perfectionism! How sneaky it is. Maybe you can empathize with me. Have you ever felt that if you have one bite of cake then you are a real pig! Or make one small mistake, and you call yourself a total loser, or leave one thing out of place, and say you’re a real slob! If you have, then you’re probably painfully aware of the negative consequences of perfectionism.
There is a difference between doing your best and striving for perfection. The first is attainable, gratifying and healthy. The second is often unattainable, frustrating and self-defeating. Since you will settle for nothing short of an absolutely flawless performance in any thing that you do, you frequently end up having to settle for just that - nothing! We all have our reasons for attempting to be perfect. Sometimes we think that if we can be perfect, something magical will happen: we will be happy, successful, beautiful, etc. In reality, perfection is the ultimate illusion; it doesn’t exist anywhere in the universe. Other times we think “If I don’t whip myself to be perfect, I’ll be/do nothing!” This is all-or-nothing thinking, a guarantee that we will fail and lose!
The irony of perfectionism is the harder we strive to be perfect the more disappointment we find. When we always focus on where we fall short, we are bound to continually feel inadequate. No matter how much good we accomplish, its never “good enough”; we tell ourselves “I should do better.” So we defeat ourselves by raising our goals and expectations even higher!
Perfectionism also leads to procrastination. We often feel overwhelmed because we insist on doing things so thoroughly that we don’t know where to start. Or we make ourselves do everything over so many times that we never finish. Or we are paralyzed, afraid to do or say anything because we might make a mistake. Fear lurks inside of every perfectionist. A person who can’t stand to make mistakes is afraid to take risks or to grow. They are so afraid that one mistake will ruin their life or career, that they never take chances, and hold themselves back in life. When you decide to give up perfectionistic self-defeating ways you will receive more satisfaction from the things you do. When we allow ourselves to be human, we succeed. A key to happiness is to set modest goals and then accomplish them. You will be able to relax and accept your humanness, thus allowing yourself to grow.
Amy Grabowski, MA, LCPC, is a Creative Psychotherapist and is the Director of The Awakening Center. She works hard to “tame” her perfectionism.
____________________________________
“Nature does not demand that we be perfect; it requires that we grow.” Joshua Liebman
ANAD Support Group News by “Janet”
Coming to the Tuesday evening ANAD group for women recovering from eating disorders is often the experience of looking in a mirror. Hold on! I don’t mean the distorting mirror that often we with eating disorders look in that makes us appear too fat, or too imperfect in some way. But a mirror that helps us to see ourselves as lovely and loving women who are somewhere in the process of letting our full selves emerge. We who are so often starving for food and ashamed of our desires, begin to see by sharing with one another our true feelings that we can become full - full of our true selves.
Instead of worrying that the mirror reveals that there is too much of us - we discover that emotion-ally and spiritually there isn’t enough of us yet. For our needs have often been silenced and ignored. When we are given room in the safe and supportive environment of our ANAD group - we can begin to take up more space in life by asserting our real needs and desires in relationships. We are given permission to examine and explore new ways to develop our talents. We create more room within to dream, relax and meditate. We learn to play and release tensions.
Thus we find we no longer use the mirror, or a scale, or a dress size to limit how much food we take in, or purge/diet out. Gradually we emerge into the size we were created to be, both inside and out. Food becomes only one of many ways we express our wants, needs and desires.
We invite you to join us on Tuesday nights, from 6:30 - 8:00pm, at the Awakening Center, Suite 213, 3166 N Lincoln. New members may call Amy Grabowski, the leader of the group (929-6262) before coming if that makes them more comfortable, or just drop in. Old friends are encouraged to come back to the group and join us for some lively discussions. As is often heard in the group, “Where else can I talk about this, and feel so accepted and understood?”
____________________________________
How To Enjoy Your Food More in 1996
Marianne Evans-Ramsay, RD, LD
Taste is the # 1 reason people choose food. It overrides cost, convenience, and nutrition. After all, we don’t eat numbers, we eat food! Here are five tips to move you into a powerful new year.
1. Carefully examine your resolutions for any hint of food restriction. Eliminate the word “diet” from your vocabulary and from your mind set.
2. Listen to your body carefully. Make eating a pleasurable, guilt-free experience - and take the time to check out how you really feel after eating various foods.
3. Recognize the flexibility of normal eating. Normal eating means sometimes you may eat a little too much and sometimes you may not eat quite enough.
4. Discover nutrition anytime, anywhere. Taste test the amazing variety of new options in the supermarket -- everything from star fruit to pretzel chips.
5. Try out new recipes. Any recipe is just a beginning -- an opportunity to adapt, modify, and change the details to get great taste and good health in every bite.
- Perfectionism, The Perfect Set Up for Failure - Amy Grabowski, MA, LCPC
- ANAD Support Group News by “Janet”
- How to Enjoy Your Food More in 1996 - Marianne Evans-Ramsay, RD, LD
Perfectionism, the Perfect Set-Up for Failure
Amy Grabowski, MA, LCPC
In the last newsletter, I promised an article on one of the underlying issues of recovery. At the time it seemed like an easy promise to keep. While working on this issue, I worked on all the other pages first. Except for Marianne’s article, this page remained blank. I found myself avoiding this page. I reworked other articles and pages long after they were finished. Finally I was forced to work on this page. Why was I avoiding it so? It dawned on me that in my mind it had to be a Pulitzer prize winning article; an article that would inspire every reader to make great strides in their recovery. In other words, it was going to be “perfect”.
Oh, perfectionism! How sneaky it is. Maybe you can empathize with me. Have you ever felt that if you have one bite of cake then you are a real pig! Or make one small mistake, and you call yourself a total loser, or leave one thing out of place, and say you’re a real slob! If you have, then you’re probably painfully aware of the negative consequences of perfectionism.
There is a difference between doing your best and striving for perfection. The first is attainable, gratifying and healthy. The second is often unattainable, frustrating and self-defeating. Since you will settle for nothing short of an absolutely flawless performance in any thing that you do, you frequently end up having to settle for just that - nothing! We all have our reasons for attempting to be perfect. Sometimes we think that if we can be perfect, something magical will happen: we will be happy, successful, beautiful, etc. In reality, perfection is the ultimate illusion; it doesn’t exist anywhere in the universe. Other times we think “If I don’t whip myself to be perfect, I’ll be/do nothing!” This is all-or-nothing thinking, a guarantee that we will fail and lose!
The irony of perfectionism is the harder we strive to be perfect the more disappointment we find. When we always focus on where we fall short, we are bound to continually feel inadequate. No matter how much good we accomplish, its never “good enough”; we tell ourselves “I should do better.” So we defeat ourselves by raising our goals and expectations even higher!
Perfectionism also leads to procrastination. We often feel overwhelmed because we insist on doing things so thoroughly that we don’t know where to start. Or we make ourselves do everything over so many times that we never finish. Or we are paralyzed, afraid to do or say anything because we might make a mistake. Fear lurks inside of every perfectionist. A person who can’t stand to make mistakes is afraid to take risks or to grow. They are so afraid that one mistake will ruin their life or career, that they never take chances, and hold themselves back in life. When you decide to give up perfectionistic self-defeating ways you will receive more satisfaction from the things you do. When we allow ourselves to be human, we succeed. A key to happiness is to set modest goals and then accomplish them. You will be able to relax and accept your humanness, thus allowing yourself to grow.
Amy Grabowski, MA, LCPC, is a Creative Psychotherapist and is the Director of The Awakening Center. She works hard to “tame” her perfectionism.
____________________________________
“Nature does not demand that we be perfect; it requires that we grow.” Joshua Liebman
ANAD Support Group News by “Janet”
Coming to the Tuesday evening ANAD group for women recovering from eating disorders is often the experience of looking in a mirror. Hold on! I don’t mean the distorting mirror that often we with eating disorders look in that makes us appear too fat, or too imperfect in some way. But a mirror that helps us to see ourselves as lovely and loving women who are somewhere in the process of letting our full selves emerge. We who are so often starving for food and ashamed of our desires, begin to see by sharing with one another our true feelings that we can become full - full of our true selves.
Instead of worrying that the mirror reveals that there is too much of us - we discover that emotion-ally and spiritually there isn’t enough of us yet. For our needs have often been silenced and ignored. When we are given room in the safe and supportive environment of our ANAD group - we can begin to take up more space in life by asserting our real needs and desires in relationships. We are given permission to examine and explore new ways to develop our talents. We create more room within to dream, relax and meditate. We learn to play and release tensions.
Thus we find we no longer use the mirror, or a scale, or a dress size to limit how much food we take in, or purge/diet out. Gradually we emerge into the size we were created to be, both inside and out. Food becomes only one of many ways we express our wants, needs and desires.
We invite you to join us on Tuesday nights, from 6:30 - 8:00pm, at the Awakening Center, Suite 213, 3166 N Lincoln. New members may call Amy Grabowski, the leader of the group (929-6262) before coming if that makes them more comfortable, or just drop in. Old friends are encouraged to come back to the group and join us for some lively discussions. As is often heard in the group, “Where else can I talk about this, and feel so accepted and understood?”
____________________________________
How To Enjoy Your Food More in 1996
Marianne Evans-Ramsay, RD, LD
Taste is the # 1 reason people choose food. It overrides cost, convenience, and nutrition. After all, we don’t eat numbers, we eat food! Here are five tips to move you into a powerful new year.
1. Carefully examine your resolutions for any hint of food restriction. Eliminate the word “diet” from your vocabulary and from your mind set.
2. Listen to your body carefully. Make eating a pleasurable, guilt-free experience - and take the time to check out how you really feel after eating various foods.
3. Recognize the flexibility of normal eating. Normal eating means sometimes you may eat a little too much and sometimes you may not eat quite enough.
4. Discover nutrition anytime, anywhere. Taste test the amazing variety of new options in the supermarket -- everything from star fruit to pretzel chips.
5. Try out new recipes. Any recipe is just a beginning -- an opportunity to adapt, modify, and change the details to get great taste and good health in every bite.