Wanting to Recover VS Not Wanting to Eat
A lot of people view university as a blank canvass. A place
where nobody knows you and a place where you can start over. A place where you
can be any type of person you want to be.
When I started university I was determined to make a lot of
friends and be the sociable one for once, instead of the shy and awkward one. I
was also determined to control my
eating disorder, instead of letting it control me. I knew this would be
difficult because at university I would have no one to make me eat. Most people
couldn’t wait for the freedom that comes with moving away from home but for me,
that freedom could be my downfall.
Wanting to Recover
I chose a catered accommodation because I knew that I would
make myself eat if it was already paid for. Fighting the guilt of eating with
the guilt of wasting money isn’t the healthiest way to recover from an eating
disorder but it was better than nothing. The canteen didn’t serve dinner at the weekend, so I didn’t
eat dinner at the weekend. Can you
imagine what I would have done if I had been responsible for my meals all of the time?
But there was another problem; I hate eating in front of people. With social anxiety and an eating
disorder, eating out and eating in front of people is extremely difficult for
me, often resulting in panic attacks. I was convinced that everyone was judging
me for what and how I was eating. So I sat alone when I could and I ate as quickly
as I could. Even the worst indigestion was better than the paranoia I experienced
when eating in public.
Every time I walked into the canteen I felt petrified and
paranoid but I also felt like a complete failure.
Another positive of using catered accommodation is that I
couldn’t count calories. I mean, on reflection I can see that it was a positive
but in the beginning it made eating even more terrifying. Before university,
counting calories was my obsession. I still have the notebooks where I used to
keep a very detailed log of what I ate, how many calories I consumed and how
many calories I burnt by exercising. Although I still consider calories in a
general sense, obsessive calorie counting is a bad habit I am so happy to have
kicked.
Not Wanting to Eat
Unlike at home, I had no one to tell me to eat. No one was
going to sit with me until I finished, or wait outside the bathroom door to
make sure I wasn’t making myself sick. I felt like I was wasting a perfect
opportunity to not eat. I remember thinking that if I gained weight I would
have no one to blame but myself, and that completely terrified me. At least at
home if I gained weight I could blame the doctors or my parents but at
university it would all be up to me.
Half of me was saying that it was my
responsibility to get healthy and the other half of me was saying that I was
responsible for my weight gain. But the thing is, these are the same. I needed
to eat and gain weight to be physically healthy and I needed to prioritise my
recovery in order to improve my mental health.
“I am forever engaged in a silent battle in my head over whether or not
to lift the fork to my mouth, and when I talk myself into doing so, I taste
only shame.”
- Jena Morrow, Hollow: An Unpolished Tale
- Jena Morrow, Hollow: An Unpolished Tale
Every time I ate I genuinely questioned whether I deserved
to live. I know that is completely absurd. I know it’s impossible to gain
weight from eating one cereal bar. I know that it’s illogical to base your
worth on your weight. I know weight fluctuates for everyone. I know that making
yourself sick 5 times a day is extremely dangerous. I know that my disorder is
irrational but that doesn’t make it go away.
Having complete freedom is something most students are
excited about but when you are trying to recover from an eating disorder
freedom is extremely intimidating because you know that you can’t always trust
yourself.
So, as scary as it may seem, my main advice is to let other
people know about your eating disorder. It could be your doctor, someone from
student services or someone working in your halls. On the day I moved into my
accommodation my mum was actually the one to tell a member of staff and
although I felt embarrassed and furious, I’m so glad that she did.
I remember once I hadn’t been to the canteen in a few days
and they actually came to my room, asked if I was alright and brought me to
dinner! Yes, I was completely mortified and I cried for hours afterwards but it
was exactly what I needed.
Recovering from an eating disorder is one of the most
difficult things anyone can do and if you have never had an eating disorder you
cannot completely understand what it’s like to fight this war in your head. You
wake up to the battle of breakfast. Should I eat it or should I skip it?
Regardless of your decision, you immediately start fighting yourself about
whether to have lunch. And then dinner. And then you repeat this all again the
next day. It’s exhausting. It’s even more difficult when you don’t have people
to hold you accountable. But there is help out there.
My university had an eating disorder support group but I
didn’t go because I thought I wasn’t skinny enough for people to believe that I
had an eating disorder. Again, that is completely illogical. You cannot tell
whether someone has an eating disorder by looking at them. They may have binge
eating disorder. They may be weight restored. They may be underweight but have
a naturally bigger build.
You deserve support even if you don’t think you are sick
enough to get it.
“My worst days in
recovery are better than the best days in relapse.”
–Kate Le Page
–Kate Le Page
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I related to every single word of this post as if I had written it myself. Since being at university (I've just started my second year) I've had to fight with my eating disorder every single day, harder than I ever have before. The notion of me being the one responsible for weight gain (because I am the one deciding to eat) is one of the things I struggle most with. I seek 'permission' from others, reassurance that eating is okay and I don't need to listen to the ED. At university, I'm responsible for giving myself that permission and it's extremely difficult, and leads to an awful lot of shame and guilt.
ReplyDeleteI'm so proud of you for trying to recover. I hope you are proud of yourself. It's so difficult and exhausting but it will be worth it. I hope you have people to talk to and support you but I'm here if you ever need to chat. You deserve all of the happiness xx
DeleteI can relate to you. It's hard, it's fighting and feeling guilty. It's an obsession but you don't want anyone to notice. In the end you are not as skinny as other people, but you are indeed killing yourseld woth every beat. It takes a lot of courahe to take awareness and to be able to share this. I'm sure this will help other people too. As I said about 20 years ago I also suffered from this. And took me years to even accept I had a problem.
ReplyDeleteI was the same in the beginning. I thought 'I'm not as skinny as that person so I can't have an eating disorder.' And I thought that if I said I was struggling or tried to get help it would be offending the 'real' people with eating disorders. That mindset is so damaging. It was hurting my digestive system and my organs but even if it wasn't, I was hurting mentally and emotionally and that should be enough. Thank you for sharing, I hope you're doing well xx
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