"Sure, you talk the talk when you need to; I fear the whole world is starting to believe you." -Tori Amos, "Taxi Ride"
At what point are you considered a fraud? I ask because everyone I know seems to think I'm 100% recovered. They believe that my eating disorder was "just a phase," and I'm past it now. My friends and family seem to believe that once the hallmark behaviors have subsided, the disease has disappeared.
Here's the thing. Even though I'm not actively sick, I still have disordered obsessions and compulsions. Maybe I quit therapy too soon. Maybe I'm not trying hard enough. Maybe there's a heap of issues I chose not to deal with. Whatever the reason, anorexia and bulimia still exist in my mind.
I eat when I'm hungry, stop when I'm satisfied, indulge in the occasional treat. But I also count calories, drink diet soda, and obsess about the way my clothes fit. Is an eating disorder a life sentence? Am I being deceitful by letting people think I'm entirely absolved? Is this simply the reality of recovery?
A look at what happens when you've climbed back out of the rabbit hole.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Eight years.
December 26, 2002. Eight years ago this Sunday. That was the closest I've ever been to dying.
It had been three straight days of non-stop chaos. Bingeing, purging, taking laxatives, diet pills, ipecac syrup. Going to work at the ski resort and forgetting why I was there. Spending hours in the bathroom. I was unhinged. I was malnourished and very, very disturbed. I had lost touch with reality. All that existed in my universe at that time was food and self-destruction. Merry Christmas.
The 26th. 72 hours into the bender. Therapist appointment. Had to climb stairs. Couldn't do it. Couldn't see the stairs, they seemed to be moving an awful lot. Therapist hoisted me up to her office. Couldn't talk. So dehydrated, tongue stuck to the roof of my mouth. Therapist panicked.
Back to the hospital. For a long time. Tubes. Pills. White coats. No therapy, too disoriented to carry on a conversation. No visitors. Will she make it? It doesn't look good. Lots of damage, maybe too much.
Wait, this isn't what I wanted. Didn't really want to die. How did this happen? I just wanted to be thin. I just wanted to be happy. I just wanted to be good at something. To matter. Hard to matter when you're dead.
Girl got better, somehow. Body got stronger, mind got stronger. Did that really happen? Yes it did, eight years ago.
It had been three straight days of non-stop chaos. Bingeing, purging, taking laxatives, diet pills, ipecac syrup. Going to work at the ski resort and forgetting why I was there. Spending hours in the bathroom. I was unhinged. I was malnourished and very, very disturbed. I had lost touch with reality. All that existed in my universe at that time was food and self-destruction. Merry Christmas.
The 26th. 72 hours into the bender. Therapist appointment. Had to climb stairs. Couldn't do it. Couldn't see the stairs, they seemed to be moving an awful lot. Therapist hoisted me up to her office. Couldn't talk. So dehydrated, tongue stuck to the roof of my mouth. Therapist panicked.
Back to the hospital. For a long time. Tubes. Pills. White coats. No therapy, too disoriented to carry on a conversation. No visitors. Will she make it? It doesn't look good. Lots of damage, maybe too much.
Wait, this isn't what I wanted. Didn't really want to die. How did this happen? I just wanted to be thin. I just wanted to be happy. I just wanted to be good at something. To matter. Hard to matter when you're dead.
Girl got better, somehow. Body got stronger, mind got stronger. Did that really happen? Yes it did, eight years ago.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Turn, Turn, Turn
Every once in awhile I take a step back and marvel at how far I've come in the last seven years. There's truly no doubt in my mind that miracles happen.
Nine and a half years ago, I was sitting in an Eating Disorders Anonymous meeting (I have to mention, I neither had any interest in attending that meeting nor any motivation to get well at the time). I was wearing a short skirt and sitting unaccompanied in the back row. Somehow I had managed to get my hands on a sharp object. As the participants shared their struggles, I carved a symbol into my upper thigh. It was a symbol of my own creation, a single letter that, when looked at from different angles, spelled the word "FAT."
I still have that scar, white and imposing against my tan skin. A reminder, every time I'm unclothed, of how much I hated myself. It wasn't enough to declare myself fat, or even to slice open my own body; I actually branded myself. That kind of self-violence is appalling to me now, and when I look at that scar, I can scarcely believe I was the person who put it there.
There are many scars on my body I would like to get removed someday; some that I put there, some put there by others. But that "FAT" scar, disturbing and sad as it is, will stay forever. Whenever I look at it, I am reminded of just how far I've come.
Nine and a half years ago, I was sitting in an Eating Disorders Anonymous meeting (I have to mention, I neither had any interest in attending that meeting nor any motivation to get well at the time). I was wearing a short skirt and sitting unaccompanied in the back row. Somehow I had managed to get my hands on a sharp object. As the participants shared their struggles, I carved a symbol into my upper thigh. It was a symbol of my own creation, a single letter that, when looked at from different angles, spelled the word "FAT."
I still have that scar, white and imposing against my tan skin. A reminder, every time I'm unclothed, of how much I hated myself. It wasn't enough to declare myself fat, or even to slice open my own body; I actually branded myself. That kind of self-violence is appalling to me now, and when I look at that scar, I can scarcely believe I was the person who put it there.
There are many scars on my body I would like to get removed someday; some that I put there, some put there by others. But that "FAT" scar, disturbing and sad as it is, will stay forever. Whenever I look at it, I am reminded of just how far I've come.
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