“What started as a longing to be loved and seen for my physical beauty digressed into the warped belief that the illness itself was what drew the attention I so craved. I towed the line between longing for perfection and longing for pity. Using my body as a signaling flag, oscillating between peacocking in times where I felt beautiful, and waving distress calls in the depths of my sickness. I never used my words, and I didn’t know how to. I used my body.” Eating DisordersAnorexiaEating DisorderBody DysmorphiaAnorexicBinge Eating Disorder Book:Where the River Flows: A memoir of loss, love & life with an Eating Disorder Source: Where the River Flows: A memoir of loss, love & life with an Eating Disorder
“And so, as if signing up for some new religion or entering into some cult, I indoctrinated myself as a member—I was and would be, Anorexic. I carried shame around this decision for a long time. As if in the choosing, I wasn’t qualified for actual sickness. That because I chose Anorexia, it was not a disease I fell ill to. That because I decided to stop eating, it was my fault, my responsibility, and a disgrace to the real people suffering from Eating Disorders that I even considered myself to be one of them. So even in my illness, I allowed myself to believe I wasn’t ill. I convinced myself it was temporary—a two-week free trial that I would cancel before getting charged. I would use and absorb the skills of Anorexic-others, then get out as soon as I’d reached my ideal weight. This, I later learned, was a lie my Eating Disorder would tell me for the rest of my life.” Eating DisordersAnorexiaEating DisorderAnorexicBinge Eating Disorder Book:Where the River Flows: A memoir of loss, love & life with an Eating Disorder Source: Where the River Flows: A memoir of loss, love & life with an Eating Disorder