|
|
SM: After losing a few pounds, why didn’t you go back to your old eating ways?
Lindsay: I was beginning to receive comments that I was losing weight and looking really good. I thrived off these comments and yearned for more. I thought losing more weight would get that, so I cut out even more from my diet and worked out even harder.
SM: What were your workouts like?
Lindsay: I started realizing I could actually run far distances. It was something I enjoyed at first and then it became an obsession to where if I didn’t go for a run I started panicking and I felt like I could see the fat already getting on me.
SM: How far would you run on an average day?
Lindsay: It’s hard to say how far, but about three hours a day.
SM: How did you even find the time to run three hours in a day?
Lindsay: I would skip school—I would find a way. This was my life. I didn’t do anything else. I didn’t have any friends, I didn’t talk to anyone. It kept me away from people, from food.
SM: Did you realize what was happening to you?
Lindsay: I was in complete denial of what I was doing and what was unfolding. The idea of an eating disorder did not even enter my head.
SM: How would you avoid eating dinner with your family?
Lindsay: I would tell them I was going out to dinner, but I wouldn’t go. (I was a very social girl before this.) I would say I had homework and I’d take the meal upstairs and do away with it. I’d flush things down the toilet or even put things in a plastic bag and hide it. If I did have to go out to dinner I’d push food around my plate. That’s a HUGE sign of someone with an eating disorder: just playing with food, making it look like you ate it.
| krnfirestone -- Pleasanton | |
|
Thank you for sharing your story. I have met you and I am so impressed with your strength! You are a beautiful person. I wish the best for you! A friend! |
|
| Amber -- San Diego | |
|
|
|
| MorganC | |
| MorganC | |
| My best friend has had an eating disorder for at least four years and she doesn't seem to be improving. I just don't know what to do or say anymore. I think she should get serious help but I'm not sure if it's my place to step in. How can I tell her without pushing her away? | |
| LS -- New York City | |
|
THANK YOU FOR THIS STORY. I can relate to soooo many things that Lindsay said. I'm a people pleaser to a fault, and I love when people say i look too skinny. When people tell me I look healthy, I take it as an insult and it motivates me to diet or work out more. Also, I have the "radar" and can spot someone with eating problems a mile away. Though i don't have full blown anorexia, I have definite food issues. Thanks for the reminder of how scary it could be if I let them get the best of me. LS |
|
| TinaVail -- Ojai | |
|
There is a book by Marion Woodman called Addicted to Perfection that might be helpful to anyone suffering from an eating disorder. Thank you SavvyMiss for getting this article out. It helps us all to be informed about this...and thank you Lindsey for your courage to speak. |
|
| babyallie -- West Hollywood | |
|
|
|
| Olivia -- Tucson | |
|
|
|