Healing Your Hungry Heart: recovering from your eating disorder; excerpt from Chapter 4: how do I begin recovery?
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How Do I Begin Recovery?
“What will open the door is daily awareness and attention.” --Krishnamurti
……Was this my starting point? I certainly thought so. But I had already chosen these people to be in my life. I created the opportunity for those events to happen long before I knew how they would turn out. In the film, Field of Dreams, a voice says, “Build it and they will come.” Buddhism says “Create the right conditions.” Psychotherapy teaches, “Create a sturdy holding environment because we never know what will emerge during the course of treatment.”
Bringing this book into your life is part of creating the right conditions for your recovery. What else do you need?
Rather than decide intellectually at this point, take a look at where you are now and what you want. This creates “the right conditions” for your imagination, emotions, and thoughts to come together to make choices that serve you well in the here and now. Then, you can bring your energy to whatever task you decide to undertake.
This sounds vague because I am not telling you what to choose. You choose. You are the only person who has accurate knowledge about your daily experiences and access to your own authentic visions for yourself. You can check in with your emotions, energy and courage to start at your true beginning place. You are reading this book because somewhere inside of you, despite the grip of your eating disorder you want to be free. Your challenge now is to honor and nurture that hopeful and healing spark of life calling from beneath the years and layers of your eating disorder.
Ask yourself: What is your eating disorder doing for you? Why is it necessary for that healing spark to work so hard to call out to you and be heard?
You may be using your eating disorder to keep yourself from knowing just how hard you believe life can get. You may be afraid to let people in our life know what you are going through and what you really want. So part of our eating disorder exists to keep the peace.
It dulls you down so you are in a state of acceptance of the unacceptable. People close to you believe you accept your way of life. In fact, you are (or were) resigned to live with an eating disorder that prevents you from becoming aware of more possibilities. You have been blocking what you fear to know in order to maintain peace in your life.
Excerpt from Healing Your Hungry Heart: recovering from your eating disorder, by Joanna Poppink, MFT, Conari Press, 2011. Copyright protected August, 2011. http://www.eatngdisorderrecovery.com
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About the Author
Joanna Poppink is a Los Angeles psychotherapist specializing in eating disorder recovery. She is a lecturer, Skype Video consultant, workshop leader and author of Healing Your Hungry Heart: recovering from your eating disorder. Joanna suffered from bulimia for many years, found recovery and uses both her professional expertise and personal knowledge to support her clients to a life of freedom and fulfillment. http://www.eatingdisorderrecovery.com
Contact her at: Joanna@poppink.com.
Further reading
Further Reading
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***Eating Disorders in Older Women
There are now more overweight people in the US than any time in history. Obesity is costing our healthcare system over $147 billion annually (Finkelstein, Trogdon, Cohen & Dietz, 2009). We have 12.5 million children who are overweight or obese and twelve million people in the U.S. with an eating disorder. Something is drastically wrong!
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Creating Boundaries: One Step on the Path to Freedom from Disordered Eating
Boundaries are imaginary or real lines around our physical, emotional, or spiritual self that set limits for us and how we interact with others. Imaginary lines protect our thinking, feelings, and behavior. Real lines allow us to choose how close we allow others to come to us, as well as if and how we allow them to touch us. Boundaries help distinguish what our responsibilities are and are not.
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*** Breaking Free of the Binge Cycle
We develop patterns of behavior early in life. We associate certain events with certain feelings and behaviors. One such pattern is our behavior with food. Being fed by our parents when we were young may come to represent being cared for or being loved. On the other hand, not being fed when we were hungry may have produced a deep insecurity about whether there would be enough food in the future.
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***Chapter 1 – Facing the Fact that Diets Don’t Work
Have you ever dieted and gained the weight back? Statistics show that sixty-six percent of the American population is overweight. Only one out of 200 dieters loses the weight and keeps it off for a year or more. Out of the 25 million Americans that are seriously dieting in the United States 40 to 60 percent are high school girls. Studies show that 35% of the normal dieters progress to eating disorders. Thirty percent of post-bariatric or gastric bypass surgery patients develop a substance addiction. The body may, but thinking remains the same.
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