Sunday, July 18th, 2010 at
11:57 am
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Overall Rating:
Total Customer Reviews: (24)
Seller: Amazon
As an experienced therapist, a parenting expert on television and radio, an award-winning columnist, and a parent, Dr. Jenn Berman provides insightful and informative advice to parents as they guide their children through early childhood. The A to Z Guide to Raising Happy, Confident Kids addresses twenty-six of the most important issues that modern[Read More]
Do you know of a good bulimia recovery site?
Sunday, July 18th, 2010 at
10:16 am
How do I stop binge eating?
Saturday, July 17th, 2010 at
12:16 am
Tanise09 asked:
I feel like I can’t control myself. I binge eat at least 3 times a week I am 5′3 114lbs. If I don’t stop binge eating I will gain weight. I have binge eating for at about a year. I also suffer from depression and anxiety. I also see a psychiatrist I try so hard , I exercise every morning at 8:00. PLEASE TELL ME HOW I CAN STOP ?
I feel like I can’t control myself. I binge eat at least 3 times a week I am 5′3 114lbs. If I don’t stop binge eating I will gain weight. I have binge eating for at about a year. I also suffer from depression and anxiety. I also see a psychiatrist I try so hard , I exercise every morning at 8:00. PLEASE TELL ME HOW I CAN STOP ?
Do Parents Cause Eating Disorders in Their Children?
Friday, July 16th, 2010 at
4:25 am
There has been a lot of discussion lately on the roll of parents causing eating disorders in their children, is this the case or not? It is very sensitive topic because it is painful for families to even think that they are a possible cause of their daughter/ son bulimia and/or anorexia.
I am a medical doctor and suffered anorexia and bulimia for over 15 years. Also I have been involved in the treatment of hundreds of eating disorder sufferers. Personally, I don’t know a family who wishes to foster eating disorders in their children. I would say that parents and the family do not cause eating disorders directly.
However, I know firsthand that the family atmosphere, parenting style and undiagnosed mental and emotional problems in parents contribute a lot to the development of eating disorders in their children.
There is a lot of research around about the roll of genetic predisposition in eating disorders. Yes, eating disorders do have a genetic component as well, but it is only the vulnerability to develop an eating disorder not the disease itself that people can inherit.
People can also inherit certain personality traits that make them vulnerable to developing eating disorders: like perfectionism, tendency towards anxiety and depression, competitiveness, impulsiveness and extreme stubbornness. All these can make people vulnerable to developing eating disorders.
It is the environment that turns people’s vulnerability into the disease. The way people live their lives from their birth that can make genetic vulnerabilities become an illness.
The first and most important environment people have is their family. Often people with eating disorders describe how in their childhood they had a tense family environment where parents very strictly and controlling. Children in families like this don’t have much space to experiment and to be free. These types of parents don’t let their children find their own way in life, turning them into puppets that are forced to be followers and controlled by strict rules.
In families like this children turn to eating disorders as a way to control their lives the best they possible can and to find emotional escape in the space of their eating disorder.
The other type of families is the overprotective one. Their protective behaviour puts onto the child so many limitations that the child is likely to seek her/his freedom and escape in things like eating, non-eating and manipulating their own weight. These parents cannot let their children be different than what their mental image of them is or the way they think the child should be. They look at the child’s achievements only from the angle of their own desires and opinions.
Most of parents in these types of families still want only the best for their children and don’t even realize that what they are doing is bad for the child. Many parents have their own emotional issues to deal with, which are still unresolved and deeply rooted in their own childhood. Some parents maybe even have undiagnosed mental disorders like OCD or personality disorders. Because these disorders have never been diagnosed parents are not aware of them and continue to put enormous pressure on their children and other family members.
Many doctors and therapists consider that blaming parents for their children’s disorder is not a good idea, because parents may feel guilty and shameful for the way they are themselves. These feelings of guilt and shame can stop parents from helping the child to recover and parents may even refuse to participate in the child’s recovery program.
Nevertheless, it is proven now that if the family atmosphere remains the same a non- loving, demanding, restrictive and an overprotective one, the child has little chance of getting better.
The purpose of writing this article was not to put lots of blame onto parents, but just to warn the families of eating disorder sufferers that certain changes need to made in the family atmosphere if the family wants to help their loved one recover.
By: Irina Webster
About the Author:
Dr Irina Webster MD is the Director of Eating Disorder Institute. She is an author of many books and a public speaker. To learn more about eating disorder treatment go to http://www.eatingdisorder-institute.com

by Geneen Roth
Amazon Price: $13.19
Customer Review: I bought this book with great expectations. To my surprise in the first chapter is the really bad four letter word. I cannot see using such language in a book that references GOD. I quit reading it and I would not recommend it. I found what littl...

by Geneen Roth
Amazon Price: $10.20
Customer Review: I did not order one of the books I was charged for... I ordered the book Women, Food, and God (ONLY)... I was charged for two books... When I sent a message via email about the billing error I never got a response! I work three jobs to make ends m...

by Geneen Roth
Amazon Price: $10.20
Customer Review: As I read though this book I had a light blub moment and for that one large moment I gave this book a 4 star because that changed the way I look at why I eat. I hope you have your light blub moment.
What is the difference between anorexia and Anorexia Nervosa?
Thursday, July 15th, 2010 at
9:32 am
Binge Eating Disorder (Compulsive Overeating)
Thursday, July 15th, 2010 at
5:37 am
TheUnbreakableOne asked:
Day 15 – Binge Eating Disorder (Compulsive Overeating)
Intuitive Eating: A Practical Guide to Make Peace with Food, Free Yourself from Chronic Dieting, Reach Your Natural Weight
Monday, July 12th, 2010 at
12:23 am
Overall Rating:
Total Customer Reviews: (8)
Seller: Amazon
Has food become your enemy? Now you can call a truce by consulting the one expert you can really trust--your own body. In this audio adaptation of their book Intuitive Eating (St. Martin's Griffin, 2003), dietitian Evelyn Tribole and nutrition therapist Elyse Resch enable you to break free of the tyranny of dieting and create a healthy relationship[Read More]
is it binge eating if i chew something the spit it out?
Tuesday, July 6th, 2010 at
11:12 pm
Eating Disorder Hell
Tuesday, July 6th, 2010 at
5:44 pm
laurenlivejournal asked:
{may be triggering] what it’s been like for me, in the past few years of my eating disorder. pure hell. misery. eating disorders aren’t a joke, they aren’t a fad, a diet, or a way to lose weight. they kill. you recover. or you ultimately die…
Finding Your Voice Through Creativity: The Art and Journaling Workbook for Disordered Eating
Tuesday, July 6th, 2010 at
1:12 pm
Overall Rating:
Total Customer Reviews: (1)
Seller: Amazon
This workbook combines art therapy exercises and guided journal writing for individuals who want to explore their relationship with food and their bodies in a new way. Written by board-certified art psychotherapists, the pages of this workbook literally serve as a canvas for thoughts and feelings "spoken" primarily through art and elaborated upon t[Read More]







