Thank you so much to everyone who has shared something, and I hope others will also send me their thoughts and experiences!
Here is a segment of one woman's contribution. She describes what many seem to experience: that having an Eating Disorder is like having a second person or personality sharing your body and mind. Well, sharing is perhaps too generous - it's more like the ED usurps your body and mind, seizing the controls, and trying to edge you out, until you're like a shell of your former self.
I never thought about my Anorexia as male but also not so much as "another" female. It was more like her taking over me, like a program on a computer would run it and take over its functions.
I wouldn't really call her anything because she was me and I was her to the biggest part. I would therefore describe my relationship with her like living with two personalities, only that one of the personalities was so strong that it left no room for the other.
Search for the second personality in you. Search for the person you used to be. Remembering the dreams and aspirations for life that I used to have, helped me a great deal to keep going during recovery.
The good news is, as this writer reminds us, that you're still in there, even when the ED is dominating your mind. Recovery hinges on recognizing your real self in there, and beginning to resist the ED's controls - perhaps, to use her metaphor of ED as computer virus, to get some anti-virus software for the mind. Do you feel like you're sharing your mind and body with an ED? If you've felt that way in the past, how did the real you edge the ED out of the driver's seat?
Reclaiming Ana & Mia
Making room for female personifications in eating disorder recovery narratives
In recovery from eating disorders, it's useful to think and talk about the eating disorder (ED) as a separate being. Unfortunately, "Pro-Ana" and "Pro-Mia" sites use the female personifications Ana (for Anorexia) and Mia (for Bulimia) to covertly encourage ED behavior. As a result, people in recovery are often reluctant to voice female personifications of EDs, lest they be mistakenly lumped in with the pro-ED "movement."
The go-to personification in treatment (popularized by certain books about recovery) tends to be "Ed" - a male figure. However, not everyone in recovery experiences their ED as male. In fact, since the majority of people with EDs are female, and experience the ED as an aspect of self, it makes perfect sense that it would often "feel" female. So, where are all the recovery narratives where the ED is female?
They are missing, but I'm on a quest to find them, to introduce a wider array of options for people going through recovery. If you experience your ED as female, I hope you will share a bit of your journey with her - as a story, letter, poem, or whatever feels right to you. It need not be Ana or Mia - some of my favorite alternatives have been Edie and Edna, but whatever you call her is welcome! I hope to ultimately create a book for others in recovery, and "reclaim" these metaphors from the pro-ED camp. Contact me at reclaimingana@gmail.com for more information, or to share your story!
The go-to personification in treatment (popularized by certain books about recovery) tends to be "Ed" - a male figure. However, not everyone in recovery experiences their ED as male. In fact, since the majority of people with EDs are female, and experience the ED as an aspect of self, it makes perfect sense that it would often "feel" female. So, where are all the recovery narratives where the ED is female?
They are missing, but I'm on a quest to find them, to introduce a wider array of options for people going through recovery. If you experience your ED as female, I hope you will share a bit of your journey with her - as a story, letter, poem, or whatever feels right to you. It need not be Ana or Mia - some of my favorite alternatives have been Edie and Edna, but whatever you call her is welcome! I hope to ultimately create a book for others in recovery, and "reclaim" these metaphors from the pro-ED camp. Contact me at reclaimingana@gmail.com for more information, or to share your story!
Friday, July 20, 2012
Saturday, June 30, 2012
A Blogger's Take on "Ed" and "Ana"
Aja, blogger at Writing and Recovering, found an old post she had written addressing her perception of gender in the personification of her eating disorder. It goes right to the heart of why I've started this project, so I wanted to share it with you. I encourage you to read her thoughts here: http://writingandrecovering.wordpress.com/2010/12/21/my-thoughts-on-ed/
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Why Personify an Eating Disorder?
The image of the eating disorder as its own person has an intuitive appeal for many people with eating disorders, perhaps because it fits the stream of thoughts that are such a big part of the experience of having an ED, because these thoughts can be described as the ED "talking." Similarly, many therapists find this image use because it provides a language for distinguishing ED "talk" from the survivor's own "voice."
However, some people - survivors, therapists, and allies alike - have concerns/reservations about the practice of personifying the ED. These concerns typically involve at least one of two points: (1) objectifying or personifying it belies the fact that it is an "illness," and therefore, personifying it may be a form of denial, or a reason not to receive needed treatment; and/or (2) attributing the ED to something external may be seen as a means of absolving responsibility for the consequences of the problem, or for change.
The practice of personifying or objectifying a problem comes from Narrative Therapy, where it is called "externalizing the problem." Narrative Therapy is based on a postmodern philosophy called social constructivism. Basically, the idea is that all of our perceptions of "Truth" are no more or less than ideas that we've collectively agreed upon - they are socially constructed (i.e., built). The concepts of "illness" and "treatment" are just that - constructions of our particular social location. In other parts of the world, and in other eras, the same constellation of symptoms we call eating disorders have been understood quite differently (the book Fasting Girls provides an interesting summary of how anorexia has been understood over time).
When it comes to selecting among available constructions, what really matters is what leads to better outcomes in people's lives (however they define that for themselves!). However, for many people with eating disorders, seeing the ED as an illness is just another way of seeing themselves as flawed, inadequate, defective, and therefore worthless. Another good book states:
What of the fear that personifying the ED would help people avoid taking responsibility for the consequences of the ED, and/or working for change? From my own experience working with a wide range of mental health problems, and as an ED therapist, I am here to tell you that the opposite is true. Instead of feeling like they are at the mercy of an external force, survivors begin to believe that they have choices in how they respond to the ED. For many, this is the first time they've seen any alternative to following the ED's dictates. Personifying the ED as something separate creates space for the person to maneuver - to see possibilities for change by redefining their relationship with it, and adjusting their responses to it. In fact, they might recognize small ways they have already attempted to do so. Since one of the most insidious methods EDs employ is convincing people that the ED is their identity, separating the ED is a revolutionary step. It allows people to reembody their own identities.
Finally (for tonight), personifying the ED offers a tool for resolving the ambivalence that is such a normal part of the recovery process. It offers a way to sort out the thoughts and impulses that are "pro-recovery" from those that are "the ED," to guide choices toward recovery and away from the ED. At the same time, it normalizes the presence of "ED thoughts and impulses," so that they aren't as likely to perceive these experiences as "failures in recovery." That, in and of itself, has prevented countless relapses.
I'd love to hear other people's opinions - both doubts/concerns and perceived benefits of personifying the ED, so please leave your comments!
However, some people - survivors, therapists, and allies alike - have concerns/reservations about the practice of personifying the ED. These concerns typically involve at least one of two points: (1) objectifying or personifying it belies the fact that it is an "illness," and therefore, personifying it may be a form of denial, or a reason not to receive needed treatment; and/or (2) attributing the ED to something external may be seen as a means of absolving responsibility for the consequences of the problem, or for change.
The practice of personifying or objectifying a problem comes from Narrative Therapy, where it is called "externalizing the problem." Narrative Therapy is based on a postmodern philosophy called social constructivism. Basically, the idea is that all of our perceptions of "Truth" are no more or less than ideas that we've collectively agreed upon - they are socially constructed (i.e., built). The concepts of "illness" and "treatment" are just that - constructions of our particular social location. In other parts of the world, and in other eras, the same constellation of symptoms we call eating disorders have been understood quite differently (the book Fasting Girls provides an interesting summary of how anorexia has been understood over time).
When it comes to selecting among available constructions, what really matters is what leads to better outcomes in people's lives (however they define that for themselves!). However, for many people with eating disorders, seeing the ED as an illness is just another way of seeing themselves as flawed, inadequate, defective, and therefore worthless. Another good book states:
" If women think of anorexia as a part of themselves, even if they decide to fight it, what choice do they have but to indict themselves at the same time they indict anorexia? An anorexic trap is laid such that when they begin to think in opposition to anorexia...they step into a view of themselves as "sick" or 'disordered.' And from there it is a relatively easy matter for anorexia to co-opt their fledgling rebellion and tighten its grip by reminding them of their worhtlessness and inadequacy" (p. 82).All too often, the result is that survivors think they don't "deserve" treatment or recovery, or are incapable of recovery because they're inherantly, inevitably "mentally ill."
What of the fear that personifying the ED would help people avoid taking responsibility for the consequences of the ED, and/or working for change? From my own experience working with a wide range of mental health problems, and as an ED therapist, I am here to tell you that the opposite is true. Instead of feeling like they are at the mercy of an external force, survivors begin to believe that they have choices in how they respond to the ED. For many, this is the first time they've seen any alternative to following the ED's dictates. Personifying the ED as something separate creates space for the person to maneuver - to see possibilities for change by redefining their relationship with it, and adjusting their responses to it. In fact, they might recognize small ways they have already attempted to do so. Since one of the most insidious methods EDs employ is convincing people that the ED is their identity, separating the ED is a revolutionary step. It allows people to reembody their own identities.
Finally (for tonight), personifying the ED offers a tool for resolving the ambivalence that is such a normal part of the recovery process. It offers a way to sort out the thoughts and impulses that are "pro-recovery" from those that are "the ED," to guide choices toward recovery and away from the ED. At the same time, it normalizes the presence of "ED thoughts and impulses," so that they aren't as likely to perceive these experiences as "failures in recovery." That, in and of itself, has prevented countless relapses.
I'd love to hear other people's opinions - both doubts/concerns and perceived benefits of personifying the ED, so please leave your comments!
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Gender-Bending
My conceptualization of gender and personification of the ED was blown wide open this week. I was leading a group, and trying to help the women separate themselves from their EDs. We got to talking about the names they would each give their ED, and whether it seemed to have gender.
I have to admit that I initially jumped to conclusions on the gender front - after all, one was called Patricia, and another Ed. However, when the topic of gender came up, I discovered that the woman who's ED was named Patricia perceived Patricia as male, while the woman who's ED was named Ed perceived Ed as female. The second woman said she just called it "Ed" because she'd heard that name used so much; after thinking about it, she decided to call it Edie instead.
However, Patricia presents quite the quandary. The woman couldn't remember how she arrived at either the name or sense of gender - both had been a "felt sense" for a long time. That raises a question that fascinates me: how DO people come to their personifications? To what extent does it come from their imagination, past exposure/experience with the world, etc, and to what extent does it seem to arise from the nature of the ED itself? Are there varieties of "ED voice" that have nothing to do with the "diagnosis" (e.g., anorexia or bulimia), but more with its style - whether it is more "mean girl," critical authority figure, abusive ex, etc? What do you think?
I have to admit that I initially jumped to conclusions on the gender front - after all, one was called Patricia, and another Ed. However, when the topic of gender came up, I discovered that the woman who's ED was named Patricia perceived Patricia as male, while the woman who's ED was named Ed perceived Ed as female. The second woman said she just called it "Ed" because she'd heard that name used so much; after thinking about it, she decided to call it Edie instead.
However, Patricia presents quite the quandary. The woman couldn't remember how she arrived at either the name or sense of gender - both had been a "felt sense" for a long time. That raises a question that fascinates me: how DO people come to their personifications? To what extent does it come from their imagination, past exposure/experience with the world, etc, and to what extent does it seem to arise from the nature of the ED itself? Are there varieties of "ED voice" that have nothing to do with the "diagnosis" (e.g., anorexia or bulimia), but more with its style - whether it is more "mean girl," critical authority figure, abusive ex, etc? What do you think?
Sunday, June 10, 2012
Company for Ed
It's not that I don't see the logic and benefit in descriptions of the ED as "Ed." Often portrayed as a jealous, abusive partner, Ed offers an apt metaphor for the verbal (and physical) abuse eating disorders inflict on those they inhabit. I get why people relate to the image of "Ed."
I just think that too many survivors talk about "Ed" because they've read others' descriptions of him, and/or heard about him in treatment - not because they really resonate with all the connotations. I suspect that, if everyone began without a preconceived notion of how to personify their ED, we'd see a much broader range of images and metaphors. That's what I've found when I've worked with people with different types of problems, and I think a similar process would unfold with EDs.
Unfortunately, I also think that the range of images and metaphors people think are "acceptible" in recovery has been limited by the pro-ED "movements" that have usurped feminine personifications of EDs for a destructive purpose. I'm on a one-woman mission to make feminine personifications part of the recovery dialogue - to take back what pro-ED groups stole from us. It's not that I want these personifications to replace Ed; I just want to give him some company!
I just think that too many survivors talk about "Ed" because they've read others' descriptions of him, and/or heard about him in treatment - not because they really resonate with all the connotations. I suspect that, if everyone began without a preconceived notion of how to personify their ED, we'd see a much broader range of images and metaphors. That's what I've found when I've worked with people with different types of problems, and I think a similar process would unfold with EDs.
Unfortunately, I also think that the range of images and metaphors people think are "acceptible" in recovery has been limited by the pro-ED "movements" that have usurped feminine personifications of EDs for a destructive purpose. I'm on a one-woman mission to make feminine personifications part of the recovery dialogue - to take back what pro-ED groups stole from us. It's not that I want these personifications to replace Ed; I just want to give him some company!
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