I let anorexia rule my world for about eight years. For me, it ended
up being more about anxiety, and a way of dealing with it, than anything
else, and it's been amazing to not have either dictate my behavior for a
while now. I think many of us struggle with similar things, so I wrote
this in case it's of help to those who do. And hopefully to shed a
little light on eating and anxiety disorders for those who don't have a
personal experience of them.
Anorexia is addiction. It's habit,
it's your body actually adapting to the new rules you've set for it, and
it's fear -- absolute terror sometimes -- at the thought of letting it
go. It's a structure to live your life around, a token sense of movement
when you feel stuck in other ways. It is about how you look -- social
and self-pressure, insecurity -- to a point. Then it morphs into
something else altogether, something incredibly obsessive and
controlling and hard to shake.
For me it became about desperately
trying to find equilibrium. I was set on the belief that if I did things
just so I could secure some sort of peace and everything would be okay.
But the lie of anorexia is that it isn't keeping you in balance, it's
helping you manage, at best. It's the thing you think is holding you
together, when in reality it's causing you to fall apart.
I shrunk
emotionally as well as physically. Being cautious with my eating became
about trying to maintain a clear head so I could just navigate each
moment. Every little choice, not just the ones about food, took on a
massive importance, making decisions almost impossible to make some
days. I'd freeze up trying to decide which way to walk down the street,
or which banana to choose at the supermarket. Each day I'd wake up
hoping desperately it would be a good one, that if I played my cards
right I could avoid anxiety and the tangents it took me on.
Star
jumps in toilet cubicles, gashing my foot on an escalator trying to run
back up it because I "should've" taken the stairs. Walking for hours
because I rushed a bite of food then second-guessed it, or because I was
meeting friends for dinner and just wanted to have a normal time. It's
hard to own up to this stuff, but I want to make the point that having
an eating disorder isn't some sort of win. It's isolating, exhausting --
they screw you physically and emotionally, and they siphon the joy out
of life. And the joy out of the people closest to you. They suck.
It
took me a long time to accept that I couldn't get better on my own, and
by the time I did my anxiety was through the roof. It was emotional,
but also a logical, physiological outcome of running my body on empty. I
didn't get my period for eight years -- my estrogen levels dropped to
that of pre-adolescence -- and I don't know if or how that's affected my
fertility. I developed osteopenia (bone density loss) in my hips, and a
good chunk of my hair fell out.
I felt so ashamed anorexia was
even an issue for me -- I had no real reason not to be healthy and good
in the world -- but the penny eventually dropped that beating up on
myself for having the disorder was preventing me from addressing it.
However, asking for help (from my dad, who helped me afford to see
doctors and a therapist) also required admitting that all the energy I'd
so diligently poured into this thing was a waste. There was a lot of
grief around acknowledging it really was time lost, and I might not get
to remedy the things I messed up along the way.
It wasn't the only
thing I had to let go of; there were a few other pillars of identity
that I'd become reliant on to define who I was. I found it really
painful to shed these skins, so to speak, but when you've done it with
one thing you realize how freeing it is to just give up and let go. We
can spend way too long hemmed in by walls we don't know can be broken
down. It's only been through crashing through one, and then another, and
another that I understood it was possible for me to do so.
Anorexia
and anxiety are behind me for the most part, but now and then I do
slide into restriction or weird habits. I eat really slowly because my
guts are messed up from not eating properly for so long, and social
situations can still be a bit stressful because of that. It took me ages
to re-learn how to eat, and there's still a patch of hair missing at
the back of my head that didn't grow back when the rest did. But my mind
is clear and my bones are strong. If anxiety kicks in, I no longer lose
days to that shit.
Life used to be really scary to me, and never
being able to relax into a moment makes being able to take each as they
come now so much sweeter. Every little thing feels like a big adventure,
and I've gotten to have some pretty proper adventures too -- armed with
a sense of humor and the ability to roll with the punches.
There's
no way this could have happened without the help of my family and
buddies. They've shown me so much love and collectively bought me the
time I needed to pull myself together. I know I'm really lucky, and that
there are many who with even a little of the support I've had might
also be able to find their way to good.
Life is hard enough, and
sometimes the kindest thing we can offer each other, and ourselves, is
grace. It can feel like that costs us a lot, but it can also make a huge
difference to the person we shoulder the cost for. Sometimes just
accepting someone as they are, and helping them anyway, is all it takes.
This is the short version of this post.
Sarah Illingworth
Have a story about depression or eating disorders that you'd like to share? Email: femmydefass@gmail.com or call +2348066541249
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