Articles in the Website Category
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If I were apply this study, called “How Brain Cells Deal with Mathematic Rules,” to eating disorders… it would be titled, “How Brain Cells Deal with Eating Disorder Rules.” :
Intelligent behavior requires strategic processing of numbers and abstract quantity information in accordance with internally maintained goals. For instance, we typically adopt a “less than” strategy when shopping for a product to pay the smallest amount of money. When searching for a job, on the other hand, our plan of action is “greater than”, and we strive to earn the largest …
Dr. Drew, Website »
“Currently, we are concerned about young people using the Internet, eating too much, spending irresponsibly, and being promiscuous, and these worries are being expressed in the language of addiction. The medical terminology helps us to believe we’re avoiding moralization or blame, and popular science has given us a sound bite of pseudo-neurology to support our prejudices. For these problems, addiction is little more than a fig leaf for a realistic understanding that would address why people return to unhelpful ways of coping with isolation, stress, and depression. Instead, we prefer …
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I’ve written several posts on the negative aspects of therapy as well as my disdain and frustration with positive self-talk, so I was pretty excited to see this headline: Study Shows The Negative Side To Positive Self-Statements In Self-Help Books
“…individuals with low self-esteem actually felt worse about themselves after repeating positive self-statements.”
“…paradoxically, low self-esteem participants’ moods fared better when they were allowed to have negative thoughts than when they were asked to focus exclusively on affirmative thoughts.”
Now, I don’t think I’ve ever claimed positive self-talk caused anyone to feel worse… …
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I read this post on Dads and Daughters With Eating Disorders: Eating Disorders – Weights & Scales
To summarize:
Because her health is directly related to her weight. Measured by scales.
Her recovery is directly related to her weight. Measured by scales.
Her life is directly related to her weight. Measured by scales.
Weight matters.
And scales matter because they measure weight.
I posted a comment on this post, which hasn’t been approved yet, but I decided that I wanted to discuss the issue on Grey Thinking anyway.
Yes, weight is inexorably tied to health and to recovery. …
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“You get to define which experiences are traumatic for you, whether or not it would impact others in the same manner. It’s not the objective facts that determine whether an event is traumatic, but your own emotional experience of the event.”
– Dr. Kathleen Young
This is just a quick post, but I read this on a trauma blog tonight and thought it was so well-put. This is something that i struggle with a lot — whether or not something “counts” as significant. Maybe I am making it up. Maybe it was …
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I can’t remember the last time I saw “economist” and “bulimia” in the same headline — I usually don’t put the two together. However, this article (Eating-Disorders Experts Challenge Economists’ Conclusions About Bulimia) made some pretty interesting statements:
Bulimia Nervosa (BN) is an addiction rather than an eating disorder
Black females are 50% more likely to be bulimic than white females
“Bulimic behavior” is less likely among wealthier, better-educated families.
You should definitely read the article, but I have a couple of things to add to these points:
1. BN is an addiction
I always compare …
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There is definitely a stigma surrounding mental illness. It doesn’t receive the same kind of acceptance as physical illness. I’m not really going to get into stigmatization and society and whatnot, but I just want to make it clear that I believe that physical illness is much more understood than mental illness.
That said, I am a little disappointed to read this article on relationships and mental health:
A partner is four times more likely to leave you because of a mental health condition like depression than because of a physical disability.
The …
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Headline: Bad Economy Spurs Eating Disorders
According to Twin Cities, the patient load at Park Nicollet’s Melrose Institute/St. Louis has increased by 36 percent from one year ago, while the patient load at The Emily Program/St. Paul has increased by 20 percent for the same time period.
For instance, he says, people who suffer from an obsession with their weight, but who exercise to control weight gain rather than starve themselves, may no longer be able to afford their gym memberships. In that case, Jahraus says, they may decide to limit their …
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I read an article this morning on dentists diagnosing eating disorders. It’s actually something that I’ve always wondered about… mainly because I was always scared that my dentist would call me out on the ED. It’s funny how having a doctor say something about my eating disorder felt oddly validating (maybe because I needed someone to say that I wasn’t okay for my feeling crappy to count), but having the dentist make a comment was mortifying.
I have never gone to the dentist and wanted anything to be wrong. …
