Perhaps the best way for me to state it is like this: If my grandmothers were ugly, they didn’t know it. I know that the statement sounds a bit crude and harsh, but I don’t remember either of them being terribly concerned or obsessed about how they looked. I don’t remember the other people in their lives (family members and friends) being concerned about how my grandmothers looked either. I don’t think that it’s any coincidence that my grandmothers’ generation didn’t grow up with nor did they have to live with the 24/7 barrage of marketing and media images that in today’s world have become standards for comparison and body-image standards to which people strive.
Fast-forward to contemporary culture. Can any of you name a person who doesn’t struggle with some level of body image care, concern, or obsession? Let me make it even harder. . . can any of you name a young person who doesn’t feel the pressure to obsess?
A couple of weeks ago I ran across a report from MSNBC on lesser known eating disorders. These lesser known eating disorders are those that don’t meet the criteria for Anorexia or Bulimia. I remember the day when I was 21-years-old when I first heard the term Anorexia Nervosa. I was clueless.

 It wasn’t part of our everyday vernacular. In fact, Anorexia and Bulima – at the time – could have called unknown eating disorders. Yes, the times have changed.

This new category of subdiagnoses is called EDNOS – eating disorders not otherwise specified. It’s growing category that I’m sure will continue to grow. In an effort to keep you informed, the MSNBC report included these subdiagnoses:

  • Orthorexia – This is a fixation with healthy or “righteous” eating. These are the folks who will only put organic foods in their bodies. They will eliminate entire food groups. They will refuse to eat anything that isn’t “pure” in quality. The motivation here is a fear of bad health, a desire to control everything they eat. Orthorexia can lead to malnourishment.
  • Pregorexia – This is the extreme dieting some resort to during pregnancy in an effort to not put on the normal 25 to 35 pounds of extra pregnancy weight. Rather than “eating for two,” these women eat with an obsession to be sure the one – themselves – stays skinny. Rooted in the social pressure to look thin during and after pregnancy, Pregorexia is risky for moms as it can lead to high blood pressure, anemia, and depression. Risks to the baby include miscarriage and birth defects.
  • Binge Eating – This is the complusive overeating people resort to to deal with stress and emotional problems. The difference between this type of binge and the Bulimic binge is that they don’t reverse the binge by vomiting.
  • Anorexia Athletica – I remember hearing this called Hypergymnasia several years ago. With this addiction to exercise, people work out above and beyond what’s helpful and healthy. Gym time begins to interfere with their jobs and relationships. Fatal cardiac problems and depression can result.
  • Drunkorexia – This occurs when someone decides to restrict their caloric intake from food so that they can drink the calories in alcohol, usually at times when they are planning to binge drink. A study at the University of Missouri found that almost 30 percent of female college students exhibit drunkorexic behavior. They think they will not gain weight and that they will get drunk faster. Chances for alcohol poisoning, drunken sexual behavior, and heart/liver diseases are risks associated with Drunkorexia.

Why did I blog on this today? To raise your awareness. It’s something else we need to understand and address with the kids – and adults – we know and love.

6 thoughts on “Disordered Eating. . . Beyond Anorexia and Bulimia. . .

  1. Thank you so much for this post! I am a 20 yr old Christian girl (I actually go to WPC, but I don’t think we’ve met) who as a past of disordered eating. It was (and in many ways still is) a major battle for me and I struggled to understand it in the context of my Christian faith. I’m grateful you are raising awareness because I’ve been burdened with the need for Biblical voices of wisdom in a largely secular and self-help counseling field. I am currently studying to be a Dietitian with the dream of counseling girls with eating disorders — to show them the hope and healing Christ has shown me!

  2. Rebecca, check out Hungry For Hope as a resource and an encouragement. Also, Wonderfully Made. These are both Christian organizations run by women with your same passion. Bless you for following God’s plan for you to help others and point them to Him. Another terrific resource is the book “Redemption: Freed by Jesus from the Idols We Worship and the Wounds We Carry” by Mike Wilkerson of Mars Hill Church, Seattle.

  3. Thanks so much for this. I’m a Young Life leader and I read this blog earlier this week and then just yesterday one of my girls broke down and confessed struggling with an eating disorder. I never would have guessed. Thanks for helping share that there are so many ways that the brokeness of the world is manifest in the lives of our kids.

  4. It was very releveving to hear someone could struggle with so much and it’s just not the rest of us. Not wanting to take care of our selfs because, of feeling things like insucrities or just not wanting to eat even though we need to to take care of our selfs.

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