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Mandi Peek, M.S., L.P.C
Caring for people through the healing
process
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Mandi Peek, M.S., L.P.C
Caring for people through the healing
process
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Mandi Peek, M.S., L.P.C
Caring for people through the healing
process
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Disordered eating has captured my attention
as a clinical focus. I am unreservedly empathetic to those battling with
such a consuming force as food/fat/dieting obsessions. I am very aware of
the power it holds to combine in captivity our minds, bodies, and spirits
all at the same time.
Clinically speaking, disordered eating can rear it's head in a myriad of
expressions that are commonly heard: anorexia nervosa, bulimia, overeating.
I also believe that eating becomes disordered when your relationship with
food becomes a controlling focal point of our minds, emotions, and daily
activities. You do not have to struggle at a clinical level for disordered
eating and/or body image to have a very negative impact on your life.
It is so important in recovery from disordered
eating to learn what your struggle is really about—it isn’t about
food and fat. Disordered eating is a gift in that it is a "red herring",
distracting from the real battle with deeper issues. Once you learn the
language of your red herring, you will have something to work with to make a
lasting change in your relationship with food, and more importantly your
relationship with yourself.
Weather your relationship with food, eating, dieting, and exercising is
disrupted to a clinical or sub-clinical level, my heart's desire is toward
freedom from obsession and preoccupation with these forces. It is to cut the
weed of disruption caused by these outward expressions of inner experiences
out from the root. So often we battle with diets, lifestyle management, and
other surface interventions and fail to attack the core fortress, or root,
of disordered eating, found deep inside.
Clinical Definitions:
*This information is documented as well on the web
site of the National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated
Disorders and the DSM IV.
Clinical anorexia nervosa can be identified by
the following signs and characteristics:
- Refusal to maintain body weight at
or above a minimally normal weight for age and height.
- Intense fear of gaining weight or
becoming fat, even thought underweight.
- Disturbance in the way in which
one's body weight or shape is experienced, undue influence of body
weight or shape on self-evaluation, or denial of the seriousness of
the current low body weight.
- Amenorrhea, or the absence of at
lease three consecutive menstrual cycles in postmenarcheal females.
- Anorexia nervosa literally means
loss of appetite but this is a misnomer: A person with anorexia
nervosa is hungry, but he or she denies the hunger because of an
irrational fear of becoming fat.
- Anorexia nervosa is often
characterized by self-starvation, food preoccupation and rituals,
compulsive exercising.
- Untreated, anorexia can be fatal.
It is not a "fad" which the victim will outgrow if left alone. The
death of pop singer Karen Carpenter at age 32 was attributed to heart
failure, following her eight-year battle with anorexia. The most
common cause of death in a long-time anorexic is low serum potassium,
which can cause an irregular heartbeat.
Clinical Bulimia Nervosa can be identified by
the following signs and characteristics:
- Recurrent episodes of binge eating.
Eating in a discrete period of time an amount of food that is definitely
larger than most people would eat during a similar time under similar
circumstance. Or a sense of lack of control over eating during the
episode, the feeling that one cannot stop eating or control what or how
much one is eating.
- Recurrent inappropriate compensatory
behaviors in order to prevent weight gain such as self-induced vomiting,
misuse of laxatives, diuretics, fasting, or excessive exercise. The
behaviors along with binges occur at least twice a week for a period of
about 3 months.
- The bulimic is aware that his or her
eating is out of control. He or she is fearful of not being able to stop
eating, and is afraid of being fat.
- The bulimic usually feels depressed and
guilty after a binge.
- Self-evaluation is unduly influenced by
body shape and weight.
- Frequently, the binges are followed by
purging, through self-induced vomiting, abuse of laxatives and/or
diuretics, or periods of fasting.
- The bulimic's weight is usually in a
normal or somewhat above normal range; it may fluctuate more than 10
pounds due to alternating binges and fasts
Clinical Compulsive Overeating (Binge Eating
Disorder) can be identified by the following signs:
- A compulsive overeater (binge eater) is
an individual who compulsively eats but does not purge and usually becomes
overweight.
- The overeater may eat three meals a day
plus frequent snacks. He or she may overeat continually throughout the
day, rather than consume large amounts of food during binges.
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