Explaining Why The Main Eating Disorders Occur


by Andy Guides Jr - Date: 2010-09-19 - Word Count: 404 Share This!

Many people if asked could not tell the difference between someone who is on a diet and someone who is suffering from an eating disorder. They are however two very different things though. A diet is used as a means to lower your weight in a healthy manner; a disorder however, is an illness which effects the self esteem of the individual suffering from it in a very dangerous way.
One of the most common is Anorexia Nervosa, which is a Greek term that stands for 'a lack of desire to eat'. An individual suffering from this condition has an abnormal obsession with being fat. They will be meticulous about counting calories petrified of losing control of themselves and giving in to the urge to eat. Low self esteem also means some sufferers of this condition believe that they do not deserve the pleasure that comes along with eating.
The next most common disorder is Bulimia Nervosa, it has many similarities with Anorexia but in this condition sufferers do not avoid food, they eat and then they purge. Purging means deliberately eliminating the food from the body before it has had time to be digested properly by means of either laxatives or self induced vomiting. Bulimics weight gain tends to go from one extreme to another, which is commonly called yo-yo dieting.
Compulsive Eating Disorder is another similar but different illness. In this condition the sufferers are classed as having an addiction to food and using it as a means to close themselves off from their worries and the outside world.
Suffers are usually very overweight and do not purge. The constant eating which momentarily feels good followed by feelings of guilt and then by feelings of self-loathing repeat themselves in a never-ending cycle with this illness.
Binge Eating Disorder is another closely related illness with the sufferer showing the same symptoms of low self esteem as in all the previously mentioned disorders. Binge eating is most closely linked to Compulsive Eating Disorder and shares many of the same features except it is done with less frequency.
Binge eaters are exceptionally secretive and store food away purposely to eat when they can be by themselves. They will eat uncomfortable amounts to the point they feel sick but will not make themselves sick. The feelings of guilt and shame associated with eating such vast quantities of food are often used as self inflicted punishment as they consider themselves undeserving and unworthy.

Related Tags: eating disorders, eating disorder clinic, eating disorder help, eating disorder recovery

Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles

© The article above is copyrighted by it's author. You're allowed to distribute this work according to the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs license.
 

Recent articles in this category:



Most viewed articles in this category: