Food is self harm
EloquentSelfLoathing
Posts: 20 Member
Sometimes I feel like when I eat because I'm stressed it's self harming and i feel like no one would understand because it's not comfort eating it's more like putting a knife to my wrist and cutting except I don't allow myself that option and somehow years of being taught that food is the enemy has accumulated as food being a way to hurt myself and tell myself that I'm useless and worthless and it terrifies me
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Replies
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There is help out there.
There is help here.
There is a way out.
You are worth the self-care. Be kind to you. Be your own best friend.3 -
You think you're alone but you're not. It's pretty common. Deep breath. Food is fuel. And yes, binge eating or stress eating IS self harm.1
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Between the username and your post, I suggest you speak with a professional about your mental state.4
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Sorry you feel like this Is there anyway you could get booked in with a counsellor? Does you place of work have an occupational health department?1
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EloquentSelfLoathing wrote: »
Then find someone who will take you seriously and help you2 -
Check your phone book. Make an appointment with a therapist. A good counselor will not brush off your concerns because you're "skinny." Explain your thought process regarding food thoroughly, emphasizing that you're thinking about it as self-harm. That wording should be the red flag that gets someone to listen to you.3
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EloquentSelfLoathing wrote: »
Then find someone who will take you seriously and help you
There are places that can help. Sounds like you might need someone who specializes in DBT as well. Call your insurance company and they can give you a list of people who specialize.1 -
rascallycat wrote: »EloquentSelfLoathing wrote: »
Then find someone who will take you seriously and help you
There are places that can help. Sounds like you might need someone who specializes in DBT as well. Call your insurance company and they can give you a list of people who specialize.
I don't have an insurance company - I'm in the UK so on nhs, queue for free counselling is 6-12 months unless I go private which is expensive0 -
EloquentSelfLoathing wrote: »rascallycat wrote: »EloquentSelfLoathing wrote: »
Then find someone who will take you seriously and help you
There are places that can help. Sounds like you might need someone who specializes in DBT as well. Call your insurance company and they can give you a list of people who specialize.
I don't have an insurance company - I'm in the UK so on nhs, queue for free counselling is 6-12 months unless I go private which is expensive
https://www.mind.org.uk/information-support/drugs-and-treatments/talking-treatments/finding-a-therapist/#charity
There are more free services out there1 -
rascallycat wrote: »EloquentSelfLoathing wrote: »
Then find someone who will take you seriously and help you
There are places that can help. Sounds like you might need someone who specializes in DBT as well. Call your insurance company and they can give you a list of people who specialize.
Or find a support group... I know some support groups make the problem worse by consolidating the issue, but talking to other people who are walking where you are in a structured/guided setting can be helpful too.2
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