My (Victorious) Battle With Anorexia
DemonElvis
Posts: 13 Member
Now although only a couple of people know about my personal history with weight loss (my mom and my girlfriend), I don't feel uncomfortable writing any of this. I feel that as long as I can help anybody, even if it is just one person, that this is all worth telling. And it is with that, you will now know my story.
Anorexia can be summed up in a number of ways. Some persons call skinny people anorexic, regardless of if they are or not. Some people call those who don't eat much anorexic, regardless of if they are or not. Me? My definition of anorexia comes from a real moment of my life. Let me start from when I was at the ripe age of fourteen.
After having been only chubby my whole life prior to the 6th grade, I gained a massive amount of weight. In 5th grade, I was 160 pounds. In 6th grade I was 200 pounds. And then in 7th and 8th grade, I was 240 and then 250 pounds (and around 5'11").
As anybody could tell, gaining 80 pounds in a span of three years was absolutely ridiculous. I was sad that I was fat, which caused me to eat a lot, which made me more sad, and on and on the cycle went.
It wasn't until the very end of 8th grade that I began to change my eating habits. At first, I cut out soda, which was followed by chips, which was then followed by any and all junk food. While hard at first, I actually began to not even crave my favorite food, Oreos, anymore. I began to crave things such as apples, chicken, and other nutritious foods.
By the beginning of my freshman year of high school, I had dropped down to 225 pounds, and felt good about myself. I played football hoping to be the quarterback, and was told I was too overweight to play that position, so I was stuck on the line, blocking for the quarterback.
Of course, this made me even more sad, causing me to take my weight loss even more seriously. At the beginning of the following summer, I began to track my calories on my phone with MyFitness Pal. Never did I think that it would become the poisonous obsession that it transformed into.
I began by setting my calories to lose one pound a week, figuring that by the end of the summer, I could be "sexy" as I called it.
After a couple of weeks, I had "only" lost three pounds. This caused me to make the decision of saying "screw it" to the 2200 calories (or so) that I was supposed to eat a day, and made me drop that number to 1000 a day. Terrible idea.
My daily routine went like this: wake up, eat breakfast, throw up breakfast, skip lunch, eat dinner. Repeat.
This was an extremely. EXTREMELY. Unhealthy thing to do. Especially considering that I was running 2 miles a day on top of this. I was in a calorie deficit to say the least.
I got what I wanted though. I had lost weight by the end of the summer. Lots of it, in fact. And to be exact, I had lost 60 pounds and was down to 175. On top of this, I had grown four inches during the summer, bringing my overall height to 6'3".
I looked like a skeleton, and I didn't even realize it. 175 was such a low number, and yet I wanted to be "skinnier," even though I was already, as my dad said "looking like I just got out of Auschwitz."
For the next year, I continued on my diet of 1000 calories a day, and by spring of last year (my Junior year), I was down to 162 pounds.
I was unbelievably unhealthy. Down to a level that now that I think about it, I should've been put in a hospital.
My cheeks were sunken in, my arms were nothing but skin and bone, and I could see each of my ribs, and my hip bones with ease. It was a miracle that I was even able to walk around.
Everybody told me that they were proud of me for losing so much and being skinny now, but all that I thought was "how am I skinny? I still look fat. I can lose more."
An even bigger miracle was that I was able to play my favorite sport, Tennis, at such a high level, having been just one match short of earning All-State accolades.
I'm glad I lost that final match though. I'm glad I lost my huge lead, and choked the game away. For had I not, I might not be here writing this today. I could be in a care center, or dead.
It was after that match that I knew I was out of shape. I was disgustingly skinny. I was anorexic, and it showed.
My friends would joke around about it, calling me anorexic, calling me "skinny *kitten*," and just mocking me for being so skinny. But each time I just thought to myself "I can lose more weight."
It was after this tennis season that I got to working hard on being fit. Not right away. At first, I was skeptical. All of the voices in my head told me I was fat, and I believed them. No matter what evidence showed me that I was severely anorexic, I believed that I was fat. And so I starved myself even more at the beginning of the summer. Sometimes only having 500 calories a day.
And then came the overeating. The huge binges.
All of the years of starving myself took their toll.
I ate one piece of candy, having gone without any for years, and it caused me to go crazy.
I ate, and ate, and ate. Sometimes even eating 8,000 calories a day.
I ate entire packages of Oreos, entire bags of family sized potato chips, entire packages of cookie dough, and boxes of Twinkies. All of these even together in the same nights, too. And by the time I decided to stay healthy, I had gained 20 pounds of fat. And I felt worse about myself than ever before.
And it wasn't until late August I actually decided to make a difference.
My cousin had given me some Herbalife while I visited him in California, and it made me want to get better as an athlete. It made me want to be healthy, and careful about my body (in a healthy way), and so I did.
Although it took me months to actually get committed to it, I did it. I began by eating healthy and eating enough each day so I could lose some of the binge-eating fat that I had gained. And then it progressed to lifting weights and trying to get bigger so I wouldn't be called a "skinny *kitten*" anymore.
It was 6 months ago that I started that change, and I haven't looked back since. When I started, I could only curl 30 pounds with one arm, and I struggled with it. Now, I rep 55s with each arm, and lift weights Monday-Friday at 6 in the morning each and every week.
Since September, I have gained a total of twenty two pounds.
Now I'm not going to say that the voices aren't there anymore. Cause they are. The very same voices that say "you eat too much," "you're not good enough," and so on. They are firmly placed in my brain. Maybe forever. But I don't listen to them, I just use them, and my past self, as fuel to become the best version of me that I can ever be.
And it is with that mindset, that i now know that I can conquer anything and every obstacle that stands in my way. If I can conquer Anorexia, I can conquer anything. And so can anybody else out there that feels too skinny, or too fat, or just wants to live a healthy lifestyle.
Anorexia can be summed up in a number of ways. Some persons call skinny people anorexic, regardless of if they are or not. Some people call those who don't eat much anorexic, regardless of if they are or not. Me? My definition of anorexia comes from a real moment of my life. Let me start from when I was at the ripe age of fourteen.
After having been only chubby my whole life prior to the 6th grade, I gained a massive amount of weight. In 5th grade, I was 160 pounds. In 6th grade I was 200 pounds. And then in 7th and 8th grade, I was 240 and then 250 pounds (and around 5'11").
As anybody could tell, gaining 80 pounds in a span of three years was absolutely ridiculous. I was sad that I was fat, which caused me to eat a lot, which made me more sad, and on and on the cycle went.
It wasn't until the very end of 8th grade that I began to change my eating habits. At first, I cut out soda, which was followed by chips, which was then followed by any and all junk food. While hard at first, I actually began to not even crave my favorite food, Oreos, anymore. I began to crave things such as apples, chicken, and other nutritious foods.
By the beginning of my freshman year of high school, I had dropped down to 225 pounds, and felt good about myself. I played football hoping to be the quarterback, and was told I was too overweight to play that position, so I was stuck on the line, blocking for the quarterback.
Of course, this made me even more sad, causing me to take my weight loss even more seriously. At the beginning of the following summer, I began to track my calories on my phone with MyFitness Pal. Never did I think that it would become the poisonous obsession that it transformed into.
I began by setting my calories to lose one pound a week, figuring that by the end of the summer, I could be "sexy" as I called it.
After a couple of weeks, I had "only" lost three pounds. This caused me to make the decision of saying "screw it" to the 2200 calories (or so) that I was supposed to eat a day, and made me drop that number to 1000 a day. Terrible idea.
My daily routine went like this: wake up, eat breakfast, throw up breakfast, skip lunch, eat dinner. Repeat.
This was an extremely. EXTREMELY. Unhealthy thing to do. Especially considering that I was running 2 miles a day on top of this. I was in a calorie deficit to say the least.
I got what I wanted though. I had lost weight by the end of the summer. Lots of it, in fact. And to be exact, I had lost 60 pounds and was down to 175. On top of this, I had grown four inches during the summer, bringing my overall height to 6'3".
I looked like a skeleton, and I didn't even realize it. 175 was such a low number, and yet I wanted to be "skinnier," even though I was already, as my dad said "looking like I just got out of Auschwitz."
For the next year, I continued on my diet of 1000 calories a day, and by spring of last year (my Junior year), I was down to 162 pounds.
I was unbelievably unhealthy. Down to a level that now that I think about it, I should've been put in a hospital.
My cheeks were sunken in, my arms were nothing but skin and bone, and I could see each of my ribs, and my hip bones with ease. It was a miracle that I was even able to walk around.
Everybody told me that they were proud of me for losing so much and being skinny now, but all that I thought was "how am I skinny? I still look fat. I can lose more."
An even bigger miracle was that I was able to play my favorite sport, Tennis, at such a high level, having been just one match short of earning All-State accolades.
I'm glad I lost that final match though. I'm glad I lost my huge lead, and choked the game away. For had I not, I might not be here writing this today. I could be in a care center, or dead.
It was after that match that I knew I was out of shape. I was disgustingly skinny. I was anorexic, and it showed.
My friends would joke around about it, calling me anorexic, calling me "skinny *kitten*," and just mocking me for being so skinny. But each time I just thought to myself "I can lose more weight."
It was after this tennis season that I got to working hard on being fit. Not right away. At first, I was skeptical. All of the voices in my head told me I was fat, and I believed them. No matter what evidence showed me that I was severely anorexic, I believed that I was fat. And so I starved myself even more at the beginning of the summer. Sometimes only having 500 calories a day.
And then came the overeating. The huge binges.
All of the years of starving myself took their toll.
I ate one piece of candy, having gone without any for years, and it caused me to go crazy.
I ate, and ate, and ate. Sometimes even eating 8,000 calories a day.
I ate entire packages of Oreos, entire bags of family sized potato chips, entire packages of cookie dough, and boxes of Twinkies. All of these even together in the same nights, too. And by the time I decided to stay healthy, I had gained 20 pounds of fat. And I felt worse about myself than ever before.
And it wasn't until late August I actually decided to make a difference.
My cousin had given me some Herbalife while I visited him in California, and it made me want to get better as an athlete. It made me want to be healthy, and careful about my body (in a healthy way), and so I did.
Although it took me months to actually get committed to it, I did it. I began by eating healthy and eating enough each day so I could lose some of the binge-eating fat that I had gained. And then it progressed to lifting weights and trying to get bigger so I wouldn't be called a "skinny *kitten*" anymore.
It was 6 months ago that I started that change, and I haven't looked back since. When I started, I could only curl 30 pounds with one arm, and I struggled with it. Now, I rep 55s with each arm, and lift weights Monday-Friday at 6 in the morning each and every week.
Since September, I have gained a total of twenty two pounds.
Now I'm not going to say that the voices aren't there anymore. Cause they are. The very same voices that say "you eat too much," "you're not good enough," and so on. They are firmly placed in my brain. Maybe forever. But I don't listen to them, I just use them, and my past self, as fuel to become the best version of me that I can ever be.
And it is with that mindset, that i now know that I can conquer anything and every obstacle that stands in my way. If I can conquer Anorexia, I can conquer anything. And so can anybody else out there that feels too skinny, or too fat, or just wants to live a healthy lifestyle.
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Replies
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You look healthy and happy and brave for your vulnerability!0
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I'm glad you posted this. I have actually struggled with anorexia for the past 2 years (it's especially tough being a guy) but I have finally decided to change things. I recently hit a binge phase like you did, but I'm hoping to end that by working out with a friend who is also my accountability partner for nutrition. I'm glad to see that I'm not alone in this; you give me hope. Best of luck to you, mate.0
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Wow, what an inspirational story. You look so much healthier and I'm sure you feel that way too. Well done for battling anorexia, it can't have been easy and probably still isn't but it's worth it!0
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You look tremendous - mainly because you look HAPPY! It looks like you've been able to hit a happy medium between your two tough times Keep it up and keep going, really really proud of you0
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You look Happy and Healthy! So glad your able to share your story to help others!! Great Job!!0
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That is such an awesome story and thank you for sharing! Way to go, overcomer!0
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You look great! Congrats on coming through it all!0
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Amazing and very inspirational story. Thanks so much for sharing!0
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Inspiring story, which you have been brave enough to share so candidly.
ED's are a misery and we sometimes forget that they don't discriminate between the sexes..... you have touched others by sharing and I have no doubt and given them hope, that in itself is a tremendous gift, so thank you.
I am so glad you are well and happy and I wish you continued health, happiness and success with your fitness goals.0 -
Good job! It must be a little nerve wracking to be open and public. But you look happy and we are all glad for you.0
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You've come really far. Good Job!0
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I'm so proud of you for sticking to your recovery. Eating disorders are so difficult to get rid of, but it really is so worth it to recover. People assume stick-thin girls are the primary group that struggles with eating disorders, but all genders, regardless of their body types, can suffer. Thank you for opening up about this and being so brave0
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Well done! You look so happy and healthy now! Thanks for sharing0
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pensierobello wrote: »You look tremendous - mainly because you look HAPPY! It looks like you've been able to hit a happy medium between your two tough times Keep it up and keep going, really really proud of you
thats what i was thinking. you look so happy. keep smiling, you're doing fantastic
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THIS should be a sticky or an announcement.0
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Keep it up!0
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Truly an inspiration! You look great!0
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An incredibly moving story. I hope you continue to be happy and healthy.0
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You look great!0
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Your strength is admirable. All best for your future endeavors.0
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Thank you so much for posting this! As a recovering anorexic, I'm finding it really difficult to stay on track some days. In a way, it's also a releif to know that someone else had problems with binging after coming off extreme calorie restriction. Am going to save your post as a reminder that it does get better. You also look great now by the way0
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Having seen a friend battle anorexia, I have seen first hand what a devastating illness it can be.
Absolutely inspirational story, showing amazing strength. Well done for all you have achieved, and for posting it here, it is so important people remember eating disorders do not discriminate between genders. You look fantastic, I hope you continue to be healthy and happy :flowerforyou:0 -
Congrats! I've felt this way (And still do), and I'm glad that you overcame it. You look great! :-)0
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Wow I never thought I would get so many responses! Thanks, everybody who read this. I hope you all reach your goals and have great success on MyFitness pal!0
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You are such a brave young man and have made remarkable changes. I'm a mother and reading your story has touched me very much. Keep being the best healthiest version of you you can be! Well done! You are so young and have a wonderful life a head of you.0
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Thank you for sharing your story. You look great and you must feel like a million bucks. Congratulations on your victory!0
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Amazing story and amazing work. You look wonderful. Don't listen to those crazy thoughts and keep lifting. You got this!! Thank you for your story, you've made a difference.0
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Thank you for posting your story. You have been at both extremes on the weight scale, but now you really know where you feel good about yourself. When I was a teen, I thought I was still fat at 124#, 5'8". Now when I see pics I realize I was not fat at all. My body was not the magazine perfect one I thought was "right"... It was more curvy; but not fat. We have such skewed ideas about ourselves when we are young! Don't ever be fooled by your mind. Listen to your family and your peers, and please don't ever starve yourself again!! I wish you a wonderful, successful life!0
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Congrats man on slaying that beast. Incredible transformation! WTG!0
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