How do you know when you have a problem?

I'm starting to really feel like I have an issue that goes beyond not eating well/exercising. I've been at this weight loss journey for 20 years. 1 month on MFP recently, but a previous user/lower in each of the last 4 years as well.

I look around at others and see them eating normally. 1-2 slices of pizza and being full, half a takeout chinese meal and being done. Not me, I could eat an entire takeout meal and then some. Last night I ate 7, yes, 7 squares of sicilian style pizza. Sometimes I feel ill after, other times I don't. Sometimes it feels like I'm bottomless.

I know i'm an emotional eater and I can tell myself to stop at 1-2 slices of pizza, but I don't listen.

Should I be seeking help outside of trying to eat healthy and exercise? My doctor has just told me to keep plugging along and I'll get there.

A little background:
Cipralex 20mg for anxiety and depression
Metformin for impaired fasting glucose (but normal range average sugars(a1c)
B12 injections for deficiency
Crohn's 2006
bloodwork all normal except for the fasting glucose and B12 deficiency
Overweight since kindergarten
5'4 294lbs currently. Have been as high as 320lbs. I am beyond morbidly obese, but still relatively healthy.
I saw a social worker for therapy a couple years back, but stopped because I didn't feel it was helpful.

I just don't know anymore. I feel like I not only won't ever lose the weight, but actually can't lose all the weight I need to lose, but i am so $%^&* over being fat, tired and limited.

I guess ultimately I don't really know what I'm asking, but since no one else (doctors included) has been able to offer me a working solution I thought i'd reach out to this community.

Thanks for listening!
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Replies

  • pootle1972
    pootle1972 Posts: 579 Member
    edited February 2016
    First of all keep plugging on....second find another therapist..one you can feel it's helping, one that specialises in food issues. You're not alone there is help.
  • My_Butt
    My_Butt Posts: 2,300 Member
    It's not that they 'feel full' after eating one slice of pizza, I could easily down a whole pizza myself. It's your brain you need to train. Only put 1-2 slices on a plate at the dinner table. Pair it with a salad. When you're done, tell yourself that's it.

    I went to a birthday party last Saturday and had 1 slice of pizza. I got the flavor and that's all I needed. I pre logged it so I knew what calories I had available. I was nowhere near 'full' though. I don't allow myself to get that stuffed feeling because I workout in the evenings so I can't have that food effecting my performance.

    After awhile you'll be able to retrain your brain.
  • enterdanger
    enterdanger Posts: 2,447 Member
    I also have issues where I'll eat like that. For me, I have to keep reminding myself at every meal that eating more pizza/takeout/chocolate won't fix my problem. My new years resolution this year is to ask myself a couple of questions when I'm stressed.

    1. Can I control this stress? If I can, than I think of a way to fix the issue. If I can't I move on to
    2. Will this end my life or someone else's.
    3. Will this be resolved by waiting? This last one is the hardest, but I've come to believe that most things sort themselves out, given time.

    Now, that's a pretty simplistic way of coping and doesn't always work, but I had to start somewhere.

    I also have to be careful with treats. I can have a "treat" every day, but I can't have a whole day where I make bad choices or it makes it super hard to eat healthfully the next day. The good thing is that the more days where I make good choices, the easier it gets.

    Some of this is willpower, but I think a lot of it goes deeper. I'd definitely see someone who you can destress with and can teach you coping strategies.

    I would also suggest (and I might get flak for this) stop trying to manage eating and exercising at the same time. Pick one to focus on. I'd suggest food. You can add exercise, but making all kinds of life changes all at the same time is hard. Exercise can easily become a habit, but it won't matter how much you exercise if you don't get the eating under control. You don't have to save the world in 1 day.
  • Jruzer
    Jruzer Posts: 3,501 Member
    Be careful about how others feel. I could easily eat much larger portions than I usually do. I'm training myself to be satisfied with 2-3 pieces of pizza, for example, but I can easily eat 2 or 3 times that. I will eat until I feel sick if I don't intentionally control myself. As internet wag Jeff Kay says, "There's not a moment of the day or night when I couldn't eat a full meal. And that includes immediately after eating a full meal."

    That said, it does sound like you may benefit from some outside help and therapy. I'm afraid I don't know what to suggest though.
  • LKArgh
    LKArgh Posts: 5,178 Member
    First, some things are a choice. I have bought chocolates today. I could eat the whole box. I would love to eat the whole box, like a little kid with no self control. But (1) unlike my 3 year old self I know it will make me sick and would rather avoid it and (2) I know it is not good for me. So, I make a choice to eat just one piece. Same with pizza. I remember myself as a preschooler being so in love with pizza that once I did eat until I threw up. Not an experience I care to repeat. And a whole pizza would probably be more than my maintenance calories for the day. So I choose to eat 2 pieces. I could eat more. I choose not to.
    So, in this sense, no, most people do not feel physically ill from eating large portions. Most people, slim or obese, do not eat a couple of slices of pizza and feel so full they cannot continue. They leave room for other food, or just decide to stop when they feel this is enough calories or fat or carbs or whatever.
    I see you are young, a mother, obese and also already need diabetes medication. So, yes, I think you do need to use any resourced you can find to get to a healthier lifestyle. Therapy might be a good idea if you feel you cannot control the impulse to it. A dietician, to help with a specific diabetes prevention plan, so you have guidelines on what your meals and calories should be like, might also help a lot.
  • PositivelyFlawed
    PositivelyFlawed Posts: 316 Member
    I'll admit to feeling very defensive about his particularly reply. If it was simply a matter of choice, we'd all just take the high road. To me it feels like a compulsion I am powerless to control.

    I'm not one to balk at hearing the hard things, but this reply felt a tad judgemental.

    I have just now booked and appt with an eating disorder clinic that I didn't know existed they deal with both under and overeating issues. I am hoping to find help there.




    aggelikik wrote: »
    First, some things are a choice. I have bought chocolates today. I could eat the whole box. I would love to eat the whole box, like a little kid with no self control. But (1) unlike my 3 year old self I know it will make me sick and would rather avoid it and (2) I know it is not good for me. So, I make a choice to eat just one piece. Same with pizza. I remember myself as a preschooler being so in love with pizza that once I did eat until I threw up. Not an experience I care to repeat. And a whole pizza would probably be more than my maintenance calories for the day. So I choose to eat 2 pieces. I could eat more. I choose not to.
    So, in this sense, no, most people do not feel physically ill from eating large portions. Most people, slim or obese, do not eat a couple of slices of pizza and feel so full they cannot continue. They leave room for other food, or just decide to stop when they feel this is enough calories or fat or carbs or whatever.
    I see you are young, a mother, obese and also already need diabetes medication. So, yes, I think you do need to use any resourced you can find to get to a healthier lifestyle. Therapy might be a good idea if you feel you cannot control the impulse to it. A dietician, to help with a specific diabetes prevention plan, so you have guidelines on what your meals and calories should be like, might also help a lot.

  • TechOutside
    TechOutside Posts: 101 Member
    I heard this long ago and it still makes sense to me. Maybe Jenny Craig or something, "nothing tastes as good as being healthy feels" or something like that.

    I travel a lot, and I get hungry, it is so easy to stop at the big drive through and mow on some double bacon monster burger, Orings and water of course.... As I drive I try to talk myself into it, I try to justify what that big juicy burger would taste like. "I saw another billboard, oh man soon enough I'll just pull off grab it and get back on the road.. It's on the right side right off the highway.. easy peasy... Here come the exit... oh, man.. I can't I just can't. I KNOW that I will not like it as much as I am thinking that I will." Then comes the self deprecating statements to myself.. What are you an idiot, man up! Don't wuss out... yada yada...

    So then I gas up at a Quicky mart and get a fruit and some beef jerkey, or order a salad at McDonalds. Something, ANYthing other than that flame broiled burger.

    My point is we tell ourselves lies all day, and frankly that guilty feeling of eating that crap after you've eaten it and realize it wasn't as great as your mind thought it was going to be.

    Lie to yourself some more, just tell yourself good lies, over and over. Just one piece and I can't eat any more, I'll get sick, yeah, sick and then I'll feel like crap afterwards, yeah and nauseated...Eventually, your mind will really follow.

    In my opinion, we have to tell ourselves new good lies every day, "I LOVE the elliptical!!" "I LOVE sqauts" "I get sick if I eat unhealthy".. "man I look good in these Jeans" Those really are powerful messages when told every day. Deprogram yourself, it can be done!

    Good luck.
  • azulvioleta6
    azulvioleta6 Posts: 4,195 Member
    You have a problem.

    If you have insulin resistance issues, pizza should be something that you eat a couple of times a year, tops. You certainly shouldn't be eating more than one serving. This is self harm.
  • LKArgh
    LKArgh Posts: 5,178 Member
    ellivort wrote: »
    I'll admit to feeling very defensive about his particularly reply. If it was simply a matter of choice, we'd all just take the high road. To me it feels like a compulsion I am powerless to control.

    I'm not one to balk at hearing the hard things, but this reply felt a tad judgemental.

    I have just now booked and appt with an eating disorder clinic that I didn't know existed they deal with both under and overeating issues. I am hoping to find help there.

    I was not trying to judge you, only to explain that you are misunderstanding people. You said in the first post that you see people full with 1 or 2 slices of pizza. This is the part you misunderstand. Unless these people have already eaten something else, they are not full. They stop without being full and eat something else, or eat something else besides the pizza you notice them eating.
    No adult feels full and satisfied after such a small meal. But what you eat matters.
    So, if e.g. you know pizza will be there for dinner, you can choose to first eat a big salad and then a couple of slices of pizza, so you will not feel hungry enough to eat the whole pizza. You seem to think that your need to eat until full is abnormal. It is not, you are a perfectly normal person in this aspect. Everyone likes to eat when hungry. But you can choose meals that are high volume for low calories, then eat favourite calorie dense things in smaller portions.
    If e.g. I decide to have lunch and then nothing until ordering pizza for dinner 8 hours later, you bet I am going to eat the entire pizza and wash it down with a few beers, before my mind has time to catch up with the fact I am actually not dying from hunger. Which is why when I plan to eat some calorie dense dinner I make sure to eat also a snack earlier on, get a salad or other low calorie but feeling side dish etc.
    What to eat and when is a choice. Staring at the pizza after 1 slice with an otherwise empty stomach and refusing to eat more, it sounds like some sort of torture. Which is why I suggested a dietitian: so you can plan ahead balanced meals, that will keep you satisfied, without going over in calories.
  • veganbettie
    veganbettie Posts: 701 Member
    Doctors suck sometimes, they don't always listen, i think it's a wonderful idea for you to reach out to the eating disorder clinic.

    Best of luck and love to you, you will get through this. <3<3<3
  • LuckyNumbers
    LuckyNumbers Posts: 208 Member
    I can appreciate that a lot of people are able to just "plug along" and put "mind over matter", but frankly, that doesn't work for everyone, or it at least doesn't work right away. Some people need extra help, and that is okay.

    Nobody has suggested this yet, but have you looked into Overeaters Anonymous? It's a program - similar to Alcoholics Anonymous - that is meeting/group based, you get a sponsor/mentor, and a lot of in-person support and accountability, which is huge. And - bonus! - it's free.

    I know you're tired of this. But you can start to gain control. And there's absolutely nothing wrong with getting help in order to gain that control. I did a quick search on Google, and it looks like there are at least two chapters of Overeaters Anonymous in your town.

    You are not alone, and I think you could benefit from being part of a group that lets you know you aren't alone. I have struggled with anxiety/depression over the past few years, and my therapist was great, BUT group therapy was the most helpful therapy I got. Good luck. You can do this.
  • emdeesea
    emdeesea Posts: 1,823 Member
    I can only speak for myself when I say that my own personal issues with food were from self-loathing. The food was addictive in that it was soothing to me; I sure as hell wasn't getting any soothing from anywhere else. So for me it was more of a psychological addiction, just as gambling, shopping, etc., can be addicting.

    How did I break it - I only remember being sick of what it was getting me which was nothing other than being 60 pounds overweight. And I also watched what being overweight did to my parents (who both have hypertension and diabetes).

    So it was a conscious struggle at first to break that very very bad habit. And was I absolutely miserable for a while? Yes, I was. I hated life for a few months because I was always hungry and miserable even though I wasn't starving myself or depriving myself - I was only eating sensibly.

    But then the weight started to come off. I could wear smaller jeans. And the hunger and the drive to eat faded away.

    Now that I'm about 10 pounds away from my goal weight, I no longer have those urges to eat everything in front of me. I can eat a few pieces of chocolate and put the rest away for another day.

    Like I said, I can only speak for myself but it was something I had to put my mind to do. I WILL accomplish this. And your daughter is watching what you do. She will learn from you. What do you want to teach her?
  • brightresolve
    brightresolve Posts: 1,024 Member
    Good for you, OP, I think you are on a good track with the appointment with the clinic.

    You will hear many voices here on MFP, ranging from "sugar is addictive" (which raises flags for people who don't demonize it) to "it's just calories in calories out" (which is simple but not easy) to "just STOP!" -- when stopping feels impossible, as you expressed below.

    Eating is a deeply emotional experience which connects to our most basic needs as a human, our sense of pleasure and fulfillment, our fundamental wiring in childhood. Though we who eat to excess have much in common, that territory for you is highly personal and decipherable only by you. If efforts to approach this as a problem of willpower or choice or education about nutrition are falling short for you, as they did for me, then I would encourage you to explore the emotional territory, and a clinic for eating disorders is a great place to start. Therapy recommended too if you can afford it, as someone above said look for someone who knows about eating disorders.

    Best of everything to you!
    ellivort wrote: »
    ...To me it feels like a compulsion I am powerless to control. ...

    I have just now booked and appt with an eating disorder clinic that I didn't know existed they deal with both under and overeating issues. I am hoping to find help there.

  • time2cutnow
    time2cutnow Posts: 150 Member
    I wish there was something one of us could say to help you see the way, but there isn't. It's up to you to do it. You know what you have to do - eat at a deficit and workout as much as possible.

    The "secret" honestly is that you WILL fail some days, maybe many, but success is determined by how you deal with that failure. Do you sit around feeling sorry for yourself and consider all the work you previously put in a "write off" and go off the wagon for a couple more months or do you think "*kitten*, that sucks, I can't believe I just did that, better make sure I am better tomorrow".
  • levitateme
    levitateme Posts: 999 Member
    ellivort wrote: »
    I'll admit to feeling very defensive about his particularly reply. If it was simply a matter of choice, we'd all just take the high road. To me it feels like a compulsion I am powerless to control.

    I'm not one to balk at hearing the hard things, but this reply felt a tad judgemental.

    I have just now booked and appt with an eating disorder clinic that I didn't know existed they deal with both under and overeating issues. I am hoping to find help there.

    Anyone here telling you that this is about willpower should be ignored. It's like telling someone with OCD to "just stop it." Binge eating and compulsive overeating (things I too struggle with) are mental health issues. See what the eating disorder clinic says. This problem (as with most compulsive behavior) is usually best treated with cognitive behavioral therapy. Keeping the food that will trigger you to binge out of the house is also helpful.
  • kommodevaran
    kommodevaran Posts: 17,890 Member
    I love reading the responses here. I hope they are useful for you too, OP.

    I was afraid I suffered from disordered eating, binging or emotional eating, but my unstructured eating pattern was just based on misconceptions mixed with bad habits. I was raised to overeat, and I had to find out, as an adult, actually just a couple of years ago, that full doesn't have to mean stuffed. Normal weight people just eat until they're no longer hungry. It's not that they can't eat more, they choose not to. I was amazed when I realized this, and that I can do it too. Full can have another meaning than not being able to fit more in. How much water do you fill in a glass before you'll say it's full? Remember that you have to lift it to drink, and you don't want to spill. It's normal to be able to go for a walk right after a meal, usually even after dinner.
  • AllSpiceNice
    AllSpiceNice Posts: 120 Member
    This exactly. brightresolve - I agree the compulsion to eat is very complex and highly personalized. Thanks for stating this so eloquently!

    OP - I find Pizza to be a trigger food for me and only eat it on the occasions that I can work at least 3 slices into my calories for the day. Some people can be satisfied with just 1 slice, but it won't satisfy the craving for me. This is just one of the many things I have learned about myself during my weight loss journey. (Lost 90 lbs over 2 years.) Congrats on setting the appt. with the clinic, I hope it is helpful for you.
    Good for you, OP, I think you are on a good track with the appointment with the clinic.

    You will hear many voices here on MFP, ranging from "sugar is addictive" (which raises flags for people who don't demonize it) to "it's just calories in calories out" (which is simple but not easy) to "just STOP!" -- when stopping feels impossible, as you expressed below.

    Eating is a deeply emotional experience which connects to our most basic needs as a human, our sense of pleasure and fulfillment, our fundamental wiring in childhood. Though we who eat to excess have much in common, that territory for you is highly personal and decipherable only by you. If efforts to approach this as a problem of willpower or choice or education about nutrition are falling short for you, as they did for me, then I would encourage you to explore the emotional territory, and a clinic for eating disorders is a great place to start. Therapy recommended too if you can afford it, as someone above said look for someone who knows about eating disorders.

    Best of everything to you!
    ellivort wrote: »
    ...To me it feels like a compulsion I am powerless to control. ...

    I have just now booked and appt with an eating disorder clinic that I didn't know existed they deal with both under and overeating issues. I am hoping to find help there.

  • gramarye
    gramarye Posts: 586 Member
    You're getting a lot of tough love here, so I'm going the other route -- because I hate tough love. I really do.

    I have the same problem. My hunger cues don't always work right. They're better now that I've been practicing normal portions and logging food, but not always. I've been at it for years, and there are still days where I could keep eating. I'm not hungry, but the urge is there and I'm not uncomfortable. (Usually it'll catch up with me later.) Sometimes I can simply will myself to make the choice not to, sometimes I won't because I'd be embarrassed to be the only person in the room still eating, and sometimes -- I don't. Sometimes I eat four slices of pizza or four ounces of chips, etc.

    Talking to a professional is going to be greatly helpful. Learning how to work yourself does as well. You absolutely can do this, but you need to prioritize self-care and understand what triggers your overeating and how to avoid those things.

    (Also: while eating can absolutely be a form of self-harm -- been there, done that -- having moderate amounts of pizza is not.)
  • TechOutside
    TechOutside Posts: 101 Member
    I never really understood therapists. (sorry to those in the profession) I know that not everyone is me though, I get that.. However, most people know what their problems are, most can identify that food, alcohol, or smoking is their problem. It's how you deal with them, the triggers, and the situations, the why. Therapy seems to be just talking with someone that will listen. Someone knowledgeable in the area to give advice on how others deal or have dealt with the problem, no one can make you do anything you aren't ready to do. Back before google, ebooks, and forums, it was hard to find general answers from people with similar problems. How did they cope, how did they overcome.. Not everyone I read about is me though, how do I know that will work for me... ?

    I would think that most of us here have some form of an eating disorder, or lack of knowledge of nutrition and health, all having to deal with problems facing food. For me, I guzzle a big 16 oz glass of water before, during or after a meal, maybe even two sometimes. That triggers my full sensor enough to be able to overcome the desire to eat more. That works for ME, won't work with everyone, but it took a long time finding out what works for ME. Life is just a combination of trial and error. You can find your triggers, you can determine what is making you lazy, you can find out why you do the things you do by trying something different, because frankly, what you are doing now isn't working...

    I can't say enough about the interaction of forums like these to give people ideas that they can try to change themselves for the better. Not everyone's suggestions will work, but at least there is an outlet to help that you can try to see if it works for you before shelling out $150 per hour to someone that will listen.
  • levitateme
    levitateme Posts: 999 Member
    I never really understood therapists. (sorry to those in the profession) I know that not everyone is me though, I get that.. However, most people know what their problems are, most can identify that food, alcohol, or smoking is their problem. It's how you deal with them, the triggers, and the situations, the why. Therapy seems to be just talking with someone that will listen. Someone knowledgeable in the area to give advice on how others deal or have dealt with the problem, no one can make you do anything you aren't ready to do. Back before google, ebooks, and forums, it was hard to find general answers from people with similar problems. How did they cope, how did they overcome.. Not everyone I read about is me though, how do I know that will work for me... ?

    I would think that most of us here have some form of an eating disorder, or lack of knowledge of nutrition and health, all having to deal with problems facing food. For me, I guzzle a big 16 oz glass of water before, during or after a meal, maybe even two sometimes. That triggers my full sensor enough to be able to overcome the desire to eat more. That works for ME, won't work with everyone, but it took a long time finding out what works for ME. Life is just a combination of trial and error. You can find your triggers, you can determine what is making you lazy, you can find out why you do the things you do by trying something different, because frankly, what you are doing now isn't working...

    I can't say enough about the interaction of forums like these to give people ideas that they can try to change themselves for the better. Not everyone's suggestions will work, but at least there is an outlet to help that you can try to see if it works for you before shelling out $150 per hour to someone that will listen.

    Your advice in this thread is not helpful for people who struggle with compulsive overeating. One time when I was in High School I had to sell chocolate bars. I ate 35 of them, in one sitting, and weighed myself after each one. This is what we're up against. The struggle is not at all comparable to "normal" people's issues with food. Drinking a glass of water before a meal doesn't help. It's not about being hungry or getting full. It's a compulsion to do a repetitive behavior that is deeply ingrained and can be brought about from anxiety or stress.

    Therapy with a person who is trained to find out the 'why' behind the behavior (which doesn't have anything to do with food, it's usually past trauma) and then replace the destructive compulsion with new coping behaviors is what's needed. Honestly, people with this type of illness shouldn't look for support on a forum like this, simply because the average person has no idea how to respond or be supportive. There is no "just do this, it helped me" because what the OP is doing is not every day overeating.
  • yayamom3
    yayamom3 Posts: 939 Member
    Good for you, OP, I think you are on a good track with the appointment with the clinic.

    You will hear many voices here on MFP, ranging from "sugar is addictive" (which raises flags for people who don't demonize it) to "it's just calories in calories out" (which is simple but not easy) to "just STOP!" -- when stopping feels impossible, as you expressed below.

    Eating is a deeply emotional experience which connects to our most basic needs as a human, our sense of pleasure and fulfillment, our fundamental wiring in childhood. Though we who eat to excess have much in common, that territory for you is highly personal and decipherable only by you. If efforts to approach this as a problem of willpower or choice or education about nutrition are falling short for you, as they did for me, then I would encourage you to explore the emotional territory, and a clinic for eating disorders is a great place to start. Therapy recommended too if you can afford it, as someone above said look for someone who knows about eating disorders.

    Best of everything to you!
    ellivort wrote: »
    ...To me it feels like a compulsion I am powerless to control. ...

    I have just now booked and appt with an eating disorder clinic that I didn't know existed they deal with both under and overeating issues. I am hoping to find help there.

    This is one of the kindest, most compassionate and sensible responses I've read during my time here on MFP. You are a lovely person. Sending you a friend request--I need more people like you in my life.
  • TechOutside
    TechOutside Posts: 101 Member
    edited February 2016
    levitateme wrote: »

    Your advice in this thread is not helpful for people who struggle with compulsive overeating. One time when I was in High School I had to sell chocolate bars. I ate 35 of them, in one sitting, and weighed myself after each one. This is what we're up against. The struggle is not at all comparable to "normal" people's issues with food. Drinking a glass of water before a meal doesn't help. It's not about being hungry or getting full. It's a compulsion to do a repetitive behavior that is deeply ingrained and can be brought about from anxiety or stress.

    Therapy with a person who is trained to find out the 'why' behind the behavior (which doesn't have anything to do with food, it's usually past trauma) and then replace the destructive compulsion with new coping behaviors is what's needed. Honestly, people with this type of illness shouldn't look for support on a forum like this, simply because the average person has no idea how to respond or be supportive. There is no "just do this, it helped me" because what the OP is doing is not every day overeating.

    Well thank goodness that it wasn't meant for those with a real disorder.

    Not sure why it wouldn't be helpful to anyone else though. There are many (if not most) who just need a nudge, they think that they can't do it by themselves, but can be inspired to try to read about their perceived disorder and how others have dealt with it, to do something about it on their own first. I don't see a problem with that.

    One person may need more assistance than someone else, but I have raised kids with real special needs who have repeatedly said, I can't, it's too hard, it's impossible. I could go on and on about what the professionals told them what they could and couldn't do.. A nudge in the right direction usually get's them to try, they don't always succeed, but they are trying, and sometimes they do succeed. When they do succeed, it plants a seed, and makes them a bit more willing to try to overcome the next obstacle. They are now productive, self sustaining adults, I'm not sure how those nudges weren't helpful though, if they could do it then literally anyone can.

    In my experience, our society has weakened the average mind with excuses as to why they aren't doing what they should, we call everything a disorder now. Doping up all our kids and making them think that they have an alphabet soup "disorder". Those that perceive and relent that they have a problem have minimized those that really have serious issues that need to be dealt with by professionals. Instead we now have more drive by therapists to fill that demand, who's motivations are to get you back in to bill your insurance or to continue the therapy. Filling up the space otherwise needed for true disorders.

    So in my humble opinion, not everyone has a true disorder, and those are the ones who I was speaking to. Sorry if you don't agree, but most people do just need a reality check, a nudge, a push.

    Those of you with a true diagnosed disorder, then you really shouldn't be reading a forum to get your guidance from someone like me.
  • fiddletime
    fiddletime Posts: 1,868 Member
    Have you read the Success stories on here? There might be a few that you might relate to.
  • Larissa_NY
    Larissa_NY Posts: 495 Member
    I love reading the responses here. I hope they are useful for you too, OP.

    I was afraid I suffered from disordered eating, binging or emotional eating, but my unstructured eating pattern was just based on misconceptions mixed with bad habits. I was raised to overeat, and I had to find out, as an adult, actually just a couple of years ago, that full doesn't have to mean stuffed. Normal weight people just eat until they're no longer hungry. It's not that they can't eat more, they choose not to. I was amazed when I realized this, and that I can do it too. Full can have another meaning than not being able to fit more in. How much water do you fill in a glass before you'll say it's full? Remember that you have to lift it to drink, and you don't want to spill. It's normal to be able to go for a walk right after a meal, usually even after dinner.

    This is exactly right. I might not be a particularly large adult but I am an adult, and I'm perfectly capable of filling up with two slices of pizza and nothing else - because when I say I'm full, what I mean is that I'm not hungry anymore and I've lost interest in eating. I don't mean that bloated stomach, all the corners are filled, belt buckle is creaking at the seams feeling - I absolutely hate that. It feels nasty and uncomfortable and I find it so physically aversive that pretty much no power on Earth can induce me to eat until I get anywhere near it. I was as amazed as Kommodevaran to realize that some people actually like feeling that full!

    That digression aside, OP, I'm glad you've booked an appointment. Whether or not it's possible to get full from two slices of pizza doesn't really matter; what matters is that the way you're eating is a source of distress to you. That's the only reason you need, full stop.
  • PositivelyFlawed
    PositivelyFlawed Posts: 316 Member
    edited February 2016
    I just wanted to thank everyone for the tough love and compassionate responses. I had lots to think about. I have been in touch with an intake worker at the eating disorders clinic and will have an appt at the end of Feb. Best part is all the services are covered by our Canadian health insurance.

    No one really thinks eating disorder when you're fat, but looking back to when I was younger I see all kinds of issues. I lost 100 lbs at 16 by eating 500 calories a day and exercising a lot. I ofc gained it back, but I've also had issues of binge eating to the point that I was sick. That led to an adulthood of binge eating and just a generally disordered way of dealing with food. I am hoping my appt will provide some of the help I need.

    Thank you again for all the replies
  • gramarye
    gramarye Posts: 586 Member
    levitateme wrote: »

    Your advice in this thread is not helpful for people who struggle with compulsive overeating. One time when I was in High School I had to sell chocolate bars. I ate 35 of them, in one sitting, and weighed myself after each one. This is what we're up against. The struggle is not at all comparable to "normal" people's issues with food. Drinking a glass of water before a meal doesn't help. It's not about being hungry or getting full. It's a compulsion to do a repetitive behavior that is deeply ingrained and can be brought about from anxiety or stress.

    Therapy with a person who is trained to find out the 'why' behind the behavior (which doesn't have anything to do with food, it's usually past trauma) and then replace the destructive compulsion with new coping behaviors is what's needed. Honestly, people with this type of illness shouldn't look for support on a forum like this, simply because the average person has no idea how to respond or be supportive. There is no "just do this, it helped me" because what the OP is doing is not every day overeating.

    Well thank goodness that it wasn't meant for those with a real disorder.

    Not sure why it wouldn't be helpful to anyone else though. There are many (if not most) who just need a nudge, they think that they can't do it by themselves, but can be inspired to try to read about their perceived disorder and how others have dealt with it, to do something about it on their own first. I don't see a problem with that.

    One person may need more assistance than someone else, but I have raised kids with real special needs who have repeatedly said, I can't, it's too hard, it's impossible. I could go on and on about what the professionals told them what they could and couldn't do.. A nudge in the right direction usually get's them to try, they don't always succeed, but they are trying, and sometimes they do succeed. When they do succeed, it plants a seed, and makes them a bit more willing to try to overcome the next obstacle. They are now productive, self sustaining adults, I'm not sure how those nudges weren't helpful though, if they could do it then literally anyone can.

    In my experience, our society has weakened the average mind with excuses as to why they aren't doing what they should, we call everything a disorder now. Doping up all our kids and making them think that they have an alphabet soup "disorder". Those that perceive and relent that they have a problem have minimized those that really have serious issues that need to be dealt with by professionals. Instead we now have more drive by therapists to fill that demand, who's motivations are to get you back in to bill your insurance or to continue the therapy. Filling up the space otherwise needed for true disorders.

    So in my humble opinion, not everyone has a true disorder, and those are the ones who I was speaking to. Sorry if you don't agree, but most people do just need a reality check, a nudge, a push.

    Those of you with a true diagnosed disorder, then you really shouldn't be reading a forum to get your guidance from someone like me.

    No one writes this much of a diatribe (which boils down to "kids these days and their made-up disorders") and considers their opinion "humble." If therapy and disordered eating aren't things you have any experience with or understanding of, I'd highly recommend you simply steer clear of and avoid contributing to threads where people are trying to work with those issues. Your "suck it up and deal with it" attitude is woefully inadequate for the majority of people struggling with this spectrum of issues.

    OP, best of luck with your upcoming appointment! Having someone to help you to aid your coping mechanisms and better care for your mental health is one of the most important steps an adult can make.
  • TechOutside
    TechOutside Posts: 101 Member
    edited February 2016
    gramarye wrote: »
    levitateme wrote: »

    Your advice in this thread is not helpful for people who struggle with compulsive overeating. One time when I was in High School I had to sell chocolate bars. I ate 35 of them, in one sitting, and weighed myself after each one. This is what we're up against. The struggle is not at all comparable to "normal" people's issues with food. Drinking a glass of water before a meal doesn't help. It's not about being hungry or getting full. It's a compulsion to do a repetitive behavior that is deeply ingrained and can be brought about from anxiety or stress.

    Therapy with a person who is trained to find out the 'why' behind the behavior (which doesn't have anything to do with food, it's usually past trauma) and then replace the destructive compulsion with new coping behaviors is what's needed. Honestly, people with this type of illness shouldn't look for support on a forum like this, simply because the average person has no idea how to respond or be supportive. There is no "just do this, it helped me" because what the OP is doing is not every day overeating.

    Well thank goodness that it wasn't meant for those with a real disorder.

    Not sure why it wouldn't be helpful to anyone else though. There are many (if not most) who just need a nudge, they think that they can't do it by themselves, but can be inspired to try to read about their perceived disorder and how others have dealt with it, to do something about it on their own first. I don't see a problem with that.

    One person may need more assistance than someone else, but I have raised kids with real special needs who have repeatedly said, I can't, it's too hard, it's impossible. I could go on and on about what the professionals told them what they could and couldn't do.. A nudge in the right direction usually get's them to try, they don't always succeed, but they are trying, and sometimes they do succeed. When they do succeed, it plants a seed, and makes them a bit more willing to try to overcome the next obstacle. They are now productive, self sustaining adults, I'm not sure how those nudges weren't helpful though, if they could do it then literally anyone can.

    In my experience, our society has weakened the average mind with excuses as to why they aren't doing what they should, we call everything a disorder now. Doping up all our kids and making them think that they have an alphabet soup "disorder". Those that perceive and relent that they have a problem have minimized those that really have serious issues that need to be dealt with by professionals. Instead we now have more drive by therapists to fill that demand, who's motivations are to get you back in to bill your insurance or to continue the therapy. Filling up the space otherwise needed for true disorders.

    So in my humble opinion, not everyone has a true disorder, and those are the ones who I was speaking to. Sorry if you don't agree, but most people do just need a reality check, a nudge, a push.

    Those of you with a true diagnosed disorder, then you really shouldn't be reading a forum to get your guidance from someone like me.

    No one writes this much of a diatribe (which boils down to "kids these days and their made-up disorders") and considers their opinion "humble." If therapy and disordered eating aren't things you have any experience with or understanding of, I'd highly recommend you simply steer clear of and avoid contributing to threads where people are trying to work with those issues. Your "suck it up and deal with it" attitude is woefully inadequate for the majority of people struggling with this spectrum of issues.

    OP, best of luck with your upcoming appointment! Having someone to help you to aid your coping mechanisms and better care for your mental health is one of the most important steps an adult can make.

    Why? Does anyone benefit from living their lives in a bubble? Does everyone require so much one sided empathy that they never feel the need to stand and fight for themselves? I'm not writing this to mean, I have much better things to do with my time, I am writing it because I have lived it for decades.

    I do not agree with you. I have plenty of life experience that is valuable to those who aren't so overly sensitive to an opposing view. I have extensive knowledge of facts with experience combined with trial and error, not just feelings, not just something I read on the internet somewhere.

    I will openly discuss an opposing view, and I will not be silenced by anyone for respectfully voicing my experience and opinion of people, humanity and life in general. That's not how this internet thing works.

    Sorry if that offends you, but you have the option to not read what I am writing.
  • cafeaulait7
    cafeaulait7 Posts: 2,459 Member
    ellivort wrote: »
    I just wanted to thank everyone for the tough love and compassionate responses. I had lots to think about. I have been in touch with an intake worker at the eating disorders clinic and will have an appt at the end of Feb. Best part is all the services are covered by our Canadian health insurance.

    No one really thinks eating disorder when you're fat, but looking back to when I was younger I see all kinds of issues. I lost 100 lbs at 16 by eating 500 calories a day and exercising a lot. I ofc gained it back, but I've also had issues of binge eating to the point that I was sick. That led to an adulthood of binge eating and just a generally disordered way of dealing with food. I am hoping my appt will provide some of the help I need.

    Thank you again for all the replies

    Good luck, OP! It's a great step. It can absolutely be an eating disorder that involves overeating (without purging). Good for you!
  • PositivelyFlawed
    PositivelyFlawed Posts: 316 Member
    For the record I never diagnosed myself with an eating disorder. Its an option I am exploring based on how out of control I feel around food. I have always wondered if something was wrong with me, for 29 years I have been overweight. For 20 of those years I have tried to lose.

    I will never understand the people who reply with a "why are you on a forum asking advice". Yes professionals are the best people, but sometimes a real life experience from someone who is there or has been there is helpful. I received a huge influx of helpful, private messages from this post. Some from people who have or are where I am and some who just had some kind words, others who had some not so helpful suggestions. I take it all in and use it in my thinking patterns.

    We should all look to deliver helpful tough love words, empathy or kindness on any communication venue.

    Thanks again to everyone.
  • LKArgh
    LKArgh Posts: 5,178 Member
    ellivort wrote: »
    For the record I never diagnosed myself with an eating disorder. Its an option I am exploring based on how out of control I feel around food. I have always wondered if something was wrong with me, for 29 years I have been overweight. For 20 of those years I have tried to lose.

    I will never understand the people who reply with a "why are you on a forum asking advice". Yes professionals are the best people, but sometimes a real life experience from someone who is there or has been there is helpful. I received a huge influx of helpful, private messages from this post. Some from people who have or are where I am and some who just had some kind words, others who had some not so helpful suggestions. I take it all in and use it in my thinking patterns.

    We should all look to deliver helpful tough love words, empathy or kindness on any communication venue.

    Thanks again to everyone.

    Because if a behavioural or physical disorder is suspected, you will be amazed by the amount of very dangerous advice you get on online sites. And unless you already have experience with how to deal with the issue (in which you wouldn't have been asking for help online to begin with), it is often impossible to figure out what is helpful and what could cause a lot of harm.