Mental Health and Losing Weight

***may contain triggers***
*
*
*
*
I am finding the mental health aspect of this lifestyle change I embarked on ~380 days ago to be more challenging than the physical.
I've only lost 57 pounds in that time period and it's because I cannot get out of my own head. I have at least 100 more pounds to lose. I binge eat. I sometimes purge. I have restricted, but rarely (obviously, or I would have lost more weight). I know what it takes to lose weight - I get the science behind it. I just don't know how to handle the mental.

So, here is my question: has anyone here been to therapy for eating disorders - or just in general - and found more success with attaining your health goals?

Replies

  • benandstephlegg1
    benandstephlegg1 Posts: 6 Member
    I have a family member that suffers from severe PTSD from combat and being a police officer and also deals with mild bipolar disorder and anxiety attacks. He has seen practitioners that deal with eating disorders and they have seemed to help. I am a social worker that specializes in therapy with veterans. If you have underlying issues, such as anxiety/depression I would try to focus on those. Otherwise, find an exercise and eating plan that works for you and you can stick to. You didn't really say if you lift weights or do any cardio. If you don't it is a great supplement to your diet plan. It will also make you feel like you are "allowed to eat" instead of having to purge.
    Hope this helps
  • Howdoyoufeeltoday
    Howdoyoufeeltoday Posts: 481 Member
    Haven't gone to therapy, although I probably should. I know how you feel about mental health and eating disorders getting in the way of your results.

    Personally I'm not ready for therapy but I think it could be a great tool for you to learn why you keep falling back into your disorder and how to break the cycle. You just have to find someone you like and trust. What do you have to lose right?

    In the mean time try not to be too hard on yourself. And if you have safe foods try sticking to those till you have a better handle on your binging. It's not ideal but it's better than purging.

    Good luck!!
  • kommodevaran
    kommodevaran Posts: 17,890 Member
    I haven't had any eating disorders, just enough disordered eating to struggle with weight. I like to take the credit for finally managing my weight myself, but I have had counseling, in general, and gone to self-help groups, and I believe all that has made a tremendous difference.

    I found out most of the weight specific things later, though. I can't take credit for all of it. MFP members have provided ingenious tweaks to how to think about food and weight, and eating and maintaining weight is no longer a struggle, it just takes a small daily effort, and it's challenging now and then.
  • peggym4640
    peggym4640 Posts: 156 Member
    Therapy has been a big part of my ability to better manage my health. I ate my feelings and used food as a coping mechanism. My therapist was a referral from a friend and it worked out great that she also worked with disordered eating. I feel better than I have in years and no longer require perfection from myself as part of this process. I make my mental, emotional, physical and spiritual health a priority. It may be painful going for awhile and it does get better. <3<3<3
  • SeptemberRain81
    SeptemberRain81 Posts: 170 Member
    Thank you everyone ❤
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Cognitive behavioral therapy has been shown to be helpful for food issues. Sometimes people avoid therapy because they think it will be years and years about talking about your childhood. That's Freudian, not CBT :)

    This book on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for overeating was available in my library system, so perhaps yours as well.

    The Beck Diet Solution: Train Your Brain to Think Like a Thin Person

    Can thinking and eating like a thin person be learned, similar to learning to drive or use a computer? Beck (Cognitive Therapy for Challenging Problems) contends so, based on decades of work with patients who have lost pounds and maintained weight through Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). Beck's six-week program adapts CBT, a therapeutic system developed by Beck's father, Aaron, in the 1960s, to specific challenges faced by yo-yo dieters, including negative thinking, bargaining, emotional eating, bingeing, and eating out. Beck counsels readers day-by-day, introducing new elements (creating advantage response cards, choosing a diet, enlisting a diet coach, making a weight-loss graph) progressively and offering tools to help readers stay focused (writing exercises, to-do lists, ways to counter negative thoughts). There are no eating plans, calorie counts, recipes or exercises; according to Beck, any healthy diet will work if readers learn to think differently about eating and food. Beck's book is like an extended therapy session with a diet coach. (Apr.)