eating disorder
oregonlady
Posts: 2,743 Member
i feel i have an eating disorder.
do you feel that way too?
would u like to talk about it?
do you feel that way too?
would u like to talk about it?
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Replies
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i feel i have an eating disorder.
do you feel that way too?
would u like to talk about it?
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what makes you feel like you have an eating disorder?
sometimes i'm afraid people might think i do because of how much i count calories and how conscious i am about what i eat. i get lots of "looks."0 -
lots of things.
i think about food all the time.0 -
I've read alot about binge eating being an eating disorder. I definantly believe I am a binge eater. I think that what we go thru in our heads (binge eaters) is the same as someone who doesn't eat just reversed. We have a hard time controling ourselves and sometimes we need the same help as people with anerexia or bulimia.0
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I've had pretty much every one going. The fact I'm on this site shows I still have issues with food. I'm trying hard to combat them though- I want to be healthy in body AND mind. At least now I can say "I have issues with food" and that's it. I'm no longer surviving on 500 calories a week. I'm no longer throwing up everything that passes my lips. I'm no longer binge eating until I'm screaming in pain. And I no longer harbour ridiculous ideals of what I should be- my goal is realistic. I've still got some way to go, but I've come a long way.
I'd recommend "Wasted" by Marya Hornbacher. But not if you get competitive and you have an eating problem already- it can (and did for me) spur things on.0 -
Like I feel that I have a problem with binge eating. At first I do great & I'm eating fine and then one little thing happens that gets me depressed and I eat out of frustration. Then I gain all the weight that I've lost back. I don't understand it though0
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I had anorexia nervosa and bulimia. Although thoughts in the back of my mind always resurface, I could never do that to myself again. I've also learned that there may be things in life I cannot control and instead of controlling it through food I have found other ways to handle it. I also realized that I will never be perfect and I like myself very much now. A million flaws and all. On my extreme end of the spectrum (starvation), it was slow suicide.
I have been recovered for 18 years now and I realize I will always have this disorder with me and so far I have been victorious against it.
We must fight the good fight.:flowerforyou:0 -
lots of things.
i think about food all the time.
I often feel my obsession with food MUST be some sort of eating disorder... it affects every single aspect of my life either negative or positively depending on whether I'm doing good or bad. It's the #1 thing on my mind ALL THE TIME.0 -
I often feel my obsession with food MUST be some sort of eating disorder... it affects every single aspect of my life either negative or positively depending on whether I'm doing good or bad. It's the #1 thing on my mind ALL THE TIME.
yes! that is me! i'm either REALLY good or REALLY bad w/ foods/exercise.
over the years, it's been more good than bad (hence, i've lost almost 100lbs) but i dont think my bottom line habits and choices have changed.
matter of fact, my wedding ring will fall off my wedding finger. i simply wear it on my middle finger cause i do not have belief/faith in myself to size it smaller. :grumble: if i did resize it, it would end up being streached bigger again.:grumble:
it dominates my thoughts and i'm not proud of that.
:sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad:0 -
I've had pretty much every one going. The fact I'm on this site shows I still have issues with food. I'm trying hard to combat them though- I want to be healthy in body AND mind. At least now I can say "I have issues with food" and that's it. I'm no longer surviving on 500 calories a week. I'm no longer throwing up everything that passes my lips. I'm no longer binge eating until I'm screaming in pain. And I no longer harbour ridiculous ideals of what I should be- my goal is realistic. I've still got some way to go, but I've come a long way.
I'd recommend "Wasted" by Marya Hornbacher. But not if you get competitive and you have an eating problem already- it can (and did for me) spur things on.
I could have written this............
It was recommended to me that I read The Mood Cure by Julia Ross. It has helped me a whole lot.
I belong to about 10-12 weight loss BBS...........most of them are low carb BBS, but none the less, I am obsessed........0 -
I often feel my obsession with food MUST be some sort of eating disorder... it affects every single aspect of my life either negative or positively depending on whether I'm doing good or bad. It's the #1 thing on my mind ALL THE TIME.
yes! that is me! i'm either REALLY good or REALLY bad w/ foods/exercise.
over the years, it's been more good than bad (hence, i've lost almost 100lbs) but i dont think my bottom line habits and choices have changed.
matter of fact, my wedding ring will fall off my wedding finger. i simply wear it on my middle finger cause i do not have belief/faith in myself to size it smaller. :grumble: if i did resize it, it would end up being streached bigger again.:grumble:
it dominates my thoughts and i'm not proud of that.
:sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad:
The first step in dealing with a problem is recognizing and admitting that problem.
You are doing that here.
Now, face it head on.
Take that ring. Have it resized immediately.
Just do it. Smile as you do it. Take deep breaths.
When you get it back and you realize it fits today, tomorrow, the day after.... it will become a little easier.
Face your fear!!! Baby steps to get there, but FACE IT. :flowerforyou:0 -
Lauryn has great advice there.
By keeping your ring big it's almost like giving yourself permission to lapse back.... "so it fits"
Same thing goes with "fat clothes"... get rid of em....
I could of written a lot of your posts....
I have gone from completely obsessive and controled (both food and diet).
To completely out of control (both food and exercise).
When I am good I am FREAKISHLY good, but when I am bad....I inhale anything and everything edible!
You can do this....and HAVE done it with such an amazing loss. Embrace the fact that you ARE succeeding! :flowerforyou:0 -
Oooops! I really screwed up today. Someone brought in a red velvet cake with icing and chocolate shavings and I ate 2 large pieces. Then because I screwed up sooo bad I went through McDonald's and got a fish sandwich and a small fries. Turns out if I had just stopped at the cake I would be Okay! Why do we do these things? As far as an eating disorder, I think most people here could say yes, because we have all overindulged in food. Food is only for the nourishment, health and sustainability of our body. When we use it for entertainment, and comfort it becomes something else. Sometimes I think about food a lot , sometimes I think about food all day and all night, way more than other people. Then there are those times I actually feel I have a pretty good handle on things. Today I made some mistakes. I can start over.0
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i have an eating disorder. i have had one since i was really young. if you want to talk, my message box is always open. I am also a part of a very supporting forum, that also helps. According to my BMI though i am not technically anorexic. I definitely restrict and count calories obsessively.0
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I just happened upon this thread and I'd really like to keep it going if anyone else is interested (otherwise it might just become my little public journal :blushing: )
I have an eating disorder, and I've had some version of it on and off since I was about 9 years old. It's been worse in the last year than ever before in my life, though, and I'm ready to take my life back now.
I have the same set of behaviors that several of you have described; I'm obsessively "good" with food, then go absolutely out of control. I often go through stretches of several weeks in which I eat perfectly all day long, plan a perfect dinner, then absolutely lose my mind and eat like a crazed cookie monster all evening. I purge because I don't want to gain weight, but I feel like I can't stop the bingeing. It's crazy, because I know I could if I forced myself.
I've shown that I can go without any food for many days on end, or eat effectively nothing, but if I'm allowing myself to eat at all I have a really hard time moderating. It's like eating anything at all is a trigger for bingeing.
I really feel like I can pull it together and eat healthily all day but I just fall apart at night. I'm thinking about looking into an outpatient program, not because I think I'm in danger of causing any substantial harm to myself, but simply because I think it's an extreme enough measure to really make me do it and finally get beyond this.
I work out a lot and I would love to be able to maximize my results by fixing my food problems. I finally got to a weight at which I felt like I looked great, but my bingeing in the last couple of months has piled about 7 pounds back on, and I can really see it in the mirror. I just started doing P90X to shake up my fitness regime, and I'm hoping the "badass" approach that it has will help build me up to a place where I can start eating to support my fitness rather than to punish myself or to ameliorate pain (or worse, to starve myself for those reasons).
Anyway, I just ordered both the Mood Cure and the Diet Cure, so maybe they'll have some insights that help me. For now, I'm trying to stick with the healthy P90X plan, and just keep putting one foot in front of the other and trying not to dwell on my previous failures (like eating a box of brownie mix after my extremely healthy dinner last night). Other addicts say "one day at a time"; I think I'm going to hang on to that idea. Thanks for taking the time to listen.0 -
Well, I guess I'll make this thread my personal journal because I'm absolutly glowing with pride right now. I did it. I broke the cycle. One day down. I went to my mom's house for dinner last night, and we always have wine when we eat, and nothing triggers late night bingeing for me like alcohol. On my way home all I wanted to do was stop & get something to sabbotage myself with, but I didn't do it. Even after getting home, I was raiding my pantry to find ANYTHING bad, and I instead decided to make the world's healthiest pizza. I took 2 sprouted corn mini tortillas and toasted them with hot sauce and reduced fat parmesan, and it was the single most fulfilling snack I've ever had. I know I'll need to start learning how to self-soothe without food, but for now I'm so pleased. I got all of the soothing with none of the self-loathing for under 150 calories. My real shining moment of glory, though, came when I went to make myself a 3rd tortilla and I stopped myself because I was already satisfied. I don't know where this strength came from. But I've got to tell you, I was way more "soothed" by the time I went to sleep after that little display than I've ever been after a binge. I guess the flawed logic with eating to self-soothe is that you (at least I) always feel terrible after it's over. I always think it wasn't worth it. Not once have I ever said, "Wow, I'm really glad I ate all of that pizza and ice cream".
Anyway, I think I might be able to at least partially credit my food and exercise journaling as well as my BodyBugg for giving me the extra push. Someone on the boards here suggested that bingers actually record everything they eat. I'm great with food journaling until it gets to the late night binge. Never even once had I journaled the entirety of a binge until this week. It was a real turning point for me to record the unfolding binge: it started with 6 oreos and that failure rapidly declined into an entire box of brownie mix. Let's go ahead and call that rock bottom.:laugh: I decided to record it all because I really did eat it, even though I was humiliated to acknowledge it. But it was the acknowledgement that was so empowering. I felt like, "Well, there it is. There's everything I ate today. Tomorrow's journal will have less brownie mix." Between the food journal and the BodyBugg showing me how easily I really could be progressing with calorie deficits, I feel like I'm on my way out of the darkness.0 -
i believe i do too, Its the whole eating calories, counting calories, looking in the mirror every five seconds kinda deal. I always feel guilty after i eat too. I kinda felt like it was normal though If i was on a diet. :ohwell:0
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i definitely have an eating disorder....i have been battling anorexia for 15 years ( i am 29). I just joined this site to see if it could help me GAIN weight. Even only after journaling my food for few days, i see how much work i have ahead of me...
i often wonder though, do you think logging food and talking about it etc. only feeds the eating disorder?? (no matter what kind of eating disorder you have).
Any thoughts??0 -
i definitely have an eating disorder....i have been battling anorexia for 15 years ( i am 29). I just joined this site to see if it could help me GAIN weight. Even only after journaling my food for few days, i see how much work i have ahead of me...
i often wonder though, do you think logging food and talking about it etc. only feeds the eating disorder?? (no matter what kind of eating disorder you have).
Any thoughts??
I honestly think that if your experience journaling so far has been eye-opening to you in terms of how little you're eating, it's a really good idea to stick with it until you are consistently eating a more nutritionally normal diet. Even if you are spending a lot of energy focusing on food & eating, I think it will help you in the long run. You'll be able to get a sense of how much and how often you should be eating; once you're really comfortable with that, then you can start weaning yourself off the journaling over time. Although you have to remember that my perspective is coming from the opposite direction as yours; I have bouts of anorexia, but my primary problem is eating too much. Actually, my primary problem is that lack self worth, and that causes the rest of the problems, but you get what I mean. Take what I say with a grain of salt. Stick with it and remember you're worth the effort and you deserve to be healthy. :flowerforyou:0 -
Hi everyone, I thought I would weigh in here. (Ug, I punned and didn't even mean to:blushing: )
Once again, I feel very sheepish, because 1. I hae an eating disorder and 2. I am an addiction therapist. Hows that for Ironic. One night I was running a group and one of the guys in the group said, "You've never been arrested for using have you?" I told him I hadn't. He then said, "Then what makes you think you know about addiction?" I said, "Are you looking at me?"
Seems like we might fall into two general catagories, one are those with eating disorders that are working to exert control in their lives in because they feel powerless or out of control in other areas. The rest of us eat for comfort, gratification or food is a crutch of some sort for us. Does that sound accurate, or is it too simplified?0 -
twincat, you posed an interesting question. For me, and those of us that are heavy, the journaling, counting ect is a critical aspect of our success. Mindfulness is so important if you've been using food like drugs, because we can't actually just quit using food altogether, so we must be mindful. For those of you trying to gain weight, And kittynurse, you are so wise to point out the self esteem issue. So, twincat, how is your self worth involved in your calorie counting, etc?0
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most eating disorders do begin with an obsession with food. Then they progress. I don't feel like I have one... but I do sometimes feel like I have Body Dysmorphia, because I can't see my body the way it really looks. When I was fat I often saw myself as "curvy" sometimes even slim, and now that I actually am thin, I sometimes see myself as fat. And I honestly mean I look in the mirror sometimes and SEE a fat person, not that I see a thin person and believe she's fat anyway. Does that make any sense? Counting calories and obsessiving over food can definitely get overwhelming though, if you really feel like you're headed for an eating disorder you should talk to a professional and step away from the calorie counting for awhile. :flowerforyou:0
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I'm glad you mentioned Body Dysphmorphia, also often called Body Betrayal in lay terms. Personally, I think this happens because we are socialized to try to be an ideal that doesn't really exist in nature. For example, the typical supermodel is a size 2 and is 16 years old. If she gets above a size 4, she will no longer be marketable.
When Barbie made her debut in 1959, her measurements if she were life size would have been 39-18-33. Around the year 2000, Barbie's waist was increased slightly and her bust was decreased slightly, though she is still far from typical. The altering came after years of lobbying by parents and professionals working with anorexia.
So you see, as a culture, we seem to be chasing an ideal that is not possible. In fact, I am copying an article here that will make this sort of a long post, but it has some very interesting information in it!.
What Size is the "Average" Woman?
By LB Lacey
The average American woman is 5'4", weighs 140 lbs, and wears a size 14 dress.
The "ideal" woman--portrayed by models, Miss America, Barbie dolls, and screen actresses--is 5'7", weighs 100 lbs, and wears a size 8.
One-third of all American women wear a size 16 or larger.
75% of American women are dissatisfied with their appearance.
50% of American women are on a diet at any one time.
Between 90% and 99% of reducing diets fail to produce permanent weight loss.
Two-thirds of dieters regain the weight within one year. Virtually all regain it within five years.
The diet industry (diet foods, diet programs, diet drugs, etc.) takes in over $40 billion each year, and is still growing.
Quick-weight-loss schemes are among the most common consumer frauds, and diet programs have the highest customer dissatisfaction of any service industry.
A recent survey found only 30 percent of 250 randomly chosen women age 21 to 35 had normal bone mass--the researchers concluded women are so afraid eating dairy products will make them gain weight that they are starving themselves into osteoporosis.
Young girls are more afraid of becoming fat than they are of nuclear war, cancer, or losing their parents.
50% of 9-year-old girls and 80% of 10-year-old girls have dieted.
90% of high school junior and senior women diet regularly, even though only between 10% and 15% are over the weight recommended by the standard height-weight charts.
1% of teenage girls, and 5% of college-age women become anorexic or bulimic.
Anorexia has the highest mortality rate (up to 20%) of any psychiatric diagnosis.
Girls develop eating and self-image problems before drug or alcohol problems; there are drug and alcohol programs in almost every school, but no eating disorder programs.0 -
I was definitely anorexic at one point in my life. It is documented in my health records and I had been denied insurance because of it in the past (even after I became obese).
My anorexia stemmed from regaining control of my life. I was newly married, age 27, and my husband was an extreme advice giver. Ex. I'd vaccuum the floor, and he'd sit in the easychair and bark at me, "Don't vaccuum up that paper, pick it up and put it in the trash can." "Don't use that cleaner on the wood floor." "Why did you use this kind of mulch?" It occurred to me one day as he droned on about how unhealthy vegetarians are, that I could PiS* him off by not eating meat! AND since he was overweight and wouldn't dry to lose any, that maybe he would be inspired by me getting thinner. Well, I went from not eating meat, to bareley eating and at my lowest weight I was 5'8 and weighed 115. I had to buy size 10 pants and have them altered to a size 6 waist.
One day I went to a wedding and saw that the punch server there was all skin and bones. My perception was that SHE must be anorexic, and WHAT was she thinking? Her bones looked huge and she looked awful! I wondered if she realized that she looked so bad, and that her bones were not going to get any smaller. THEN I walked into the bathroom, looked in the mirror and PANICKED! I vowed that day to put the weight back on, and haven't stopped SINCE!!!
I have always had problems with knowing how big or small I am, which is a strong indicator of anorexia. At size 6, I honestly thought the 10s should fit me when I held them up. I also, as a size 18-20W, would (for a long time) try on size 16 and 14s. It took me a long time to get used to the fact that I was that big. Body image is so inaccurate for me that I had just gotten in the habit of buying the 20W so I was sure it would go around me. It's annoying to try on pants that are too small.
Now I am on the way down, and I look at the difference between my size 20s and the 14s I just bought... It's an incredible difference in size, when I hold the pants up next to each other, but I've only lost 17 pounds. I can also still wear the 18s and some of the 20s, but they are pretty loose on me.
Now about thinking about food all the time,
I just do so much better when losing weight to eat the same thing all the time so that I don't feel the hunger pains. It keeps my focus off of food and the choices.
I am still married to the same man, and we are in our 17th year. I have been an incredible lion tamer! When I spend the holidays around his father and two brothers, I realize just how far we have come! (Last Christmas, his brother's dog pooped on my mother-in-law's carpet. The brother looked at his wife and bellered at her, "Kris, GO PICK IT UP NOW!" The younger brother looked at me at 10 pm one night and said, "Turn it off NOW!" OMG I HATE THEM!!!)0 -
An eating disorder is serious stuff, please get help if you think that you may have one. I don't but one of my foster daughters does, and it's very upsetting for everyone involved, here's a little note that gets sent to my email from The post, I'm trying to help and understand..that's the big one, cause I really don't get it, and help her through this.
Awareness first step in beginning recovery from eating disorders
2/23/2009 1:38:00 AM Email this article • Print this article
Anna Hartenbach • For The Post • ah896106@ohiou.edu
For Ohio University junior Nicole Mikusa, getting help for her eating disorder was difficult, but the recovery process is more difficult than she had anticipated.
Mikusa, who studies family and consumer science education, worked with a psychiatrist, psychologist and a dietician in the beginning stages of her recovery and regularly attends an Eating Disorder Anonymous support group.
"It's one thing to tell people who don't know what you're going through, and it's another to tell people who know what you're going through because they can understand," Mikusa said. "It's definitely been really helpful and a way to help other people with eating disorders because we're all at different stages in our eating disorders."
Today is the start of National Eating Disorder Awareness Week and to raise awareness, OU Counseling and Psychological Services, Ping Center fitness staff and the Women's Center will host events on campus.
Jonathan Mosko, a counseling intern at OU's Counseling and Psychological Services, said about 10 million Americans have an eating disorder, and one out of every 10 people with an eating disorder are male.
Though Mikusa's ongoing battle with anorexia started because of many factors, her recovery is centered on control of her body, she said.
"After going through recovery, I feel like it was more of a control issue now because I'm supposed to be giving up that control of knowing how much I'm eating and knowing how much I'm exercising and focusing on one battle at a time," she said.
Though many people do receive help, in some cases the damage from an eating disorder is irreversible. Jane Lonsdale, an OU senior studying broadcast journalism, said her sister Mary Lonsdale died during her senior year of high school while recovering from bulimia because of the fluctuating potassium levels effects on her heart.
"What they think happened was ... that her heart gave out. It was so weak from all of the years (of her disorder)," Lonsdale said.
Encouraging friends or family members who might have an eating disorder to ask for help is important, she said.
"First of all, if someone knows of someone that is doing this ... definitely bring it up to them - don't push it under the rug," Lonsdale said. "I think the huge problem with my sister was that she ignored the problem for so long that it continued to have these adverse effects on her."
For Mikusa, her disorder is still something she has to deal with in her daily life, but she is learning how to accept herself.
"It's kind of like this daily battle I go through to not over-exercise or under-eat. I really have to maintain ... eating what I need to and not exercising too much," Mikusa said. "I definitely pray and wish that I will be 'normal' again."0 -
I definitely have a compulsion to eat. I think about food sometimes even when i'm not hungry yet.
I'm also an artist and a gourmet food lover, though, so on that aspect I'm not sure if it's my eating disorder or my love for food as an art.
However, I KNOW that I have a problem with eating when I'm down or stressed. It's my coping mechanism. I will often treat myself to a latte or chocolates if I have a bad day...
Lately I've been doing better and having healthier treats and less binges when my emotions go haywire.
I also have an issue with portions. Because I love food so much I frequently would eat an appetizer or soup/salad and the meal and dessert at restaurants. That's a LOT of food especially at places like Olive Garden or Macaroni Grill and etc... The calories in a meal like that are more than you're allowed for a whole day! When food is good I just want to eat it all...and my stomach got big to compensate.
Luckily since I've been working on cutting down portions I don't feel the need to eat as much.0 -
I had anorexia nervosa and bulimia. Although thoughts in the back of my mind always resurface, I could never do that to myself again. I've also learned that there may be things in life I cannot control and instead of controlling it through food I have found other ways to handle it. I also realized that I will never be perfect and I like myself very much now. A million flaws and all. On my extreme end of the spectrum (starvation), it was slow suicide.
I have been recovered for 18 years now and I realize I will always have this disorder with me and so far I have been victorious against it.
We must fight the good fight.:flowerforyou:0 -
I had anorexia nervosa and bulimia. Although thoughts in the back of my mind always resurface, I could never do that to myself again. I've also learned that there may be things in life I cannot control and instead of controlling it through food I have found other ways to handle it. I also realized that I will never be perfect and I like myself very much now. A million flaws and all. On my extreme end of the spectrum (starvation), it was slow suicide.
I have been recovered for 18 years now and I realize I will always have this disorder with me and so far I have been victorious against it.
We must fight the good fight.:flowerforyou:
I couldn't agree more!!:flowerforyou:
I'm not sure if just thinking about food and exercise all the time constitutes as an eating disorder. I think it's when you go to extremes about your food intake. We all become regularly obsessed with something momentarily about things in our lives (i.e. hobbies, sports, video games) but rarely use it to destroy ourselves.
I learned early on that eating disorders (on the anorexia end) deal with control....or lack thereof....issues. I did not ever obsess about food though. I thought about it as an enemy and nothing more. I just DIDN'T think about it.....that was the problem.
I REALLY think my issues with food went away when I became a mom. I no longer wanted to obsess about myself and my body. All I cared about was my son and so my main focus became him and not me. Ironically.....that is when I allowed myself to eat and become overweight. Add a sitting all day job and eating food on the run and that spelled disaster. But it's all good. I have learned how to resolve my mental issues (<
that makes me sound loony) and I have learned how to really take care of myself and be healthy.0 -
dhutch if you don't mind my asking, how did you get healthy, and how do you stay healthy?0
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dhutch if you don't mind my asking, how did you get healthy, and how do you stay healthy?
I dont mind at all...honestly it really just took a lot of time and lots of support. I have a wonderful mother, and when I saw how my illness was affecting her, I decided to change. And really that was it. It was a LONG process, but i had to be the one to make the change. And still I do not claim to be completely healthy, I still at times revert back to the old ways, however now my priorities are more in line. Years ago the only thing that mattered to me was controlling how much food i ate, where now i have way too many others things going on in life to really worry about it THAT much, I still worry, and like an addict I guess, if I have some bad times and things get a little crazy for me, I want to take control again through food, but I am aware now of what i am doing and I dont let it get out of hand. I am proud though of myself for getting better and I try to find positives...it has made me a stronger person in many ways, more compassionate, and confident!
Thanks for asking!!0
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