is anyone have eating disorder or feel pro ana?


Question:
i havent ate for a wk. i feel fat but am not sure because am told not. i feel good that i havent ate for so long! i have no plans to do so in near future. I am 5ft 4in and weigh 110 but want to lose ten more. is this too big? bf says not but stomach still hangs over some pants

Answers:
You need to eat. I weighed 110 before i got pregnant with my baby and i didnt think i was fat i weigh 120 now. It it very dangerous to stop eating. I was told that when u dont eat u gain more weight im not sure if its true. But please eat itsnot good to starve urself

Other Answers:
well if your stoah hangs out u need to eerise do ab eerises join a gy n ask your trainer he'll guide u do not ut down on food us that is going to har u in the long run dont ake that istake instead work out well properly that is what is going to ake your body taut and fir and your stoah flat

Twenty-One and Afraid

As a youth, I didn't believe I could trust anyone. Yet, the secrets that haunted the corners of my mind were destroying my life and making me crazy. I knew that I was very close to ending my life. If I didn't end it myself, I knew that my disease of compulsive eating and purging would end it for me.

I grew up in an alcoholic home and was molested many times by "family friends." Being the quiet good girl of the family, I never told a soul. I started withdrawing and soon became the world's greatest chameleon. I could put on any mask.

Food was the only thing over which I had power. When I was angry or hurt, I would smile sweetly and act as if everything were fine. Then I would go off by myself to binge and purge until I felt good again. However, this good feeling was only temporary. Soon the disease overtook my body and soul, leaving nothing of the real me. I hated everyone around me. I was dead inside.

Then, at the age of 21, I stumbled into a Twelve-Step meeting. Thank God! My life has never been the same since. Working the Steps stripped away the dead layers and brought alive the person I had buried.

The last several years have been full of learning, growing and forgiving. Finally, I can look into the mirror and like what I see.

I live the Twelve Steps. I am not perfect, but I work hard. I have had my ups and downs, but when I entered this program, it was like leaving a prison and walking through heaven's gate. For me, there is no turning back.

Life is so precious and dear to me today. I spent so many years numbing the pain. Now I have an entire childhood to catch up on — so much to feel, so many hearts to touch, so much left to experience.

I am grateful for who and what I am. I owe my life to God and to the Twelve Steps. I could have died. Instead, I am thriving. The gift of recovery is a beautiful, life-long journey without end.

— Reprinted from Lifeline, March 1998, p. 9
Source(s):
http://www.oa.org



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