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Bulimia: help yourself

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By Princessa

Are you bulimic?

Can you honestly answer to these questions?

  • Do you lose control of your eating or eat excessively?
  • Do you make yourself vomit or take laxatives to empty your stomach?
  • Your weight fluctuates more than 2 kilos (4 lb.) a week?
  • Do you see yourself fat?
  • Does food dominate your life?
  • Does your mood afect what you eat, when and how much you eat?
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If you have answered yes to two or more of the above questions you should look for further diagnosis or tests as you are at risk of having or developing an eating disorder.

 

Are you Bulimic? How to stop it.

Are you Bulimic and want to change that? Do you want to regain control of your life and finish with the circle of Bulimic behaviour? The most important thing to stopping bulimic behaviour is wanting to stop it. You are the only person who can decide whether to stop it or not.

 


If you are on the first stages of coming out from bulimia, these tips might help:

1) Write a letter to your bulimia. Write one as if it was a friend of you –something like thanks to you I am slimmer, calmer, and so on. Then write another letter as if your bulimia was your enemy, something like “I hate you because you make me ill, because of you I do not have friends, I cannot go out and party with anyone…”. Both letters will help you identify if you want to stop being bulimic and WHY you want to change. Finding good reasons to change is the first step to changing.

2) Make a list of advantages and disadvantages of being bulimic. Think not only of yourself but how bulimia affects your friends and family.

3) Believe in change. People can come out of their bulimia. You can cure yourself or at the very least reduce the frequency of your bulimic crisis. Read inspiring books, real stories of people who have won their battle against their eating disorder. Find inspiration an encouragement in their stories.

4) Once you are ready to change, look for adequate treatment. Sometimes just visiting your doctor or the help of a nutritionist can work wonders if you are wanting to change.

5) Inform yourself about the different treatments. Different things work for different people. Some people needs medicaments while others find support from other sufferers the best therapy. Personal psychological support or even hospital treatment as an inpatient are also available.

6) To help yourself, observe your bulimic behaviours and record them in a diary. Be as honest as possible. Once you have identified your bulimic behaviours over a period of time try to understand the WHY. This will help you take conscience of your behaviour and try to avoid the starting sings in the future. For example, if you notice that you have bulimic crisis on the weekends because you are lonely, then in the future try to plan something in anticipation to avoid feeling lonely and starting another crisis.

 


Overcoming Bulimia: Your Comprehensive, Step-By-Step Guide to Recovery

This workbook contains tools to help bulimics break the cycle of bingeing and reacting, allowing them to take control of their lives and make positive behavior changes. Use it to recognize the symptoms of bulimia, its causes, and the health risks it poses. Then work through the exercises to normalize eating and deal with the issues that underlie the symptoms. Take control of your recovery process with checklists, self-monitoring assessments, and thought diaries. Practical advice and real-life examples reinforce attitudes and offer encouragement. Discover that it is possible to overcome your disorder and live a happier, more fulfilling life.

 

 


Eating Disorders in the news

  • Team approach helps those with eating disordersEvansville Courier & Press5 hours ago

    If you were in a room of 100 people and you asked how many of them had ever tried diet and exercise in order to lose weight, how many do you think would raise their hands? In a country where 66 percent of adults are overweight or obese (according to the National Institutes of Health ) and billions are spent on diets and diet products a year, it is quite likely that many would raise their hands ...

  • Norovirus-related illnesses linked to eating oysters, reveals reportNews-Medical-Net6 hours ago

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is advising consumers to avoid eating oysters harvested from the San Antonio Bay on or after Nov. 16 due to reports of norovirus-associated illnesses in some people who had consumed oysters harvested from this area, which is located on the Gulf of Texas.

  • NewYork-Presbyterian, Weill Cornell And Columbia University Establish Integrated Eating Disorders CenterMedical News Today5 days ago

    NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Weill Cornell Medical College and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, in affiliation with the New York State Psychiatric Institute, announced the creation of an integrated eating disorders center. Opening today is a key clinical component of this new center -- The Outlook at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Westchester Division in White Plains...

Bulimia: A Guide to Recovery Bulimia: A Guide to Recovery
Includes A Three-Week Program to Stop Bingeing
Price: $6.04
List Price: $14.95
It Started With Pop-Tarts... An Alternative Approach to Winning the Battle of Bulimia It Started With Pop-Tarts... An Alternative Approach to Winning the Battle of Bulimia
A personal experience. The author shares five key strategies with practical steps to help readers recover from eating disorders holistically.
Price: $11.49
List Price: $15.95
Learning to Be Me: My Twenty-Three-Year Battle with Bulimia Learning to Be Me: My Twenty-Three-Year Battle with Bulimia
The author has struggled with bulimia for more than twenty-three years. Now effectively controlling the disorder, Golden uses her experiences to educate and support other victims.
Price: $9.92
List Price: $16.95
Sensing the Self: Women's Recovery from Bulimia Sensing the Self: Women's Recovery from Bulimia
This work is recommended for therapists, counselors, and others seeking to understand and help people with eating disorders.
Price: $19.99
List Price: $26.50

Bulimia Kills

Comments

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Finding Melissa  says:
2 months ago

After experiencing chronic bulimia, I am incredibly aware of the mis-perceptions that exist about the illness - and about the difficulty in breaking the cycle. Giving up bulimia was the hardest thing I have ever done; however, it has transformed my life - and, as my story (at www.findingmelissa.co.uk) outlines, it is possible to break through the barrier and move forwards.

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