The Fasting of An Eating Disordered Male

March 15, 2010

in eating disorders,God,guest post

During my deepest days in my eating disorder, when I was barely struggling to survive, and yet, just…barely struggling to even recover…my dad used to ask me this all the time: “Is it because you cannot…or do not? Do you really want to get well? Or is it that you cannot get well?” Sometimes he would say it softly in deep sorrow. Sometimes, he would cry it out in exasperation and frustration. Other times, he would be raging out the question in anger at this obstinate demon inside of me that was unwilling to let me go.

That obstinate demon? That hideous, yet enchanting, and repelling, yet desirable stronghold over me…it wasn’t vanity. It wasn’t a desire to be thin like the rail-like models on the cover of Vogue magazine. I knew I looked horrible, and I hated the way I looked. I really, desperately, wanted to gain weight. But I wasn’t ready to recover…because I had fallen prey to the seductive, serpentine melody of something named Control. In short, I was not willing to give up the core of my disorder.

In my experience, anorexia formed from layers and layers of obsessive habits, behaviors, thoughts, and desires, all glued together with that addiction to control. I had built a deluded world for myself, in which the rules and principles designed by God did not apply. No, in this world, I was God. I planned and arranged my own rules and principles, and I relished in that rigid system over my lifestyle. Not blindly—I did read up on a lot of information, of course…in fact, maybe too much. Nutritional data, diet tips, exercise routine…I craved and licked up each knowledge…but I twisted them around so that they fit into my own neat little world of obsessions. I was safe in that world…because I was deranged under this sense of imaginary power I had over myself.

As you may already have guessed, this post will be heavy, and severely lacking of food. Let yourself be warned. But I urge you (eating disordered-history or not) to read on. The story shared by this particular person will take at most 10 minutes to read…but its message may stick with you for far longer than that.

Joseph (not his real name) is a young college student with whom I’ve been in contact with for several months. To be honest, I still have the tendency to think that guys have cooties. But somehow, we’ve connected through a common struggle—the addiction for Control through a vicious disease called Eating Disorder. And I have to confess—I used to be one of those people in society to put a stigma on males. The stereotype that males should be tough, manly, and impervious to frivolous concerns like weight and beauty.

Well, Joseph proved me wrong…and he’s opened my eyes into the reality that males struggle with body image, and many of the same struggles that we females do…like control. As I said, my eating disorder did not stem from mere vanity, and neither did Joseph, and neither, I suspect, did most eating disordered individuals. It really started under an obsession to have power over something, which in truth is just a deceived illusion. The sad truth is, such stereotypes against eating disorder prevent many sufferers to ask for help. It certainly took me a long time to admit that I have an eating disorder. And for guys, it’s worse, because they are too pressured by social expectations and stigma to ask for help, in fear that they will be judged and berided for caring about “beauty”.

Thus Joseph has asked to be kept anonymous. But he’s more than willing to share his story. The story of a male with social pressures in the real world, the experiences of a person struggling with an eating disorder, and the testimony of a Christian who has only just realized the infinite and personal Love of God.

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A Different Kind of Fasting
by a certain “Joseph”

Because I do not hope to turn again

Because I do not hope

Because I do not hope to turn

Desiring this man’s gift and that man’s scope

I no longer strive to strive towards such things

-T.S. Eliot, Ash Wednesday


I repeated the words anxiously to myself in the darkened church, as each silent syllable weighed more heavily on my racing mind. Unadorned, cold and lightly attended, the scene inside the local Newman center that morning seemed indicative of the very day, or at least my conceptions of how it should be. It wasn’t as though I had never read the lines before, and it wasn’t as if this particular Ash Wednesday was — to borrow a phrase from the poet — to be given the value of something long looked forward to.
If anything, it was to be quite the opposite. Because when you’re a young Christian man fighting an eating disorder, the idea of fasting carries (pardon the pun) quite a bit of weight. 

But that is to start in media res, and to get too far ahead of myself. After all, you probably didn’t expect to be greeted by the words of one the 20th century’s most prolific poets when you logged onto Burp and Slurp today, much less the confession of someone currently immersed in the struggle to recover from an eating disorder. If the fact that I’m not Sophia, combined with the fact that I’m also male, doesn’t further catch your attention; well, then every rhetorical device I claim to wield may as well be sheathed for the time being. 

But if I have caught your attention then I ask you to bear with me, because the season of Lent has coxed me out of the cocoon of self-denial, and awakened me to the need to seek recovery.

Like many who go through the trials of an eating disorder, there is an innate struggle for me to identify a time and place where it all began, as well as a particular motive for why it began and the factors which ultimately escalated the behaviors associated with the disorder to the point of my own self-destruction. We all have our own stories when it comes to how we ended up where we are, but in the interest of space and time, I’ll refrain from the details. All that matters for the time being is that in a period of 18-20 months I not only lost some 45 pounds of healthy body weight (much of it muscle), but more profoundly, lost most of my friends, my interests, and my very identity. 

But that wasn’t all I lost.

I guess it never occurred to me that the behavior I was engaged in – the over-exercising, the long and tedious walking, the restriction of anything less than healthy, less than optimal – could have serious repercussions. Sure, I talked of recovery with my nutritionist and therapist, but at the end of the day I hid behind the façade of tomorrow. “Tomorrow,” I would say at the end of each night, “is when you will challenge yourself.” “Tomorrow,” I would say after a day of restriction, “you will make up for what you lost today.” But tomorrow never came, and it wasn’t until late January that I learned the truth of the matter. If I kept pushing against my body, my mind and even God himself, then tomorrow might never come. 

To cut to the chase, I found myself in a hospital bed hooked up to an EKG and an IV, all the while being probed by a small army of nurses and technicians who I had never planned on seeing. That “bum leg” I went to get checked out at my school’s student health center might have only been a short-term effect of my inability to break the treadmill’s sinister embrace, but the severe bradycardia which the doctors discovered was much more threatening. To be 21 years old and to have a doctor tell you that you may need surgery for a pacemaker isn’t just scary – it is defiantly surreal. As for my condition, the cause of it was easily explainable. I had in fact brought myself to this point, and despite my concerns over the long-term health effects, I was told that a full recovery from my ED would likely alleviate the condition of my heart.

Pray that I may forget

These matters that with myself I too much discuss

Too much explain

Because I do not hope to turn again

Let these words answer

For what is done, not to be done again

Was the experience a prayer answered? I asked this question to myself in the pew, returning once more to the setting of that early morning service nearly a month ago which began the season of Lent. For us Catholics, Lent is a time of self-reflection, abstinence and fasting; all with the inherent goal of bringing each believer more closely aligned with God by tearing down the physical and mental barriers of this world which so often stand between us and Him. Yet that morning in the church, even some two weeks removed from the biggest scare of my life, I still found myself in a state of debilitating debate over issues relating to my ED. Even as I should have been focusing on the meaning of Lent I found myself asking the familiar questions and attempting to plan out every last aspect of the day’s eating, exercise and school work — once again letting the meaningless details of this life interfere with the importance of my true value in attaining salvation in the next. “How vain was I?” I asked myself angrily. Here I was, incredibly underweight and unhealthy, and I was proposing to actually go through the day as a normal Catholic would and fast?  Was it my spirit I was hoping to enrich, or was it the disorder which had already robbed me of so much? 

Let these words answer

For what is done, not to be done again

The answer was the latter, and only after repeating the lines of the poet and staring above the pew at the unadorned crucifix did I have the courage to admit this. And in that moment, some two weeks removed from promising God I would recover (only to half-heartedly give the attempt), did it hit me. If I wanted to grow closer to God, and if I wanted to free myself, I would have to undergo a different kind of fasting, and have to give up something much more meaningful than I had ever given up for Lent before. 
It’s been four weeks since that day, and tying my recovery to the spiritual exercises involved in Lent has been, I believe, the first positive step I’ve made in quite some time. Not only have I lived up to a promise made to God that I would stop weighing myself on a weekly basis, but I’ve gradually begun to give my faith and trust over to the professionals he had blessed me to have come into contact with. I’ve begun to look back on my hospitalization and “wake-up” call as a blessing, and have become aware of the life long sapped of color that I now want to live. Even in this time of self-inspection and denial, I have been overjoyed to learn that there are people in this world who care, and the person they care about is the far-from “ideal “image that I have nearly destroyed myself in trying to create. 

Still, to sit here today and say that I am recovered would be a lie. Likewise, to sit here today and tell you that my daily battles of recovery have been overwhelming successes would also be to evade the truth. There is work too still be done, and further steps that I desperately need to take. I still struggle in daily conflict with the numbers game, the veiled deceit of ‘healthful’ eating that shouldn’t (and doesn’t) apply to my situation. The constant calculations of saturated fat and added sugars; the “eat this, not that” mentality that saturates a society of chronic dieters. Yet, even as I continue to struggle, I draw strength from the poet’s words.

Suffer us not to mock ourselves with falsehood

Teach us to care and not to care

Teach us to sit still

I pray every night that God gives me the strength to win this unseen struggle, and the courage to turn away from the constant debates in my mind and sit still. When it comes to eating and dieting we know too much, and the knowledge of what is truly good and bad for us – or at least what we think is good and bad for us — has the potential to ruin our lives. I never began this escapade thinking I would get to this pathetic state, nor did I want to. In fact, if there is one myth about eating disorders that must be put to rest, it is that they result exclusively from “body image” issues. 

So what is at the root of this scourge and these debilitating behaviors which have drastically and negatively affected my life?  It has taken me a long time to discover this, but my real “issues” revolve not so much around how I look or how I feel or wish to feel, but rather the gripping need for control. It is this need for control, coupled with a longing sense of searching for validation in what is healthy or correct, which I believe is at the root of many eating disorders, especially for males. To make a long story short, and to press over the details, my own struggle began during a time in my life when I became “fed up” with events outside of my control, and decided that I could no longer risk being vulnerable or leaving things to chance. It just seemed like nothing was working out in my life, and in my pursuit of perfection in so many areas — academic, physical fitness, that ‘All American’ boy image was trying to conform to — the only way to achieve my goals was to build in the necessary control aspects to assure myself that I could reach those false values. Here was a situation in which I was taking my trust and the direction of my life away from God, and putting it completely in my own human (and thus flawed) hands. At the same time I desperately needed some kind of validation, some illustrious (if not false) pat on the back each day to let me know that I was in fact someone special, and I was doing the right thing. By conforming to these control aspects in my life I was thus accomplishing both tasks, but at what price? The answer, I hope you have discovered, is painfully clear. 

As I have alluded to, my challenge this Lent has been, in a way, the familiar challenge. That is to say I have given something up, and given something up that is both profound in the way I live my life but also detrimental to the way I behave. Yet unlike most peoples’ Lenten experience, my sacrifice involves a different kind of Fasting, and instead focuses on a giving up of the control aspects tied to my eating disorder (as well as my habits to overwork and over-analyze my ‘progress’ in my academic and professional careers) instead of giving up the ‘usual’ Lenten sacrifices of a favorite food or minor habit. The goal is the same – surrendering to God’s will – yet the way in which to meet the goal remains unorthodox. But it is my hope and prayer that by tending to this exercise in spiritual discipline, and by giving up my need for complete control and knowledge over the food choices in my life, I will finally tear down the walls which I have built between God and myself. This is the meaning of Lent, and this is the meaning of fasting.

Burp and Slurp

I left church that morning with the familiar sign of the cross scribbled in black ashes across my forehead. But that is not all that I left the service with. I left, for the first time in a long time, with a sense of peace and trust, and a sense of validation for the mission I was embarking upon. It wasn’t as if I was free from all anxiety, and it was not that I had seemingly found a path towards simple and straightforward recovery. Yet the debate at hand (as well as the decision over whether or not to fast in the literal sense on that particular day) had been decided. And with those first steps, and with the silent offering of a day of full and complete meals, I took up my own cross and embraced the spirit of this most holy of seasons. Looking down at the poem I carried in my hands, I felt an odd serenity come over me, and a feeling that my lonely cry was somehow, somewhere being heard. 

Even among these rocks,

Our peace in His will

And even among these rocks

Sister, mother

And spirit of the river, spirit of the sea,

Suffer me not to be separated

And let my cry come unto Thee.

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I don’t think I can add any more than Joseph already has so eloquently expressed, except to ask you to…Share your thoughts?

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{ 64 comments… read them below or add one }

Barbara March 15, 2010 at 10:42 pm

Beautiful post!
“Joseph”, I hope you know how brave you are for this post. Keep your head up and your heart with God. Take it a day at a time, a step at a time, but keep moving forward. God never fights our battles for us, but gives us ‘the sword’ with which we fight them. I was deeply moved by your bare and honest message. My thoughts and prayers are with you!
Sophia- you already know I think you are beautiful and amazing! Hope you are doing well!!! xoxo
Barbara

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Danielle (Coffee Run) March 15, 2010 at 11:13 pm

Wow, this was an amazing post. I really admire “Joseph” for sharing his story because I KNOW that he’s not the only one out there. It’s ironic…a male suffering from an ED is sort of looked down upon. But it’s socially acceptable (and praised) for wrestlers to starve themselves to make weight. I’m sure the trip to the hospital was a huge scare and I’m glad it opened his eyes. If someone has the will, they can do anything.

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Averie (LoveVeggiesAndYoga) March 16, 2010 at 12:35 am

I dont even know where to start this is so eloquent, beautiful, deep….wow, Sophia. Amazing post. And thank you for your stark honesty about your own journey. And thank you for writing it in a way that draws us in and helps others to empathize with your struggle, rather than to disengage b/c they don’t “get it”. Your words will help people to “get it”. I will read this post again in the morning with fresh eyes and a clearer brain. There is just too much to even digest it in this sitting.
love and strength to you, Sophia!
xoxo

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Christine @ Fresh Local and Best March 16, 2010 at 12:47 am

This is a very touching post, it gives me better insight into this disorder.

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Naomi(onefitfoodie) March 16, 2010 at 2:32 am

wonderfully written, sophia. how honest and out there and i love your writing, you should write a novel. Males do struggle with disordered eating as well as eating disordered and I think there is this stigma that iton;y happens to young girls, well this is not the case at all. Men struggle with body image and eating issues as well, and Josephs story was beyond touching. Thank you for sharing and the awareness that this has brouht to me
xoxox

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Jessica @ How Sweet March 16, 2010 at 3:53 am

You are such an incredible writer – you really know how to touch someone and get deep into their soul.

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Lela March 16, 2010 at 5:40 am

I am so grateful you put “Joseph’s” story on your blog. I’ve been reading your blog for about a year during my own struggle and recovery. I can relate to his struggle with fasting during Lent, and yet wanting to do something truly meaningful. Thank you.

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Jessica March 16, 2010 at 5:51 am

Just Amazing. A really fantastic post. You give a really powerful message to keep on going and for us all to fight for each other.
Thankyou for sharing Joseph’s story on your blog. He has a lot of courage and I wish him all the best in recovery.

Sophia – amazing as always! xxxxx

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Sophie @ yumventures March 16, 2010 at 6:08 am

Wow, what a moving post. Thank you, Joseph, for sharing your story. I think it is so important to recognize that men suffer from disordered eating and body image as well, from people like Joseph to the body builders you find at the gym. This is such an amazing story, thank you for posting!

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Gabriela March 16, 2010 at 6:11 am

One of my best male friends has been suffering from an ED recently, and I know how ashamed he is of it. It’s seen as such a girly thing, and I can’t imagine having to defend one’s masculinity in the midst of such an already difficult recovery. Thank you so much for posting this, and best of luck to Joseph!

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rustique March 16, 2010 at 6:16 am

This is seriously one of the most touching things I’ve read in a long time. I admire both of you, for your frankness dealing with what are very hard and heavy struggles.

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Morgan @ Healthy Happy Place March 16, 2010 at 6:42 am

That story took me back to my own ED days and how it was TOTALLY centered around control. I think that’s the common link that brings all of us in this eating disordered community together. I learned to break free by finding my own happiness that didn’t involve anorexia. I’ve been mostly ED free for 6 years now, and I feel great!

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Astra Libris March 16, 2010 at 6:46 am

Thank you Joseph, so much, for sharing your story… Thank you both for your strength, and for helping us to have a small understanding of your struggles… I am grateful for, and deeply touched by your words.

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Jolene (www.everydayfoodie.ca) March 16, 2010 at 6:55 am

Thanks to you both for putting this story out there. It was so touching and really opened my eyes to the struggles that people with an ED go through.

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Christina March 16, 2010 at 7:08 am

What an amazing and moving post. Thank you for sharing! I definitely think most people believe that eating disorders stem solely from body image issues. I’m seeing more and more now how that is not always the case.

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Tina March 16, 2010 at 7:15 am

Wow. I’m speechless for the moment.

Ok…wow!!! What a touching post and eloquent description of what it feels like to be in a disorder and trying to overcome it. And I completely agree that control is a BIG part of disorders. It was definitely the basis of my eating issues I faced years ago, like I just talked about in my last post. This was a wonderful read and I pray that “Joseph” overcomes this.

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Tori March 16, 2010 at 7:24 am

I’m glad he is able to share his story with us. I tend to forget that there are males who struggle with the same things. Probably more than I realize because they don’t feel as comfortable admitting to EDs that are thought of as a womans disorder. Body image is something everyone struggles with and I hope that more males who have this problem gain the courage that ‘Joseph’ finally did to seek help.

<3 Tori

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Ameena March 16, 2010 at 7:28 am

I really admire Joseph for being so honest and sharing his story. I never think about the fact that guys share the body image struggle, I guess because no guy I know has an issue like this. I hope that Joseph can overcome his struggle.

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Betherann March 16, 2010 at 7:39 am

Joseph, thank you so much for sharing. For me, telling others my struggle and my story was a crucial step in reaching freedom from ED. My heart breaks for you, but there’s joy and hope because you’ve got GOD on your side. Keep pushing, praying, and living.

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Barbara March 16, 2010 at 7:44 am

Thank you, Joseph, for sharing your story. For some reason, it never occurred to me that men suffer from body image problems and ED but I understand now. I hope you can continue on the road to recovery.

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Gena March 16, 2010 at 7:46 am

This is absolutely exquisite: honest, eloquent, precocious. Thank you, Joseph, for sharing.

I’ve always thought it perverse that ED sufferers and others associate EDs with control. They are the very opposite: a spiral into complete loss of control, and utter chaos. They divest us of any control we ever had, but consuming us with an illness.

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Mary March 16, 2010 at 8:34 am

You did a wonderful and compassionate retelling of Joseph’s story. I hope he, and all who are afflicted with this disorder, continue on their paths to recovery. Blessings to you all.

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Julia March 16, 2010 at 8:42 am

Inspiring, true and hard and beautiful to read at the same time. I hate this disease, but I love the way people can overcome ED. This touched me. Josep’s story and your story. The need for control is so familiar with my ED.

You really mean so much to me girl…xxx Julia (Taste of Living)

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Abby March 16, 2010 at 9:45 am

I can relate so much, but to say I could have written this myself would discredit the eloquence and poignancy to which it has been presented. Unbelievable. I hope I can find the strength that “Joseph” has found, the faith and trust needed to recover.

Thank you “Joseph” and Sophia!

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Nicole G March 16, 2010 at 9:48 am

Wow. I don’t even know how to respond to this. It is raw, honest, inspiring, and so relatable. I felt like he was telling my story as well.

Keep strong Joseph and let God continue to guide you!

Nicole G

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Jen @ Tiny Urban Kitchen March 16, 2010 at 10:40 am

Beautiful post. I really appreciate “Joseph’s” honesty and willingness to share about his struggle as he’s going through it.

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Nicole, RD March 16, 2010 at 11:16 am

You are a beautiful soul, Joseph. This post brought me to tears. I cannot imagine the burden you are carrying with this all and as a nutrition professional, I urge you to continue utilizing the “system” and putting your faith into your support. Good luck to you and thank you for sharing your story.

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Therese March 16, 2010 at 12:14 pm

Wow I am sooo incredibly touched by “Joeseph’s” words. I took had the same moment of struggle sitting in mass on Ash Wednesday. I racked my brains for something “to give up” but realized anything I did give up would be for selfish and vain reasons. Giving up chocolate so I can lose a few pounds will not bring me closer to Jesus.

Instead I am trying my hardest to surrender myself to His plans instead of wasting my days making my own.

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Kristie March 16, 2010 at 12:37 pm

Whoever this Joseph is, he has a powerful and amazingly well-written story to share. Thank you for sharing it with us.

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Laura March 16, 2010 at 1:03 pm

That was the most beautifully written post, thank you Joseph for sharing your story. Having a eating disorder is very difficult to deal with and since its mainly associated with girls, I`m sure being male has made it even more tough.
Nothing I can say can add to your post, it was truely wonderful, so deep and Im really touched reading it.
xox
Laura

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Karyn March 16, 2010 at 1:24 pm

wow this is a very deep & touching post. i can’t even imagine how tough it must be to go through that and also to share it with the world. very brave

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thenomadGourmand March 16, 2010 at 1:46 pm

True, somehow its alws ladies with eating disorders. I’m glad ‘Joseph’ has came forward to share his story. Now, I wonder, how many are there out there tht needs help?

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homecookedem March 16, 2010 at 2:15 pm

To Joseph: One day a male reader will stumble upon this post and will find inspiration and strength in knowing he in not alone. Thank you for sharing with us.

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5 Star Foodie March 16, 2010 at 4:37 pm

A very touching story, Joseph is very courageous to share it with us, truly inspiring!

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Faith March 16, 2010 at 6:02 pm

Wow, I don’t know what to say…that was really beautiful. I’m sure it will reach out and touch the lives of many suffering from eating disorders. Joseph, thank you for your courage in sharing this!

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BroccoliHut March 16, 2010 at 6:04 pm

Very insightful post, Sophia. I’ve always thought that TS Eliot knew his stuff–”Ash Wednesday” is one of my favorites of his.

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Jessie March 16, 2010 at 6:27 pm

I’m hoping that the more stories I read about ED, like yours and Joseph’s, will help me better understand and help someday in my work. Thanks for sharing, Joseph, and showing that ED is not only in girls and women.

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Veronica M. March 16, 2010 at 6:50 pm

I commend “Joseph” for sharing his story and have to say I was really impressed with his writing style–this could have come from a magazine. In fact, I would encourage him to submit it to magazines to be published b/c this isn’t a subject discussed often (at least in relation to males–as you said b/c of social stigma) and it could benefit not only males but females in a similar boat. Seriously brought tears to my eyes and I’m so glad he’s taking steps to overcome the ED and will keep him in my prayers. I like the first commenter who said God doesn’t fight our battles but gives us a sword to do it ourselves. How true–and it looks like Joseph has picked up that sword. Awesome!!!!! Girl, I’m so so so so glad that you have overcome your own and don’t hold back in talking about it–I know you are helping so many who have the same issues and hope they too will give that control back over to God. HUGS.

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AnnQ March 16, 2010 at 7:35 pm

Joseph – What a fantastic, open, heartfelt post. Thank you for sharing.

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Joanne March 16, 2010 at 8:31 pm

Thank you so much for posting this Sophia! I think it’s so easy for us to forget that all of the guys out there struggle with weight and body image in much the same way that girls do. Joseph’s story was beautifully written and my heart is with him as he goes through this tedious and difficult process. I know that all of our faith in him, as well as your help, will get him through.

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Nicole March 16, 2010 at 8:35 pm

“Joseph”, your post was truly beautiful and I admire your strength and courage. It takes a brave soul to do what you did and to write what you wrote. Thank you so much for sharing. I feel honored being able to read your words and to understand just a little bit of where you are coming from and what you are going through. I’m glad you are on the right path and have turned to God for guidance. You are a beautiful soul. Please take care of yourself and stay strong.

Sophia – thank you for sharing “Joseph’s” story with us. I am glad that the two of you were able to find each other and provide support for one another. I think because you have transformed and healed such a great deal from your ED (and because you are such an extraordinary person), God has brought you into “Joseph’s” life. God works in mysterious ways, but He always has a plan.

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clare March 16, 2010 at 8:54 pm

Joseph, I hope that your writing has helped you, and if so may God continue to shine through you via this outlet…because you have helped me tonight. Thank you for sharing your inspiration. The darkness is breaking Joseph, I can feel it and see it in the way you wrote your piece. You WANT the change, you are ready, and you are staying open to the one road that will get you to your peace. Let Him lead you, carry you!

Blessings!

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marla {family fresh cooking} March 16, 2010 at 9:49 pm

Sophia and Joesph, you are both beautiful people. Thank you for being so honest and sharing your lives with us. Without the truth people would feel so alone. It is with this honesty that we can heal ourselves and each other. Too much control can bring chaos to our lives and torture those who love us. Letting go can be so difficult but ultimately so very freeing. Hopefully your message will reach others who are in need of support at this time. We can all learn from you. Best of luck moving forward and we are all here for you, always.

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luvtoeat March 16, 2010 at 10:00 pm

Wonderfully written post. Thank you so much to Joseph for sharing this with us. Hopefully other males with eating disorders will read this one day and know that they are not alone. Joseph, my prayers are with you. Please continue moving forward with your struggles.

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So Spiffy (Girl Japan) March 17, 2010 at 12:58 am

Sophie, that is so deep, and I have “faith” as well but living in a country where only 3% is Christian, is hard to find that “community” I used to LOVE church, the people, making friends there.

How are you now, no pacemaker? Right? You seem to be doing well? I can tell you though, I go in and out of my ED, the plague of guilt after I eat is HUGE. After I gained all that weight from breaking my knee… and almost lost it all…. I’m scared if I miss one day of workout.

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art and appetite March 17, 2010 at 2:11 am

Thanks for sharing this, Sophie and Joseph. The story is very deep and touching. I can now have a better understanding of this eating disorder.

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Blond Duck March 17, 2010 at 3:54 am

What a powerful post.

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Valerie March 17, 2010 at 4:11 am

Thank you, Joseph and Sophia, for sharing this.I read it twice through and it has touched me deeply in a way that words fail to express. It has put into writing what I have been pondering in my mind for the longest time. A different kind of fasting, but a fasting nonetheless. To me, this totally delves into the true spirit of fasting – the surrendering to God’s will and the breaking down of barriers that stand between. Thank you, from the bottom of my heart…

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The Candid RD March 17, 2010 at 4:52 am

Not many people realize that males can suffer from ED. It just, doesn’t seem normal, but it truly is. While women feel more pressure to be skinny, men also have pressures (muscles….they have to have them!) and also pressure to not be fat. I’m glad you posted this fantastic post Sophia. People need to read this, the message needs to be spread.

Do you know what my dad used to say to me when I had an ED? “GINA!! JUST EAT! IT’S NOT HARD!!” He didn’t get it. I hated it when he said that. He’s such a fantastic dad, but he was just as confused as I was….

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Andrea@CeleryITC March 17, 2010 at 5:04 am

this was an absolutely amazing post, I’m not even sure how to respond. I am amazed by how much faith and courage you and “Joseph” have.

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