Hope, Help, and Healing for Eating Disorders by Dr. Gregory L. Jantz
Author:Dr. Gregory L. Jantz [Jantz, Gregory L.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 978-0-307-72939-2
Publisher: The Crown Publishing Group
Published: 2010-10-05T00:00:00+00:00
DAMAGE TO THE FLESH
Your body is paying a heavy price for an eating disorder. If you are bulimic and use laxatives or vomiting to purge, your skin is probably quite dry and frequently breaks out in small rashes and pimples. If your salivary glands havenât yet become enlarged because of your constant vomiting, they could.
If youâre bulimic or anorexic, you probably experience continual constipation and intestinal bloating because you either donât keep down enough food to pass through your system or simply donât eat enough to trigger elimination. You may also have swollen, puffy hands and feet brought about by an electrolyte imbalance. For anorexics, this is because of malnutrition; for bulimics, vomiting or laxative abuse. If you compulsively overeat, your extra weight is putting a strain on nearly all your bodyâs systems and setting you up for future health problems. If you only eat from a small list of safe foods, you deprive your body of the proper range of vital nutrients. If you constantly defer to unhealthy food choices, you ask your body to accommodate too much fat, salt, sugar, preservatives, and chemical additives. If you yo-yo dietâindulging one day or one week or one month and then restricting yourself the next, you create a systemic strain where your body is forced to accommodate either too much or too little with no balance in between. These are not easy things to say or read, but you need to know the truth.
Your eating disorder or pattern of disordered eating today will affect your body tomorrow. One such effect is the slowing down of your metabolism. You have a unique metabolic rate that has become unbalanced by your lifestyle choices. Down the road, this can result in weight problems years after your disordered eating patterns have been overcome. Your body can readjust itself in time, but the longer you continue in this destructive behavior, the more difficult it will be for your body to reestablish its proper functions.
If you are an anorexic woman, your self-starvation will lead to a complete loss of your menstrual period, if it hasnât already. Rigorous exercise, emotional ups and downs, even bingeing and purging can also shut down your bodyâs reproductive systems. It knows something is wrong, even if you donât, and itâs not about to take any chances with pregnancy. With menstrual loss comes estrogen loss, resulting in loss of calcium to your bones. Too much calcium loss can result in osteoporosis, or brittle-bone disease, later in life. Many young anorexics develop the bones of an eighty- or ninety-year-old.
If youâre bulimic, the bitter acid from gastric juices washes over your teeth when you vomit and destroys enamel that can never be replaced. If you continue your eating habits long enough, your teeth will be irreparably damaged and will require either crowns or replacement by dentures. What teeth you retain will be more susceptible to cavities because of weakened enamel.
If you use laxatives to purge, either exclusively or in addition to vomiting, there is added damage to your digestive system and bowels.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
What's Eating Us by Cole Kazdin(109)
No Apologies by Niamh Orbinski(91)
Recover from Eating Disorders: The Homeodynamic Recovery Method, Step by Step Guide by Gwyneth Olwyn(77)
The Self-Worth Path: A Guided Journey to an Empowered Life by Papez Lisa(69)
Dancing with a Demon by Valerie Foster(65)
I'm So Effing Hungry by Amy Shah(65)
The Predatory Lies of Anorexia by Abby Kelly(64)
The Psychology of Overeating by Kima Cargill(58)
Hope, Help, and Healing for Eating Disorders by Dr. Gregory L. Jantz(54)
Eat with Joy by Stone Rachel Marie;Wirzba Norman;(52)
Man Up to Eating Disorders by Andrew Walen(51)
Think More, Eat Less by Janet Thomson(50)
A Fat Girl's Manifesto by Cyr V. Daniel(50)
Good Girls: a Story and Study of Anorexia by Hadley Freeman(48)
Lessons from the Fat-o-sphere by Kate Harding(46)
The Parent's Guide to Eating Disorders by Jane Smith(43)
Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Obesity: A Clinician's Guide by Zafra Cooper Christopher G. Fairburn Deborah M. Hawker(41)
Body in Mind: a New Look at the Somatosensory Cortices : A New Look at the Somatosensory Cortices by Michael Schaefer(40)
Class Change by MentalCrash(39)