Dear journalists: please try harder
I have much sympathy out there with journalists and reporters, seeing as I am one of them from time to time. Writing on deadline is difficult. Eating disorders are subjects that are fraught with meaning, are not well understood by most people, and are amazingly easy to inadvertently sensationalize. And it is the so-called "meaning" of eating disorders that has me the most tweaked about two stories that I read about today.
One, from CBS titled "Tweens Starving for Perfection," had me annoyed from the title. An eating disorder is NOT ABOUT starving for perfection! It passes along the subtle but absolutely incorrect idea that starving or losing weight will make you perfect--or at least "better." Second of all, I understand very well that an eating disorder can take on meaning in the context of our individual lives. My own experiences have meaning, and so do everyone's, eating disordered or not. But my symptoms (starving, purging, over-exercising) weren't meaningful. They were the result of an illness, not a conscious desire to look better.
I see exactly where people get confused. Hell, I was confused and mired in a cesspool of potential meaning and uninterpreted histories for several years. It was only when I was told, over and over like Robin Williams did to Matt Damon in "Good Will Hunting," that anorexia was a brain disease and these actions were symptoms of an illness. They weren't me trying to express myself on a subconscious level- the only thing they meant was that I had an eating disorder.
Only, humans like to explain things. Think of how many creation stories out there address the question of "Who are we and where did we come from?" Eating disorders are baffling illnesses, both to loved ones and to the sufferer. When I was freaked out by my OCD symptoms in high school, I thought I was being punished for some unknown transgression by the Big Guy in the Sky. It was the only way I could make sense of it. As I went looking for an explanation for my intense fear of food, some of these ideas like "control" and "perfection" made a lot of sense. I freely admit I like to control my world and anyone who has ever met me can attest to my perfectionism. It did kind of make sense.
But my OCD wasn't punishment for a sin, and my anorexic symptoms were largely meaningless. Finding meaning doesn't bring recovery. Finding meaning may be psychically helpful, but I've found it largely useless in getting better. Incorporating your experience into your life story, weaving them into your own personal narrative and giving that some meaning- this is useful. Tremendously so, as I have done it and continue to do it. But that's not the same as saying I was starving for perfection. I was starving because I had anorexia, period.
Many of my complaints about the CBS story can be echoed with respect to this story from ParentsCanada called "Dying to Fit In: Do you know what your tween is not eating?" Schizophrenia is not dying to hear more voices, and depression isn't dying to be sad. Diabetes isn't dying for higher blood sugar, and cancer isn't dying for a larger tumor. An anorexic isn't starving for perfection and they're not dying to fit in. They're just starving and dying. And the sooner we can strip away this false meaning, the better we can get aggressive treatment and nutrition for the people who need it the most.
Raising awareness of eating disorders, especially in age groups where you might not be actively looking for them, is good. But please, try just a little harder. Please. It matters.
(Also see Laura Collins' excellent analysis of the CBS story here)










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