Eating Disorder Recovery Remains Hard Even With New Advances
Despite numerous new avenues for eating disorder treatment, recovery remains challenging. It takes effort, perseverance and resilience to move through the process and get better.
I have written about the way new medications might be a useful tool, how concomitant medical diagnoses may inform treatment and how access to all forms of care can be beneficial. None of these changes affect the fundamental challenges in recovery.
Eating disorders reflect a profound change in eating behaviors from hunger and fullness cues to meal/snack structure to the underlying purpose of eating. Food is also a basic necessity for human survival, so much of the thoughts and behaviors around food are encoded deeply and unconsciously in our brain function. We delude ourselves into thinking we have conscious control of eating only to realize how much our bodies dictate how and when we eat.
Although new directions for treatment seem promising on the surface, none of them address the subconscious nature of how we eat. In order to change the embedded behaviors, we need to make consistent, conscious effort to change unconscious patterns.
For example, walking is largely an unconscious activity. One can change one’s gait in time but only with concerted effort to change every step until the new pattern becomes unconscious.
Much of eating disorder recovery is about similarly changing a deeply encoded pattern. The added issue is that the person needs to find motivation to do laborious work and forgo the very strong emotional benefits that come with behaviors.
Recovery demands the desire to find new ways to manage emotions, the effort to change eating patterns and the willingness to work on both of these endeavors day in day out until one becomes capable of managing emotions and food more comfortably.
No medication, medical diagnosis or program will replace the necessary steps to get better. Even though I continue to learn about all the ways someone with an eating disorder can recover, the fundamental path of recovery remains unchanged. People can get better and need to commit to the longterm process and know that they can be well on the other side.