Not Being the Thinnest Any More—How to Adjust
Coping with a changing body in recovery from anorexia.
By: Emily T. Troscianko
Dear Readers,
Coping with not being thin anymore is the hardest thing one has to go through. One minute you want recovery and your taking the right steps towards recovery and then all of a sudden you get all these crowded thoughts in your mind. Crowded thoughts constitute the experience of having too many thoughts at one time on your weight, body shape and yourself.
ED thoughts on Body Image
Our average thoughts can be controlled to some extent. You can have the thought, and ignore it, if you like. Most thoughts get thrown out as soon as we have them.
ED thoughts and thoughts on body image are not so much like that. Someone doesn’t whisper ED thoughts nor are they typically easy to shed. No, these thoughts on body image are like being yelled at.
In recovery, problem is not the food, the problem is these thoughts. It’s very sad, how you get brilliant people and they are doing so well in recovery and all of a sudden they are like hit by a tornado, a sharp slap on a face with random fast thoughts on body image. At time these thoughts are so horrible, you can’t keep up with them. Before one thought is done another appears. Within split seconds, you label yourself as ‘failure, loser, ugly, fat and worthless.’
These times are the most challenging times in recovery and I often wish there was a magic cure for these hard times. Simply put, these are indescribable experiences. The reality is that your none of these whispers/labels, you are in recovery and your body is healing, recovering. You are looking at your-self from a very negative angle, an angle that belongs to the Demon of ED, you are not looking at your-self from heart’s eye.
‘Goodbye,; said the fox. ‘Here is my secret. It’s quiet simple: one sees clearly only with the heart.’ –
ANTOINE DE SAINT- EXUPERY, THE LITTLE PRINCE.
It’s so important you express these emotions and don’t keep them inside you. In that present moment, you will feel that your ED is not getting any better, but do not allow it to get any worse. These thoughts are unhealthy and often dangerous things. Don’t forget hostility, anxiety, stored-up resentment, guilt and hopelessness can have an impact on your immune system, hormone levels and your overall well being. We experience emotions in our body, not in our head. Impact on the body: Insomnia, high blood pressure, skin and digestive problems, back ache, palpitation and many more. Isn’t this unbelievable how such thoughts can have a power to harm us and our internal system?
Take a moment out and Consider the way you see your body and how this has been shaped by media images and prejudice against weight? WE all have a different genetic make up that gives a diversity of body shapes and images.
As Christinne Craggs Hinton said: “Don’t ever forget that the main objective of the fashion, cosmetic, diet, fitness and cosmetic surgery industries is to make money. The ultra-thin ideal is reaping great rewards for them, but is it working for you?”
These negative thoughts pave a way for us to work on something that is profound: on our body image, self image and self esteem.
Many years ago, someone said to me: How you would prefer to spend your life? Pursuing ‘the perfect body image’ and ‘living in darkness’ or ‘living in light’ and ‘spending time with good positive people?’
I found a brilliant article by Emily T. Troscianko on ‘Not being Thinnest Anymore- How to Adjust.’ She’s a brilliant recovery warrior and let me tell you this, she very bravely defeated the demon of ED, she too had to go through a weight gain and body changes, but she did it, and so can you. Please read this, she’ll make more sense than me and then in my next post, I’ll tell you how I deal with ‘not being the thinnest anymore’.
Happy Reading!
Not Being the Thinnest Any More—How to Adjust
Coping with a changing body in recovery from anorexia.
When you’re recovering from anorexia, it’s one of the most frightening things in the world to realise that you’re no longer the thinnest person in the room. And for it suddenly to be true not just once, but usually. After years of starving yourself, followed by months of regaining the weight you lost in anorexia, there comes a point where you realise that your body no longer looks anorexic: your bones aren’t visible as they used to be, you don’t look brittle enough to break in two, your muscles aren’t wasted away right down to the bone, your face isn’t any longer remarkable mainly for the hollows round the eyes or the concave lines where your cheeks try to connect up with your chin. Maybe you loved those things, or thought you did; maybe you knew you hated them, but you loved and needed what they represented: the illusions of control, strength, and purity that felt so special and precious to you. In any case, when you decided to get better, you decided to obliterate them: to let a protective layer of fat cover your bones and organs again, to let the muscles rebuild themselves, to become again someone that people—and you yourself, in the mirror—can see not as just a sick person but as a person with other, more interesting and less saddening qualities.
But having decided to let, and make, these changes happen doesn’t mean you’ll find it easy when they do, so I thought I’d offer a few thoughts about how to make it a little bit easier. My thoughts split into two strands: the strand that says be gentle and patient with yourself, and the strand that says simply stick rigidly to your plan (i.e. keep eating). They can require somewhat different attitudes, but they come together in the importance of just waiting it out, and waiting for it to be better.
I’ll begin with a diary entry from Christmas Day of 2008, which was a day I remember vividly as one when my new body (I’d been eating more since mid-July, and I weighed about 52 kg, with a BMI of about 18.5) felt very alien to me. The things I wrote then bring together some of what I want to talk about now.
Thursday 25th December 2008, 11:56 pm
Difficult. Lovely food, & I’ve eaten too much—i.e. the right amount, a good amount for Christmas; but the aftermath—or rather, the lull between dinner proper & the leftovers I ate more ravenously & uncontrollably—was difficult, & D [who would soon become my boyfriend]had to help me through it. Or rather, he didn’t have to—but he was able to; & I feel calmer & better for his having rung & texted. I was captivated by one of the awful Corfu photos of me & Sue [my mother], comparing it with those taken on North Sands this morning. I looked deathlike then I know; but can’t help staring, & longing with a great insidious part of myself to be her again. That other sexless joyless creature. D was shocked—had tears in his eyes, he said, when he saw it; a concentration-camp survivor; someone he’d never dare touch—nor one, I said, who would want to be touched by him. I feel again I’ve burdened him with my past; but it’s felt real today, the fear, as I see my fat puffy face in photos where my bones used to give it definition. But he says he likes curves not angles. And Tom [my father]has given me a beautiful dress—yet another long sleeveless thing, wine-coloured silk […]; & I could try on the dress & parade around in it without embarrassment about my arms [being too thin]—even if the photos I thought appalling.
The first thing to be aware of is that everyone in recovery has moments, even whole days, when they feel disgusted by their new, bigger body and long for their former smaller one, when however often they recite all the good reasons for regaining weight, and all the things that this process is and represents besides gaining fat, none of it has any force against the sheer overwhelming feeling of being fat, ungainly, in the wrong body. Sometimes, the only thing to do is cling on to those mantras you should have developed for yourself—all the reasons why anorexia made life intolerable, and all the physical and thereby psychological restoration that the higher numbers on the scales or the tape measure represent—and to wait for the awfulness to pass, which it will, as everything does.

That’s for the worst times. For the rest, and to pre-empt those, a few other thoughts might help. Perhaps most importantly of all, be patient. This all takes time. The early stages of rehydration and restoration of fat deposits may be uneven—you may have a slightly bloated looking face, as I do in the photo above, which in my diary I called ‘fat’ and ‘puffy’, and which now looks terribly terribly tired—illness was exhausting, and recovery was even more so—but with a light of hopefulness in the eyes. Fat may also be deposited preferentially around your middle to begin with, to help protect vital organs. This is perfectly normal, and with time everything will even out, as long as you continue to be strict with yourself, and eat as planned. Remember that the body dysmorphia that often goes with anorexia—hich seems to manifest itself not just in explicit body representations and perceptions but also in automatic motor behaviours (Keizer et al. 2013)—won’t instantly be cured. But it will, with time, and consistent eating and consistent efforts to address its explicit aspects.
At an explicit level, articulated aesthetic ideals will take time to shift from their anorexic incarnations (staring enviously at catwalk models’ upper arms or whatever) to the acknowledgement of beauty in different, healthier kinds of bodies. While your articulated values still lag behind how your body looks, there’ll be all the discomfort of cognitive dissonance as you work towards a kind of body that you’ve spent so long finding reasons to reject—but it’s very important not to attempt to reduce that dissonance by eating less again, and instead to work on reducing it by seeking out and acknowledging alternative, more real, forms of beauty in people whose bodies support rich and varied lives rather than crippling them.
The more you can be patient, and take the long view, the more you’ll be rewarded in the end. My body four years ago, at (or just over) a healthy weight, was nothing like how it is today; part of this is due to the barbell training, but much of it is just time: time for fluid and fat to be redistributed, time for muscles and tendons to grow and be used and further strengthened, time for you to learn how to be at ease in your body and to get to know what it can do and what it can’t (yet). Nothing stays quite the same, ever, whether we want it to or not, but in the years following the restoration of a healthy bodyweight after anorexia, this constant mutability can be a source of delight, manifesting the human body’s miraculous ability to restore itself from the lowest point of deprivation. This depends, again, on bravery and strictness in resisting the urge to restrict and lose weight again because everything isn’t instantly how you’d like it to be. Give your body time, but also give it the best possible chance.
And it sounds awfully clichéd, but try not to fight against how your body is changing; embrace the changes. This is a mental attitude, but it’s one (like all mental states, indeed) that can be nurtured through specific actions. For example, don’t keep trying to wear all the same kinds of clothes you used to when you were ill; lots of them won’t suit you any more (though some may now look much better on you), and clinging to the old styles won’t help you move away from your anorexic body. Enjoy, ideally with other people, the journey of finding out what works for you now, but don’t expect everything to. Another thing that applies specifically to women, and which I found easy to embrace but which for others can be very difficult, is the newly feminine quality of your body, and – as noted in the diary entry – its now potentially sexual character. This was something that I’d completely failed to think about before I began to eat again, so consumed was I by worries about my tummy getting bigger, but the fact that I now began to have breasts again was actually quite a delight. Getting hips again was more difficult, but seeing that side of myself come back into being, and seeing others’ reactions change accordingly, made leaving skeletal behind much easier.
Stopping fighting your body by feeding its appetites again should go hand in hand with a willingness to be kind to it and to relearn how to listen to it. Obvious ways of doing this are things like massage, which can feel wonderful when your body is in the midst of such profound structural change. Slightly further along the line, yoga as part of outpatient treatment for adolescents with eating disorders seems to have beneficial effects on ED symptoms including preoccupation with food and anxiety and depression, with no negative effect on BMI (Carei et al. 2010). I’ve recently taken up yoga again—the last time I tried it I was still very ill—and it’s lovely to feel how it instantly attunes me more delicately to the capacities and limitations, in strength and flexibility, of all the parts of my body, and how it gives a calm context in which to stretch myself, literally and figuratively. Later still, strength training can have similar benefits, along with the added one of making you significantly stronger, with all its attendant benefits for cardiovascular health, bone and joint health, and metabolism. For women, post-anorexic or not, I think that getting physically strong can be a very potent way of declining to buy into anti-feminist equations of thinness (and hence weakness) with beauty, and for men recovering from anorexia, getting strong can be a way of reasserting your masculinity in the way that weight gain more generally naturally re-emphasises femininity. It shouldn’t be done too soon (maybe not till your bodyweight is healthy or close to healthy), and should be done with supervision, but for me, barbell training was a crucial factor in coming to understand, not just in the abstract but through the whole of me, that regaining weight was not just getting fatter, but was a fully constructive process of creating a newly beautiful, capable, dependable body for myself.
Remember that just as you have to contemplate constructing a character for yourself after anorexia, you have to construct a body for yourself too, one that will be what you need it to be for the adventure of being more fully alive in the years to come. Neither your character nor your body can be created from a blank slate, and especially after the control obsessions of anorexia, waiting and seeing what happens can be as empowering an attitude as taking things into your own hands, but the possibilities for what you can now let and help your body become, now it’s no longer trapped in the dangerous tedium of being skeletal and weak, are exhilarating. Enjoy them, with that mixture of strictness and openness which above all says: there’s time.
6 Comments
I plead ignorance on this topic. But thank you for highlighting it. My daughter is 8 and first time I’ve been forced into thinking how I need to stop making weight related jokes around her. I don’t want her to ever think she needs to be thin to be valued.
Thanks Kara, helps to have gorgeous bridesmaids lol. The albums are gorgeous. They come in a silk bag within a proesntatien case and are storybook type albums made in Italy!
One of the biggest causes of negative body image is being surrounded by people who enforce negative views about their own figure. When you’re surrounded by that, especially as a child, you think that it’s normal and healthy. This can be brushed off by many, but others carry it into their lives and that’s what causes eating disorders. It’s so important to keep a positive body image environment around young children, especially girls.
This must be one of the hardest things to deal with while in recovery since your poor self image is one reason that people have eating disorders. Thanks for posting these positive words.
When someone, man or woman, gains weight, or isn’t thin anymore, they need to realize there should not be any worry. My mentality is that I think about myself in that I don’t care what others think. Let them think I’m fat or a bit chunky, what matters is how I feel about myself and I feel awesome. I know it’s hard for those dealing with eating disorders, but it can be done. Also, being thin isn’t the popular thing these days anymore. People are actually embracing their bodies and not caring what others think. That’s how the world needs to work.
I believe that these real life stories are something that make this blog way better than any other .. You should continue doing what you are doing !! Great article !