Healthy Living

Friday, December 4, 2009

Are you a disordered eater?

http://cache.lifehacker.com/assets/resources/2007/01/200%20calories%20of%20celery.png
Tonight, I'll be accepting an award from the Newswomen's Club of New York for a story SELF ran last May, called The Disorder Next Door. While it's exciting to get the kudos, it's especially gratifying to see the media shine a light on an issue that affects millions of women: disordered eating.

According to the SELF-University of North Carolina survey--a poll of over 4000 women--6 out of every 10 women suffers from some form of disordered eating, falling into one of these categories: A Food Addict, a Calorie Prisoner, a Secret Eater, a Career Dieter, a Purger or an Exercise Addict. So what is disordered eating? It's eating behavior and thoughts about food and weight that are unhealthy for a woman's body and psyche. A disordered eater isn't someone who has a bona-fide eating disorder (anorexia, bulimia, binge disorder), but she doesn't view food and eating normally, either. A non-disordered eater, for example, eats when she's hungry, stop when she's full, and doesn't engage in extreme behaviors (meal skipping, fasting, diet pills) to control her weight. A disordered eater, on the other hand, might spend 50 percent of her day thinking about food and her weight, perhaps going to extremes to control it (restricting her calories below what is healthy, or cutting out whole food groups).

Perhaps you--or someone you know--fits this description. To find out if you might be at risk for disordered eating, take our quiz. The good news is that once you ID the behaviors that aren't healthy or that are interfering with your happiness and enjoyment of eating (it's a pleasure, afterall!), you can work your way toward the healthier end of the spectrum.

The antidote to disordered eating? Finding your Happy Weight, the weight your body can healthfully stay at without you having to obsess over every calorie (or every curve). Check out these tips on how to find your weight and celebrate your gorgeous self.

Image via WiseGeek

MORE FROM SELF:
Syndication:

From the Community…

Comments 21-24 of 24
  • Brandia's Avatar
    Posted by Brandia Sun Jul 5, 2009 7:47am PDT

    I scored a 40, but I am bulimic with some anorexic tendencies. I hate it! All day I think of food, eating, not eating, weight,exercise, and the scale. I've been good lately, I am doing some self recovery, and I haven't purged in almost two weeks. However, most of that's because I've been sick and in bed for a week until today. I HATE IT!

    Report Abuse
  • Michelle's Avatar
    Posted by Michelle Sun Jul 5, 2009 8:18am PDT

    I scored a 30 Sure wish I knew what the scoring info is...

    Report Abuse
  • MarciaT's Avatar
    Posted by MarciaT Sun Jul 5, 2009 10:43am PDT

    Does emotional eating fall into the definition of disordered eating? Check out my blog, I recently posted an entry about emotional eating.

    Report Abuse
  • Mhu Cao's Avatar
    Posted by Mhu Cao Sun Jul 5, 2009 4:52pm PDT

    6/10 people have some form of psychiatric disorder. Dysfunctional eating may be merely a symptom. Depression and anxiety often are underlying problems. Unless they are acknowledged and effectively treated, the eating disorder will be difficult to overcome.

    Report Abuse
Comments 21-24 of 24

leave your comment

You must sign in to post a comment

Sign In for personalized information

New User? Sign Up

Health Byte

Tune in to our fitness forecast! These are the top ten exercise trends for 2010.