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Emma Woolf

The Ministry of Thin

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  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    Some academic studies claim that up to 80 per cent of patients with eating disorders also have a history of abuse. The links between eating disorders and sexual assault make sense – something about punishing oneself, denying one's own needs, the betrayal of the body, finding a focus for the shame/hurt. Sexual abuse makes them feel intensely guilty, as does food hunger, so they try to deny themselves everything. Victims of sexual abuse often blame themselves, thinking that they must have invited the abuse: they cannot control or punish the offender so they damage their own bodies and punish themselves. The parallels between sexual abuse and disordered eating are logical, when you think about the self-hatred caused by both conditions. (I should say, this hasn't been my experience, nor that of many women I know with EDs, but it's thought-provoking nonetheless.)
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    If nothing else, nothing at all, you've been for a run.
    And there are the rare moments, running through Hyde Park, or along the Embankment, when everything falls into place. Rare moments when my legs and arms are working in perfect coordination, when I'm pushing myself hard but not on the verge of collapse, when a great song comes on and I'm Mo Farah, Jess Ennis and Paula Radcliffe rolled into one. Cue 'Eye of the Tiger'!
    Yes, music helps: for me it has to be something loud and upbeat, and the cheesier the better – Queen, Beyoncé, Black-Eyed Peas or the theme tune to Rocky (anything to block out the sound of my own hyperventilation).
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    And yet I love running (or rather, I love having been for a run); I love being outdoors on freezing winter mornings and on glittering summer dawns; I love being athletic and neat
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    Never admit you are skinny enough.
    2. Binges should only occur a maximum of once every six weeks and must be kept private, if you expect perfection. Purging and excessive exercise MUST follow… otherwise, you're a failure.
    3. Never let your stomach growl. You can control it.
    4. 10 glasses of water a day, 10 sticks of gum, 10 diet sodas, and 10 cups of black coffee must be consumed on a regular basis for your perfect body's essential needs.
    5. Wrist bones are infatuation. Ribs are sexy. Collar bones are beautiful. Hip bones are love. Back bones are submission, but the two bones that connect your ankle to your foot, those are perfection.
    6. Flat stomachs are banned; concave stomachs are the only kind acceptable.
    7. Fast at least 5-7 days every month, and exercise 7 days a week, at least 2 hours a day.
    8. Weigh yourself at least three times a day and hate yourself no matter what the number is.
    9. Never give up on what you want most. Ana loves you only if you're thin.
    10. Recovery is a sin… but sins are forgiven. Remember obesity is a crime and crimes are on your permanent record FOREVER. (Source: theanabelles.blogspot.co.uk)
    These are the thin laws, and it's this kind of madness which fuels the misunderstanding of anorexia. Most people with eating disorders do not think like this. You may think that doesn't make sense at all, but trust me: the Ana Belles and their 'thin laws' are utterly misguided, and I don't agree with a single one. I may have spent several years living on '10 sticks of gum, 10 diet sodas and 10 cups of black coffee' but I've never referred to anorexia as 'ana'. It's a terrible addiction, not a sister or a friend.
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    Female standards of beauty are impossibly high, and male and female expectations are warped by pornography and airbrushing.
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    All this disordered eating and body dysmorphia destroys our self-respect. Peace of mind, when you're at war with yourself, is impossible. In the unlikely event that you do, as a woman, feel OK about yourself these days, you're wrong: there is always someone thinner, fitter, younger and more beautiful. Anyway, as the debacle over Samantha Brick (of whom we'll hear more later) reminds us, it's socially unacceptable to be satisfied with yourself.
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    Look at what the Ministry of Thin can do. It can cause us to hate ourselves, to starve or spend hours in the gym, even undergo risky surgery. It can make us feel inadequate and unattractive, telling us we are failures, and ugly, and weak. It sets us against ourselves, profoundly at war with our own bodies. It imprisons us in a lifelong cycle of weight loss and gain; a war we'll never win, and which will never make us happy.
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    disordered eating is rife, but this is different from an eating disorder. Lots of people are mixed up about food and their bodies, but a diet is still just a diet. Much as I hate to admit it, true anorexia and bulimia nervosa are in a different realm. They're on the other side of madness.
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    Being constantly hungry is no life at all. Getting thinner doesn't make you happy. The more you starve your body, the more you starve your brain, which in turn makes it even harder to manage your emotions or maintain your self-esteem.
  • cvrritchiehas quoted6 years ago
    Anorexia stems from a terrible need for control, an anxiety that if you let go for a minute, you will spin wildly out of control.
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