Join the Facebook page (see below)According to the BBC website and the Royal Society of Public Health (RSPH): “Labels should be added to food and drink to show how much activity would be needed to burn off the calories consumed, the Royal Society for Public Health says.” When I told my son Ben (who had a lethal exercise addiction when he was sick with anorexia) about this shocking new proposal, he said:”If this had been around when I had my eating disorder it would have killed me, and I mean that. I saw it on the News this morning but didn’t tell you, mum, because I didn’t want to upset you.”Basically it would have given him the ‘green light’ to exercise even more than …
More about why I am donating royalties from my books to ‘Mama Shirls’ hospice
In a nutshell, Shirley (the school nurse I call ‘Sheila’ in my book Please eat…: A mother’s struggle to free her teenage son from anorexia), gave so much to Ben and me during his long battle with anorexia in terms of support, love and someone I could trust to take care of Ben when he was at school that I wanted to give something back.And when I heard her speak on Friday about her voluntary work in Uganda I had a brainwave…The good thing about book royalties (the profits I get from Please eat… and When anorexia came to visit after costs) is that once you’ve written and published the books you don’t have to do anything to get them.Apart from hoping that people …
Download my blog posts on PDF for FREE – 2011-15
At last I’ve put all my blog posts (from 2011 when I began writing about eating disorders in boys up to the end of 2015) onto PDFs. So they’re much easier to read than clicking around Blogger which can be a nightmare. The latter two years – 2014 and 2015 – tend to be a bit more thin on the ground than the other years because, as you will know if you’ve been following my blog, I was struggling with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder type symptoms which hit me at the end of 2013.So throughout 2014 and 2015 I took a bit of a break from writing about eating disorders in boys and my son’s recovery from anorexia while I concentrated on fixing the PTSD problem. It also meant putting on hold …
And while we’re on the subject of BMIs…
My sister pointed out this article about a friend of hers whose healthy, sporty son was sent home with a letter from school telling his mum that he was overweight. This especially incensed the boy’s mother because she herself had been a victim of anorexia as a young woman and understood more than most people about the dangers of the many things that can trigger an eating disorder.There’s a massive conflict at the moment between the drive to do something about the escalating levels of obesity in the UK and the danger that warnings/solutions could trigger the wrong sort of people to lose weight i.e. those predisposed to developing an eating disorder.The thing is, none of the measures which are being rolled out …
Scottish Eating Disorder Interest Group (SEDIG) Carers’ Conference 2016
I may have mentioned this already, but I’m speaking at the Scottish Eating Disorder Interest Group (SEDIG) Carers’ Conference 2016 at the end of next month (Saturday 27th February). The title of my talk will be “Eating disorders aren’t just a ‘girl thing'”; indeed the main thrust of the conference, I believe, will be about eating disorders in males and in particular eating disorders and anorexia in teenage boys.The angle I’m taking for my talk is that not only did it take some time for my husband Paul and I to recognise that our son was developing an eating disorder, because we had no idea that boys got eating disorders just like girls do, but that throughout the whole process – from GP referral through to CAMHS …
What’s the latest news about FBT in Leeds / England?
That’s what I’ll be asking the guy who’s in charge of rolling out FBT (Family Based Therapy) for adolescent eating disorder patients in Leeds when I meet with him on Wednesday. My home city of Leeds is claiming to be a ‘pioneer’ in the rolling out of FBT in England and so I can’t wait to hear what he has to say about plans for FBT being implemented in other parts of England. Already it’s being implemented in Scotland – and England was lagging behind. I’m not sure what the situation is in Wales or Northern Ireland.According to studies and trials, FBT as an outpatient treatment model for adolescents with eating disorders such as anorexia has a higher and more sustained success rate than other treatment models …
I’m finally happy with my Edinburgh talk!
For better or for worse, I’m a terrible micromanager. And you wouldn’t believe the tweaking that’s gone into my script and PowerPoint presentation for the talk I’m doing at the Scottish Eating Disorder Interest Group (SEDIG) Carers’ Conference 2016 at the end of next month (Saturday 27th February). But I think I finally sorted it out. I think the main problem with my talk (which is called “Eating disorders aren’t just a ‘girl thing'”) is that I’ve got such a massive story that condensing it into just 25 or 30 minutes has been a bit tricky, to say the least! I’m not just talking about my son’s descent into and recovery from anorexia, I’m also talking about how he’s getting along now and also looking at what helped and what …
Yet another anti-obesity proposal that could be lethal for eating disorder victims
Even Adolphe Quételet,who invented the BMI formula,warned of its limitationsA major reason why I believe that my son’s eating disorder wasn’t taken as seriously as it should have been by clinicians from the GP upwards is because his BMI was still within the so-called “normal” range, despite the fact that he’d lost about a quarter of his original body weight.Just as damaging, was the fact that my son’s BMI was calculated in front of him at virtually every CAMHS session. So he was constantly being given the message that he was kind of okay and didn’t need to put on much, if any, weight. Because if he did put on weight, he’d be getting “too fat”. So, for eating disorder victims and especially …
It’s just life… going on as normal. Good normal. Just like anyone else.
Over this last week, my son and I have gone through a heck of a lot. Not to do with his (now thankfully gone) eating disorder, but to do with a GIRL. Let me explain…Recently he’s met this girl and he really likes her. A lot. But last weekend she was behaving a little off-hand and he was convinced that she was trying to dump him. So we went through all of that… all the usual heartbreak plus the added worry (in my mind) that something like this could ping him into relapse – or worse. And of course no one likes to see their child upset, eating disorder or no eating disorder.But the story so far is that she’s been poorly, which is …
So much going on at the moment!
If you look back on my blog posts over the last couple of years, you’ll notice that they were a bit thin on the ground for a while. That was because of the Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, etc which suddenly hit me about 27 months ago and which meant that I had to take a break from anything to do with eating disorders because I found it very triggering.Thanks to the fourth set of therapy sessions (care of the NHS!), I seem to have finally come out the other end. I still have issues with anxiety, but am pretty much able to manage this using all the various CBT/mindfulness tools that I’ve learned along the way. Unfortunately I haven’t been able to fix the nightmares …
So how was my meeting with the guy from Leeds CAMHS?
My home city of Leeds is one of the first areas in England which is pioneering FBT (Family Based Therapy) as the primary model for treating adolescents with eating disorders in the city. It all goes back to Chancellor Of The Exchequer George Osborne’s Autumn Statement in 2014 when he promised an extra £2 billion a year of additional funding for the NHS across various services including mental health. Leeds was one of the authorities that applied for funding and they were successful in their bid. So some of this funding is being used to roll out a new service for adolescents with eating disorders within the Leeds postcode area.Hopefully, the new service will “go live” at some point this year, but I’m not sure when. Meanwhile …
SEDIG Conference in Edinburgh was really good
On Saturday afternoon I spoke at the SEDIG (Scottish Eating Disorders Interest Group) conference in Edinburgh about my family’s experience of getting my son through anorexia. It was great to see so many dedicated people together from across Scotland – mainly parents who are still struggling with an eating disorder in the family but also one or two clinicians, and the speakers, chaired by the amazing Dr Jane Morris, Consultant Psychiatrist, Eden Unit, Aberdeen.Everyone who spoke at the conference is doing an incredible job to raise awareness of the issue of eating disorders – and in the afternoon the focus was primarily on eating disorders in males, so it was great to see Sam Thomas from Men Get Eating Disorders Too and Paul Donald from Men …