Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Eating Disorder Healing Through Equine Therapy

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Kristen Zollars, Program Director of Equine Services for Remuda Ranch at The Meadows, recently wrote about Eating Disorder Healing Through Equine Therapy. In this article she addresses how interacting with horses can help one deal with their own emotions and bring about acceptance.

capable of recovery

To read this article in its entirety, please go click here.

Horses are an integral part of our leading-edge treatment. At Remuda Ranch at The Meadows, our patients learn how to be predictable, trustworthy and communicative from the bonds they establish during our Equine Therapy program. For additional information about the treatment of eating disorders, please call to speak to a Counselor at 866-842-1253 and we will contact you with the information you need.

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Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Unhealthy Eating Disorder


Source Link: Unhealthy Eating Disorder

Orthorexia is “an unhealthy obsession with eating healthy food.” This is how Dr. Steven Bratman defined it in 1997 and although it is not a medical diagnosis, it can become a life-threatening disorder. Unfortunately, Orthorexia is hard to identify in its early stages because it simply looks like an admirable desire to eat “healthy.”

An Unhealthy Eating Disorder

It often starts as a simple and positive desire to eat in a more wholesome, nutritious way. The brain chemistry imbalance that causes Orthorexia turns this into a destructive addiction that results in malnutrition and physical and mental harm.

Orthorexia shares some features of both anorexia nervosa and obsessive-compulsive disorder. However, it differs from anorexia nervosa because the sufferer experiences an excessive and compulsive “need” to be “pure,” “clean,” or “natural” as opposed to “thin.” This leads to refusal to eat any foods that do not meet with the individual’s impossible standards. Of course the quest for “perfect” eating is not only unrealistic but unattainable since it not based in reality and the person’s sense of failure reinforces the desire to avoid even more foods.

Signs of Orthorexia

Even though a person with orthorexia may not want to lose weight, the disease nevertheless can cause emaciation or starvation due to food rules, restrictions and avoidance. This malnutrition makes it harder for the individual to recognize the disorder and increases anxiety, which then perpetuates the harmful restrictive eating behavior. Some symptoms of Orthorexia are:

  • Preoccupation with nutrition and diet far beyond that which is necessary for health.
  • Over-reliance on eating in a certain way in order to feel “safe” or “good”.
  • Fear of eating, accidentally eating, or even being around “unhealthy” foods.
  • Experiencing anger or panic while watching others eat “unhealthy” foods.
  • Judging others harshly due to their eating and/or only associating with others who share the same restrictive food rules.
  • Emotional distress or self-harm after eating a food considered “unhealthy”.