Eating Disorders
Articles
In Treatment What Comes First:
Bingeing or Feelings?
by Joanna Poppink, M.F.T.
Recently a colleague asked me, "Do you try to get your clients to
diminish their bingeing behaviors from the beginning of therapy, before you
together have explored the feelings that are fueling that behavior? I know
there are differing views on this, and I would be interested in hearing
yours."
When I heard this question, several points of equal value, in my opinion,
arrived simultaneously in my mind concerning therapy work with eating
disorder patients. Since writing is linear I can only communicate one point
at a time. Please understand that these considerations are simultaneous.
My first thought was that I don't try to 'get' my clients to do anything.
I want them to heal and develop the capacity to live a fulfilling and
satisfying life. But what that means to them and how they specifically
accomplish that falls into the realm of their personal values, decision
making and evolution.
Therefore I do not address the bingeing or purging in terms of control in
any way. Often it's the new client who is quite active in wanting immediate
results in terms of stopping both bingeing and purging behaviors. In fact,
I'm usually the one who is putting forth effort, gentle and consistent, to
create an environment where we focus more on our newly forming relationship.
To me, a rush to focus on behavior undermines the therapy before it has a
chance to begin, regardless of whether that focus comes from me or my
patient. Once we have a relationship based on earned trust, we can be allies
and look together at feelings and behaviors that need attention.
From my experience I see that many clients with active eating disorders
have built up in their minds, before their first appointment, what they
think therapy is supposed to accomplish for them, and how it will all
unfold. Women come in determined to obliterate their binge or binge/purge
behavior. They are also terrified that I will somehow make that obliteration
happen and that they must surrender to 'the all powerful one' (the
therapist). Many feel that going to therapy means facing some kind of
terrible criticism or punishment as well as forces of demand and control.
Often the first way a new eating disorder client presents herself shows
how much she wants help and how terribly afraid she is at the same time.
I've described some of them below. All of them represent how the client is
rallying her courage to begin therapy. She is trying to protect herself and
come forward for help at the same time. This requires courage. She doesn't
need more stress by my attempting to control her in any way.
Ways of first presenting include:
1. Subservient Patient conveys a willingness to do anything the therapist
says.
2. Combative anger Patient is ready to fend off the therapist's perceived
and imagined power and commands.
3. Defeatist Patient feels she's already failed before psychotherapy work
even begins. She is certain she will fail in any program she thinks the
therapist will attempt to establish.
4. Childishly cute and manipulative Her strategy is to outwit the
therapist's plans while getting attention and love at the same time.
5. Superiority She will listen to perceived controls and ideas coming
from the therapist but acts as if the therapist is a puny force compared to
her sophistication and intelligence.
All these stances are manifestations of patient terror caused by the
thought of being bereft of an eating disorder. They demonstrate power of the
client's guilt, fear, shame and despair in terms of maintaining their eating
disorder.
Since most new clients are certain they are going to face some kind of
painful punishment or criticism in therapy, their coming to that first
appointment is a tremendous act of hope and courage. These various stances
help them show up for that first appointment despite their fear. Behind each
of these stances is a frightened, hopeful and very brave person.
So as far as which comes first in our conversation, bingeing or purging,
I don't focus on either. The client may be stressed to the maximum just by
being present for the first appointment.
I focus more on creating a relaxed atmosphere where the patient and I can
begin to develop a relationship that is based on earned trust, genuine
interest in the remarkable puzzle of her eating disorder, deep respect and
compassion for her struggle and shared curiosity about what triggers an
episode.
Clients usually feel terrible guilt about their bingeing and purging.
They criticize themselves severely for these behaviors. They set impossible
goals for themselves in terms of stopping. They feel hopeless and despairing
when these goals are not met. In my opinion they need their eating disorder
behaviors in order to maintain whatever lives they have going because they
don't have any other coping mechanisms that are as effective.
If I have an agenda for them that includes their stopping or diminishing
their bingeing or purging I may run the risk of accentuating their feelings
of guilt, self criticism, sense of failure and despair. I believe this is
why so many people with eating disorders leave therapy. The increased burden
of negative feelings about themselves becomes intolerable.
Once a bulimic patient in my practice said she thought she wasn't making
any progress because she was still bingeing and throwing up and, after all,
we'd been seeing each other once a week for two months.
Because we had developed a friendly way of talking about her bulimia, as
if we were talking about a third friend with rather curious habits, I could
say, "Isn't that just like bulimia? You want results immediately."
She laughed and said, "I'm like that about everything. I have to have
everything work out perfectly and right now." So we had a moment together,
in harmony with one another, as we both appreciated one of the symptoms of
bulimia.
I was also demonstrating to her that she is not her bulimia. She was
beginning to understand that symptoms of bulimia are not character traits.
They are symptoms of an illness and different from her deep and unique
identity. She can recover from an illness and no longer manifest those
symptoms. Her identity will remain and can blossom.
Then I asked her, "If I did have the power to take your bulimia away
right now (and we both know I don't), but if I did, what do you suppose that
would be like for you?"
She said, "I wouldn't like it. I'd hate it. I think I would be very
frightened and not know what to do with myself."
So then the conversation turned to the fact that bulimia exists to help
her take care of herself. Even if we could, we would not take away a defense
that would leave her defenseless. Our plan was to create an opportunity,
through understanding, to develop beyond her current limits. Then she could
use other methods to care for herself that are far more useful and healthful
than the symptoms of bulimia.
Her developing an easy manner with me so she could talk about her bulimia
without guilt or shame (at least not overwhelming guilt or shame) gave her a
platform on which to stand to gain internal equilibrium in the face of her
symptoms. It gave her the experience, often a first experience, of being
with a trustworthy companion who is a witness to her growing strength and
awareness and validates her healing and maturation. And it stimulated a
curiosity about herself and her symptoms, often leading to quite courageous
steps as she learned to tolerate painful feelings rather than acting out
through bulimia.
Sometimes a client and I together do a little problem/puzzle
solving. For example, to a bulimic many events, both business and social,
seem to be centered around food. When these events involve the presence of a
bulimia triggering person (such as a parent or parental figure) the patient
may only know about bingeing and throwing up as a way to get through the
experience. We talk about how she might anticipate those feelings and plan
ahead for caring for herself so bingeing and purging might not be as
necessary.
Over time, as I think you can see from the gradual development of this
style of working, the patient is explores her feelings that are associated
with bingeing and purging. There is no failure involved. Sometimes she'll
binge and purge and sometimes she won't. Sometimes an episode will be quite
severe. None of this is success or failure in my eyes and eventually it
isn't in hers either. All of these incidents become opportunities to
discover and develop more self understanding, personal strength and new ways
to care for herself that serve her better than the bulimia which she is
outgrowing.
Of course, a lot more is involved in treating bulimia, but this is a
beginning response to your question, "What comes first?" What comes first is
respectfully being with each other so the client can develop the ability to
be respectful of herself.
References
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