Depression, self-harm and suicidal thoughts
This section includes people describing their experiences of depression, self-harming and suicidal thoughts which some people might find upsetting or distressing to read. All the...
People often think that eating disorders develop because people are worried about their weight or unhappy with how they think their body looks (negative body image). In fact, eating disorders develop for psychological reasons such as difficulty coping with negative thoughts and emotions and low self-confidence. People can focus on the way they look later on and a negative body image can keep an eating disorder going once it has developed. Overcoming negative body image is often the last challenge in recovery.
Only a few people we spoke with felt that their eating disorder had started off as wanting to lose weight, be more ‘slim’, ‘toned’ or ‘muscular’. This often changed as people became more ill: weight loss became an obsession or habit and some people who hadn’t been aware of their bodies before, became more body-conscious.
Body-image, or the way people think about their physical appearance, was closely linked to self-confidence and how people felt about themselves more generally. Some had felt ‘ugly’ or ‘fat’ and that they couldn’t look themselves in the mirror. A negative body-image was commonly tied up with an overall feeling of being ‘undeserving’ or ‘a failure’.
People’s view of their body could be different from the way others saw them. People’s view of themselves could become highly inaccurate. Some people had body dysmorphia’ an anxiety disorder where people have a distorted view of their appearance and worry excessively about it. . When ill, some people struggled to believe it when people told them that they were underweight or looked ‘ill’. David recognised he had a ‘warped’ self-image and Fiona-Grace knew her view of herself was ‘unrealistic’. Others had always known that they were underweight’ Felicity says she never had ‘a distorted’ view of herself and knew when she was too thin.
People had addressed their body issues through counselling, therapy and workshops. Often their body-image started to improve as people were recovering and feeling better about themselves overall. This often remained the last challenge to overcome after their weight was at a healthy level and people’s mindset and thought patterns started to change.
(For more about how people got better see ‘Working towards recovery‘.)
This section includes people describing their experiences of depression, self-harming and suicidal thoughts which some people might find upsetting or distressing to read. All the...
Although eating disorders are mental health problems they can also have serious effects on the body. Besides weight loss or changes in weight, there are...