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BLB_Oregon
Guest
Incidentally, you ought to also be very careful about how you speak to a victim of bulima or anorexia concerning food and eating. If in doubt, don’t! Get professional help. Those are even more complicated diseases and require extreme sensitivity.Been there, tried that. Have avoided all negatives or any thing that approaches criticism, in favor of praise for progess and effort.
Condescending attitude?! Does anyone think for a minute that those of us who resist being overweight or obese are at a loss to understand what it requires–especially as we age, have babies, or even find ourselves with more disposable income than in the past that affords opportunities for dining out, etc? Trust me…I have trudged many a mile towards that effort and resisted plenty of urges to indulge.
I have to wonder if there would be such defensiveness and/or hesitation to speak up if, instead of dealing with obesity, you watched a family member slowly starving himself/herself? How about abusing/misusing/neglecting to take medication necessary to maintain normal functioning? Would we pause to consider whether we might “offend” them before speaking up or trying to remedy the situation?
Eating disorders are generally not simple moral faults that cure themselves by the mere willing it, and they don’t cure themselves once and for all. Unlike alcohol, food is not something that can be avoided entirely. For someone with an eating disorder, keeping the relationship with food healthy is daily work, and usually life-long work. Many try and fail many times before succeeding, and of those who succeed, success is never guaranteed. It can be extremely discouraging, to say the least.
You undoubtedly have a parallel in your own spiritual life–we all do!–so you know what I mean. Put yourself in the position of having your spiritual fault become something that you see in the mirror and in photographs, that some of society finds repulsive and ugly, that others feel a need to bring to your attention “for your own good,” that may in fact be rooted in your deepest unforgiven hurts, and that your loved ones make advance alterations in family gatherings to contend with, and you’ll have the picture. Pretty mortifying, to say the least.
As for “been there, done that”…there is a limit to how much control you have over someone else’s health and spiritual life. Just because your efforts did not change them does not mean that you aren’t doing your part as well as can possibly be done. Sometimes, you are left in the same position as St. Monica was…you have to be patient and keep on praying for continued conversion of heart, for yourself, for those you love, and for those poor souls who seem beyond help, too. You ought not beat yourself up about this, either.