Facebook Pixel

Bulimia Triggers Can Lead to Food, Isolation, Sex and Danger

 
Rate This

This article is my attempt to bring understanding to this painful, desperate and all too common experience in the life of a bulimic woman. Please share your comments as we develop more understanding together. I also wrote this because articulating a burdensome secret can help the secret holder know she can be understood and accepted. She just might experience a new sense of validated hope.

Bulimia before recovery work
Trigger: Your roommate goes out of town for a week.

Action: Bulimic episode

Why? You don’t know. You don’t seem to have a choice.

Day One: You are on your own. You like the freedom. The apartment is all yours at last. You also feel the apartment is less familiar. You feel you are somewhat of an intruder and are getting away with something. You eat dinner in the living room in front of the TV. You don't clean up. You binge and throw up your roommate's ice cream.

Day Two: You continue to eat in the living room while watching TV. You leave your dishes on the coffee table and food wrappers on the floor. You drop your clothes and papers where they fall. You leave food and open food packages scattered on the kitchen counter.

Day Three: You don’t notice that you avert your eyes to the mess that is building. You do not see the turmoil you are creating.

Days Four to Six: You feel lonely, disgusted, helpless and despairing. You eat to comfort yourself, and you feel fat and ugly. You binge and throw up more often throughout the days and nights.

Day 6 p.m. or Day 7 a.m. The night before your roommate returns you clean up in a panic. Maybe you clean up the morning of the day she is returning. You scrub down the bathroom and wonder if you missed anything.

Day 7 continued: Your roommate returns. You attempt to act like a normal person. You feel like a fraud. You feel anxious that she will notice something odd, something you missed in your clean up frenzy. If she makes a comment, like, “Oh, I’m so glad I have some ice cream,” you feel sick and relieved. She doesn’t know you binged and purged her ice cream. She doesn’t know you replaced the container. She certainly doesn’t know you meticulously ate just enough of that replacement container ice cream so it would appear to be the original. You feel sick and lonely. You feel removed from her, this person you believe you can fool so easily. She becomes less real in your eyes. You become less real to yourself. You want to withdraw. You probably leave. You don’t ask her about her experiences while she was away.

Day 7 continued: You tell her you have to be someplace (anyplace) and head out the door. Once on your own you feel quick relief, then anger and then anxiety. You head for your nearest binge supplier: Chinese restaurant, fast food place, bakery, ice cream or frozen yogurt shop. All the while you are figuring where and how you can purge quickly after you binge because you are not ready to go home.

Sex and Doughnuts
Dangerous Sexual Encounters as Part of Bulimic Episode

Day 7 continued p.m. You are out the door. With firm, fast steps you head for your car. blood surging through your veins, heart pounding, stomach vibrating, electrical energy pouring out of your cells, you can almost hear your body humming. You get in the car, turn the ignition and love the engine roar.
It matches your own internal roar. You pause looking straight ahead with hands on the steering wheel. You don’t know where to go. You drive anyway. You’ve got to feel you are going in some direction, feel some motion.

Possible Scenarios
I. You call a man.
You don’t call a woman because you want intense holding. You want someone to be glad to match your energy. To your way of thinking this must be a man. An available man answers the phone – a former lover, a current lover, a barely known man who has flirted with you. If he is sympathetic and welcoming you drive to his place. You are as seductive as you can so he will hold you. You want his touch to become intense.

You surprise him by pushing the experience, without preamble, into a sexual encounter. He may go for it. If he does, you feel relieved by the holding and scared by his sexual intensity. You feel lonely and isolated as you pretend arousal you don’t feel to evoke more impersonal performance in him. You are numb to any erotic feelings. No matter who he is he seems like a stranger during and after the encounter. Not only does he seem alien to you, but you barely have a sense of who even you are.

You may leave immediately. You may try to turn him and the experience into some kind meaningful relationship. You play act. You may actually believe you are in the middle of a committed relationship that will last forever and at the same time feel like a moving mannequin.

Despite a sense of artificiality, you will yearn for him to call and days later feel heartbroken and bereft because he hasn’t. Or you will feel heartbroken, bereft and disbelieving if he does call and simply wants another unadorned sexual encounter. You may be horrified, heartbroken and bewildered if he calls and offers you a sexual encounter with his buddy or with a group of his associates.

II. You’re in the car driving. You can’t think of anyone to call.
You still are in the state where you want someone to be glad to be with you and match your energy. You want relief. Where is this man?

You stop at a bar or a restaurant that has a bar. You walk in and measure the men who might be candidates for what you want. You might have a tiny flash of eye contact. You sit at the bar and don’t look at anyone.

A man or men come forward to talk. One sends you a drink from across the room. You like that. It feels caring and glamorous. You feel that someone has seen you and wants to find you. You feel unlovable, clumsy, ugly and awkward. You hope that you can be seen as beautiful, desirable and lovable. You want to be held and cherished out of your pain.

Now what?
Depending on how lost you are in your bulimic episode – yes, this is still bulimia even though food is not in the picture right now – you will talk the candidate. Or you will make out with him in a car in the parking lot. Or you will drive with him to a secluded spot nearby and have sex in the car. Or you will go to a motel for sex. Or you could go to one of these places and get raped by him or by more than just him if he’s the kind of man who would call his friends to join in.

You could feel held while a group of others use you sexually. If so you feel hidden and lost by the fervor or grim determination of their actions, numb to any kind of eroticism and hopeful that somewhere in this experience you will find the sensation you desperately believe you want and need. You struggle to close down your mind when you feel isolated with these strangers whose voices, bodies and hands are unfamiliar. And at the same time you hope that somewhere in this chaotic, sensual, frightening and exciting mélange is the man who will know you, satisfy you, recognize you, love you and protect you forever. (You are very lucky if you don't get badly hurt.)

Day 8 early morning:

He or they get dressed and leave. He or they may or may not say good-bye. Or you get up, get dressed and leave. You might feel sad that he or they don’t ask for your phone number. Or, if he or they ask for your phone number, you feel a crawly feeling and don’t want to give it. Or, you fight against that crawly feeling hoping that your feelings are wrong and that he or they really do care about you and will give you another opportunity to find the holding love and care you desperately seek. You are stunned if he mispronounces your name or forgets your name entirely.

Maybe you got hurt, and are embarrassed that you are in pain. Maybe you are shocked if someone offers you money. Maybe you are shocked because you want them to.

Day 8 continued: You get in your car. On your drive home you stop at a bakery. You carefully select, one by one, a dozen doughnuts of different flavors. In the car, you eat every doughnut as you drive home.

Day 8 continued: You quietly let yourself in to your apartment. You run water in the bathroom to hide sound. You throw up the doughnuts. Exhausted, you collapse on the bed, fully clothed, on top of the covers and pass out.

Day 8 through 10: You are groggy, feel unreal, quick tempered, guilty, dirty, ugly and fat for days. You withdraw from people physically or emotionally or both. If you must you interact with others while telling the lie with your body and mind that everything in your life is fine.

You tell no one what happened during your bulimic episode and do your best to forget it yourself. You keep yourself consciously removed from your experience by binging and purging every day. You wait for someone to call you and make your life right. No one does.

Certainly not everyone with bulimia acts out their illness as I describe here. But many do match this scenario and many scenarios are much worse. At least in the descriptions I gave here, the woman got home. I wrote the full bulimic episode description to make clear that bulimia covers a territory far more vast than eating behaviors.

From Being Lost to Being Found: The woman I depict in this article is lost and desperately needs to be found. She is raw and vulnerable. She has no access to inner strength and no ability to recognize healthy, kind people who might support and guide her through her challenges. At some point we can hope that one day when she wakes up, she will feel her usual guilt, shame, fatigue, loneliness and, maybe, for the first time, a determination to not go any lower than this.

If she hits her bottom, she’ll look up for her way out. She'll kick off from that bottom, perhaps on hope and determination alone. But that's enough to get started for her way out. And that way does exist.

Once she is open to even the possibility of recovery, she will ask the questions and see some hints of answers that will lead her to her recovery path. Many people in my profession devote their lives to eating disorder recovery work. See Academy for Eating Disorders and International Association of Eating Disorder Professionals. Overeaters Anonymous provides help and support all over the world for people who are willing and able to move on their recovery path. Empowher.com offers an array of helpful resources created by dedicated people who can help a woman begin her way to a better life. We are here, ready to take that call.

(This article may raise many questions for readers. I hope you will ask them in the comment section as well as share your responses. The underlying issues involved in bulimia are deep and complex. If I can't answer your question simply in the comment section, perhaps I might be able to devote a longer article specifically to issues you may raise.)

Add a Comment15 Comments

(reply to Anonymous)

You raise important and sensitive issues. The experience of being touched is varied, even among people who are not struggling with any kind of disorder at all. We use some form of the expression, "That was touching," to mean that we have emotions about something, that we feel vulnerable and moved by something.

The woman with bulimia or other eating disorders struggles with body image, body shape and size, weight gain and loss, bloating and cramps. Her body is a battle ground, and the feeling of battle is familiar.

Feeling soothed by physical touch requires a sense of safety and trust. The woman must be capable of allowing herself to be vulnerable. A woman with little or no recovery from bulimia is frightened of her own vulnerability. She is already being courageous and as vulnerable as she can manage by working with her psychotherapist.

At some point in her recovery work, however, body work is very helpful, as long as it occurs with sensitivity and at the right time for her. For example, I sometimes will recommend that a patient take a yoga class. If she takes a class and can tolerate the experience, I will suggest that she wear something that leaves some part of her body exposed. Usually she has been wearing sweat pants and a sweat shirt or loose t shirt. She will looked startled and worried when I make this suggestion.

I explain: I want you to have an experience of skin on skin. Yoga offers you many poses where you are holding yourself. Find a way to wear something you can bear so that in some of the poses you are holding your own body and feel your own skin.

This is a beginning, incorporating breathing and a body accepting environment with touch at the most non threatening level and where she is in complete control.

Baths, jacuzzis, showers, warm sun, breezes on bare skin are other physical activities that help bring her to her body experience in a soothing and pleasurable way, again with no threat. She will know when she is ready for a massage or body work of some kind. These experiences can be wonderfully therapeutic because they introduce a kind of body awareness and emotional connection with body that is strange and unknown to her.

It's not unusual for women to cry during yoga classes or during a massage without knowing why.

I love it when a woman gets comfortable enough in her body to dance. But we have to be careful about movement in treatment. Dance can take the form of exercise. Yoga can too. And exercise, before recovery work, is often a weapon against the body.

Achieving the ability to experience soothing without a heavy price is a sign of progress in recovery.

Thank you for your participation. I appreciate hearing from you.

warm regards,

Joanna

July 7, 2009 - 12:26am

Dear Jeannie,

Thank you for your comment. You add rich information that deepens the subject. My hope is that such information will help people more fully understand the depth of eating disorders and what kind of courage is required to move toward recovery.

We can't change the world, but maybe we can encourage more compassion for self and others. Your compassion radiates from your post. And compassion may be the key to helping people find their way to recovery.

warm regards,

Joanna

July 6, 2009 - 9:53pm

You have given such a clear example, Joanna, of what goes through the mind of a bulimic! The intensity of feeling and the inability of being able to find "something" or "anything" to help one self-soothe. The desperation can be extreme. Bulimic women will not only use purging, sex and shopping as a way of activating their neurotransmitters, but they even more often gravitate to alcohol and/or drugs for the quick fix. 40-50% of all women with eating disorders are also substance abusers or have the potential to be.

The world we live in is dangerous enough without our madly trying to cope with life with these kinds of external coping mechanisms. Thanks again for your article!

Warmly,
Jeannie Rust, PhD
www.mirasol.net
www.edrecovery.com

July 6, 2009 - 8:19pm

Dear Pamela,

Thank you for your questions. Deep work with a person caught in bulimia raises many questions. Bulimia is complex.

In my experience, based on over 26 years in the field as a professional and the many stories I've heard before that when I was in my own recovery I have seen and continue to see people with bulimia acting out their bulimia with far more than food. In fact, a phrase my patients and I will use when it's appropriate in our work together is, "You don't have to be bulimic about it."

It's a short cut phrase that people understand once they have more awareness and recovery work in them. It refers to their bingeing on people, possessions, shopping, sensations and then discarding people and things and activities quickly.

A bulimic person who can and must binge and purge 10 - 20 times a day and get caught in her home for days, unable to stop is pouring out a tremendous amount of unconscious energy. She's desperate to get something and terrified to have it.
She can, still in an unconscious way, channel this desperation into something else that seems to offer her the promise of safety and care... like a man. She can go to the lengths I describe in this article and more.

Women who binge and purge ocassionally, again in my experience, may serial date. These women, who are often bright and attractive, don't understand why their excursions into dating do not create a developing relationship. They do not understand that what they think is giving to a man is actually an attempt to consume him. She's bewildered and often self critical because he stops calling. She doesn't understand that she never gave him a chance to meet her. She gets into a posture where she did anything she thought "would work", that "men like", etc., but she isn't present. When he realizes that she is not really here, depending on the kind of man he is, he will use her or leave her. If he needs a woman who isn't present he may be the type of man who wants a codependent relationshp.

I don't think this is a quest for feeling. She is feeling plenty. Her feelings are flooding her. She wants relief and safety. And while the body is an essential aspect of bulimia, I think the last thing she wants is to actually feel present in her body. That would make her too vulnerable. She is looking for powerful sensation that will flood everything she does feel and will give her what she thinks will be relief. It's true that feelings exist that she doesn't know about. Her capacity to feel such feelings develops throughout recovery work.

Thank you again for your question, Pamela. I hope this response helps.s It may raise more questions than it answers.

I hadn't thought of a specific message I had for creating this article beyond the one which is, there's more to bulimia than people may realize; eating in a reasonable and healthy way is the beginning of recovery work; some aspects of the life of a bulimic woman are so private and secret that they don't come out in conversation or in media coverage. The big message, to the bulimic woman, is that some of us know, appreciate and understand these dangerous and painful episodes. The bulimic woman needs to know that despite her own shame, guilt, fear and disgust at herself, people do exist who do not share those judgments of her and that she can start her recovery work from wherever she is in her life.

That, I believe, is the theme that runs through Empowher and that I gladly embrace.

By the way, I like your picture very much. In it you look like you are listening and thinking about what you hear.

warm regards,

Joanna

July 7, 2009 - 11:52am

So are you saying that Bulimic Behavior is far larger than in the relationship with food? That bulimic binge and purge on sex? Relationships? Are you saying that it is a quest for "feeling" and desire to feel an elusive embodiment? There is a lot in your post - but I am not sure of the message here. Can you please explain further?

July 6, 2009 - 6:03am
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
By submitting this form, you agree to EmpowHER's terms of service and privacy policy
Add a Comment

We value and respect our HERWriters' experiences, but everyone is different. Many of our writers are speaking from personal experience, and what's worked for them may not work for you. Their articles are not a substitute for medical advice, although we hope you can gain knowledge from their insight.

Eating Disorders

Get Email Updates

Eating Disorders Guide

HERWriter Guide

Have a question? We're here to help. Ask the Community.

ASK

Health Newsletter

Receive the latest and greatest in women's health and wellness from EmpowHER - for free!