Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not accommodate anorexia. That’s like buying bottles of liquor to accommodate an alcoholic. Let her figure it out.
So....the difference between alcoholism and anorexia is that alcoholics ingest things they shouldn't, and anorexics do not ingest things when they should.
The right way to help an alcoholic is to not provide alcohol. The right way to help an anorexic is to provide calories they will eat, or at a minimum let them eat the calories they are comfortable with.
You sound very stupid the anorexic can’teat and the alcoholic can’t not drink.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of my siblings had a pretty bad eating disorder among other issues like anxiety. She is 26 and still lives at home, but my parents walk on eggshells with her and have never forced her to get help.
My parents, siblings and their families are all coming to visit next month so there will be 14 people that we are responsible to feeding and entertaining for a few days. This is totally fine, but my sister with the ED has. Very restrictive diet and my parents have asked me to try to accommodate her for all meals so she has something to eat.
Given the number of people, we wanted to keep things easy and were planning to order pizza and salad for one meal, grill burgers and hot dogs, etc. My sister doesn’t eat any of those things - no bread, no red meat, no dairy. She really only eats things she cooks herself so there is no oil or anything she won’t eat. I am really not sure how I would accommodate this unless I let her cook her own meals, but not thrilled about that either since she always makes a humongous mess that she never cleans up.
How accommodating would you be here? Don’t want to encourage her not to eat the entire weekend, but always don’t want to make things even more complicated and messy.
How does she eat at home? Does your mom cook? Does your mom let her cook but clean up after her?
Since you will be busy hosting everyone else, I would talk to your mom and sister and tell them to come up with a plan. Your kitchen will be available, you will even pick up what she wants from the store when you shop for everyone else, but beyond that you are not making separate meals and you expect anyone else using your kitchen will leave it in the condition in which they found it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not enable an eating disorder. Let her cook her own stuff. She can go to a store.
OP says that she doesn't even want to do the bolded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not accommodate anorexia. That’s like buying bottles of liquor to accommodate an alcoholic. Let her figure it out.
So....the difference between alcoholism and anorexia is that alcoholics ingest things they shouldn't, and anorexics do not ingest things when they should.
The right way to help an alcoholic is to not provide alcohol. The right way to help an anorexic is to provide calories they will eat, or at a minimum let them eat the calories they are comfortable with.
Anonymous wrote:I would not accommodate this nonsense at all. She is a grown woman.
Anonymous wrote:One of my siblings had a pretty bad eating disorder among other issues like anxiety. She is 26 and still lives at home, but my parents walk on eggshells with her and have never forced her to get help.
My parents, siblings and their families are all coming to visit next month so there will be 14 people that we are responsible to feeding and entertaining for a few days. This is totally fine, but my sister with the ED has. Very restrictive diet and my parents have asked me to try to accommodate her for all meals so she has something to eat.
Given the number of people, we wanted to keep things easy and were planning to order pizza and salad for one meal, grill burgers and hot dogs, etc. My sister doesn’t eat any of those things - no bread, no red meat, no dairy. She really only eats things she cooks herself so there is no oil or anything she won’t eat. I am really not sure how I would accommodate this unless I let her cook her own meals, but not thrilled about that either since she always makes a humongous mess that she never cleans up.
How accommodating would you be here? Don’t want to encourage her not to eat the entire weekend, but always don’t want to make things even more complicated and messy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not accommodate anorexia. That’s like buying bottles of liquor to accommodate an alcoholic. Let her figure it out.
So....the difference between alcoholism and anorexia is that alcoholics ingest things they shouldn't, and anorexics do not ingest things when they should.
The right way to help an alcoholic is to not provide alcohol. The right way to help an anorexic is to provide calories they will eat, or at a minimum let them eat the calories they are comfortable with.
The op is providing calories. You are wrong.
Anonymous wrote:I would not enable an eating disorder. Let her cook her own stuff. She can go to a store.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not accommodate anorexia. That’s like buying bottles of liquor to accommodate an alcoholic. Let her figure it out.
So....the difference between alcoholism and anorexia is that alcoholics ingest things they shouldn't, and anorexics do not ingest things when they should.
The right way to help an alcoholic is to not provide alcohol. The right way to help an anorexic is to provide calories they will eat, or at a minimum let them eat the calories they are comfortable with.