Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must have not read the research above. Nobody is saying you must be BPD, but there is a clear correlation between BPD and anorexia nervosa.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just learned a friend is anorexic.
And I’ve learned there was a lot of lying about the past. (Unexplained absences, many doctor visits, hospital stays, etc.)
Personality is very consistent with many other anorexics.
How many people have been able to maintain a functional relationship with an anorexic, whether a work or family or friend relationship?
I’ve heard it’s much like borderline personality disorder.
It sounds like you are attributing or correlating a lot of your friend's negative personality attributes directly to anorexia rather than perhaps saying or seeing that they performed a function for her. People with addictions in general (not just anorexics, but all kinds of addicts) lie a lot. In order to maintain a facade of normality. It's not specific to anorexia. Neither is anorexia specifically correlated to BPD. Studies show that starvation brings on or manifests a host of psychiatric symptoms. That is, starvation itself will cause any normal person to behave irrationally. So it's impossible to say whether the BPD was there or not.
OP, if you don't want to be bothered, then drop your friend. You don't sound like a compassionate or particularly nice person.
Don't argue with us -- Arthur with the research that establishes the link as true .
Whatever you say, Arthur.
Quite a challenge to admit you are wrong. Not everyone is up for it, but it does take some confidence and insight, so probably not likely on this thread..
DP. What the other poster is pointing out is that correlation does not mean causation. And that even with a correlation, not all people with a food disorder have the same personality traits. You, however, are intent on painting everyone with the same brush. Which is better - to see each person as she or he is OR to see only the disease? I know which answer I choose (the first) and you (obviously) choose the second. IMO you are wrong to see only the disease but keep on doing what you're doing and let us know how that doesn't work for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must have not read the research above. Nobody is saying you must be BPD, but there is a clear correlation between BPD and anorexia nervosa.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just learned a friend is anorexic.
And I’ve learned there was a lot of lying about the past. (Unexplained absences, many doctor visits, hospital stays, etc.)
Personality is very consistent with many other anorexics.
How many people have been able to maintain a functional relationship with an anorexic, whether a work or family or friend relationship?
I’ve heard it’s much like borderline personality disorder.
It sounds like you are attributing or correlating a lot of your friend's negative personality attributes directly to anorexia rather than perhaps saying or seeing that they performed a function for her. People with addictions in general (not just anorexics, but all kinds of addicts) lie a lot. In order to maintain a facade of normality. It's not specific to anorexia. Neither is anorexia specifically correlated to BPD. Studies show that starvation brings on or manifests a host of psychiatric symptoms. That is, starvation itself will cause any normal person to behave irrationally. So it's impossible to say whether the BPD was there or not.
OP, if you don't want to be bothered, then drop your friend. You don't sound like a compassionate or particularly nice person.
Don't argue with us -- Arthur with the research that establishes the link as true .
Whatever you say, Arthur.
Quite a challenge to admit you are wrong. Not everyone is up for it, but it does take some confidence and insight, so probably not likely on this thread..
Anonymous wrote:I just learned a friend is anorexic.
And I’ve learned there was a lot of lying about the past. (Unexplained absences, many doctor visits, hospital stays, etc.)
Personality is very consistent with many other anorexics.
How many people have been able to maintain a functional relationship with an anorexic, whether a work or family or friend relationship?
I’ve heard it’s much like borderline personality disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must have not read the research above. Nobody is saying you must be BPD, but there is a clear correlation between BPD and anorexia nervosa.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just learned a friend is anorexic.
And I’ve learned there was a lot of lying about the past. (Unexplained absences, many doctor visits, hospital stays, etc.)
Personality is very consistent with many other anorexics.
How many people have been able to maintain a functional relationship with an anorexic, whether a work or family or friend relationship?
I’ve heard it’s much like borderline personality disorder.
It sounds like you are attributing or correlating a lot of your friend's negative personality attributes directly to anorexia rather than perhaps saying or seeing that they performed a function for her. People with addictions in general (not just anorexics, but all kinds of addicts) lie a lot. In order to maintain a facade of normality. It's not specific to anorexia. Neither is anorexia specifically correlated to BPD. Studies show that starvation brings on or manifests a host of psychiatric symptoms. That is, starvation itself will cause any normal person to behave irrationally. So it's impossible to say whether the BPD was there or not.
OP, if you don't want to be bothered, then drop your friend. You don't sound like a compassionate or particularly nice person.
Don't argue with us -- Arthur with the research that establishes the link as true .
Whatever you say, Arthur.
Anonymous wrote:You must have not read the research above. Nobody is saying you must be BPD, but there is a clear correlation between BPD and anorexia nervosa.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just learned a friend is anorexic.
And I’ve learned there was a lot of lying about the past. (Unexplained absences, many doctor visits, hospital stays, etc.)
Personality is very consistent with many other anorexics.
How many people have been able to maintain a functional relationship with an anorexic, whether a work or family or friend relationship?
I’ve heard it’s much like borderline personality disorder.
It sounds like you are attributing or correlating a lot of your friend's negative personality attributes directly to anorexia rather than perhaps saying or seeing that they performed a function for her. People with addictions in general (not just anorexics, but all kinds of addicts) lie a lot. In order to maintain a facade of normality. It's not specific to anorexia. Neither is anorexia specifically correlated to BPD. Studies show that starvation brings on or manifests a host of psychiatric symptoms. That is, starvation itself will cause any normal person to behave irrationally. So it's impossible to say whether the BPD was there or not.
OP, if you don't want to be bothered, then drop your friend. You don't sound like a compassionate or particularly nice person.
Don't argue with us -- Arthur with the research that establishes the link as true .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn’t you? It’s a sickness. Nothing to do with you, and lying about doctor’s appointments is not your business.
For me, it was that a co-worker was obsessed about food. She almost seemed to want to fatten other people up. And she had a LOT of emotion invested in "just being genetically this way" while we could hear her throwing up after parties, or see her gulping liters of bone broth. It's not pleasant to be around.
That behavior is not a symptom of anorexia.
I am the recovered anorexic above and I never comment on what others are eating (except my kids- as in, eat more veggies, yogurt, less sugar- normal parenting stuff).
I can be sensitive about people commenting on what I eat if it comes from judgement, but I will generally just avoid people who do what the person you describe above is doing when they start with the judgement. Since this is a coworker, if you walk away when they do this, eventually they will stop the comments.
You must have not read the research above. Nobody is saying you must be BPD, but there is a clear correlation between BPD and anorexia nervosa.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just learned a friend is anorexic.
And I’ve learned there was a lot of lying about the past. (Unexplained absences, many doctor visits, hospital stays, etc.)
Personality is very consistent with many other anorexics.
How many people have been able to maintain a functional relationship with an anorexic, whether a work or family or friend relationship?
I’ve heard it’s much like borderline personality disorder.
It sounds like you are attributing or correlating a lot of your friend's negative personality attributes directly to anorexia rather than perhaps saying or seeing that they performed a function for her. People with addictions in general (not just anorexics, but all kinds of addicts) lie a lot. In order to maintain a facade of normality. It's not specific to anorexia. Neither is anorexia specifically correlated to BPD. Studies show that starvation brings on or manifests a host of psychiatric symptoms. That is, starvation itself will cause any normal person to behave irrationally. So it's impossible to say whether the BPD was there or not.
OP, if you don't want to be bothered, then drop your friend. You don't sound like a compassionate or particularly nice person.
Anonymous wrote:I just learned a friend is anorexic.
And I’ve learned there was a lot of lying about the past. (Unexplained absences, many doctor visits, hospital stays, etc.)
Personality is very consistent with many other anorexics.
How many people have been able to maintain a functional relationship with an anorexic, whether a work or family or friend relationship?
I’ve heard it’s much like borderline personality disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn’t you? It’s a sickness. Nothing to do with you, and lying about doctor’s appointments is not your business.
For me, it was that a co-worker was obsessed about food. She almost seemed to want to fatten other people up. And she had a LOT of emotion invested in "just being genetically this way" while we could hear her throwing up after parties, or see her gulping liters of bone broth. It's not pleasant to be around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn’t you? It’s a sickness. Nothing to do with you, and lying about doctor’s appointments is not your business.
For me, it was that a co-worker was obsessed about food. She almost seemed to want to fatten other people up. And she had a LOT of emotion invested in "just being genetically this way" while we could hear her throwing up after parties, or see her gulping liters of bone broth. It's not pleasant to be around.
Anorexics also often exhibit overvalued ideation, cognitive distortions, such as all-or-none thinking, and attempts to gain control of their environment. For bulimics, the need to feel relieved of the obsessive guilt and shame following binges causes them to compulsively purge the food they consumed, repeating the cycle over and over again. Here too, perfectionism an excessive desire for social approval or acceptance, and bouts of anxiety or depression play a major role.