Anonymous wrote:The excuse used by my coworkers is food allergies. They say they cannot eat a lot of food. I actually believe it until on woman made a comment that after eating an almost normal portion of food that she would have to skip dinner so she did not get fat (she is severely underweight). This is why people do not believe those with true allergies. I find this more offensive then using vegan as an excuse for limited eating.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. This is/was me. In “recovery” from anorexia and became vegan. It allowed me to restrict my calories sort of naturally without having to count/measure every bite of food (behaviors that had to go because I was recovering, right?). Did I mention I was also training for a marathon and running 80 miles a week?
A funny thing happened though. Gradually as I began to eat more (vegan) food, the idea of food in general became a lot less scary and little by little I felt comfortable enough to add in dairy products, then eggs, and finally chicken and fish. (I’m still working on beef and processed meats which are a huge huge fear food for me.). I had a delicious dinner last night that included some baked chicken, and tonight I ate a grilled cheese sandwich with my kids.
I am a year into recovery now and I have reached a healthy weight for my height. I still struggle with certain behaviors (timings of meals is a huge issue) but I am much much better. I have my period back and I no longer worry my heart will fail in my sleep.
Anonymous wrote:Even non-disordered people do this. I usually only eat vegetarian or seafood dishes at restaurants as a way to limit calories. And on international flights I'll check on my profile that I require hindu vegetation meals (I'm a white chick from the midwest) because I can eat the veggies (and they actually taste good) and then toss the rice.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone else notice this? I know a few women that used to be anorexic and now they’re vegan. Hosts go out of their way to provide lovely vegan dishes and they still barely eat. I’m wondering if this is a new way to hide your anorexia? One of my friends who was anorexic in high school and college went vegan several months ago and she’s getting very, very thin. Anyone else notice this?