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Body Image & Eating Disorders

It might be difficult to know what to do as a parent of a college student with an eating disorder.  Your child may have developed the disorder years ago or it may have recently become a problem.  No matter when or how an eating disorder enters the life or your child, you are challenged with the tasks of learning, listening, caring, understanding-- even when it is hard to do so.  If your child suffers from an eating disorder their life could be in danger. And the steps you might feel compelled to take to try to save their life are not always clear.  You can't reach into their inner world and pull them out of a destructive way of thinking, feeling and behaving.  But, you can take some heart-guided actions that can help your child in healing.  Some actions may appear straightforward while others may be confronting and painful.  However, your love and courage will equip you to face the challenges ahead.

You can always call Creighton's Center for Health & Counseling at 402.280.2735 to confer with a counselor or get information about counseling for your son or daughter.

Ten Acts of Parent Courage

  1. Keep communication clear and open with your spouse. Negotiate any differences so your day-to-day living with each other and your family reflects your shared values.
    Be courageous about communicating.
     
  2. Establish and maintain respectful boundaries for yourself and the people around you. Say "no" when "no" is required. Expect yourself and others to keep their word and carry out their responsibilities. This relates to paying bills, living within an allowance or budget, transportation needs, laundry, maintenance of personal property (including cars, clothes, rooms, bureau and desk drawers, etc.)
    Be courageous about saying no.
     
  3. Establish an honest relationship with your spouse and dissolve or resolve secrets. If you live in a complex family structure, establish an authentic relationship with your spouse and your child's other parent and any other children and stepchildren.
    Be courageous about being honest.
     
  4. Learn to quietly and with generous patience listen to any member of your family, especially during times of intense emotion. Then, without taking any action or supplying any solutions, articulate your understanding of what they said and feel and mean. Ask them to help you understand if they think you are missing something.
    Be courageous about listening.
     
  5. Find or rediscover a joyous and satisfying activity for yourself and participate in it on a regular schedule. (Remember to honor your boundaries and follow through for yourself.)
    Be courageous about honoring your capacity for joy.
     
  6. Find or rediscover a joyous and satisfying activity for you and your spouse and participate together on a regular schedule. (Remember to honor your boundaries and follow through.)
    Be courageous about recommitting to your marriage.
     
  7. Accept the fact that all actions and inactions have consequences. Meet those consequences with caring, empathic and neutral acceptance (in other words, no blame on others and no taking on other's responsibilities). Also know and teach that consequences are not punishment but neutral events. A consequence of rain is that we can get wet. We then decide what actions we will take to deal with the rain. The rain is not punishing us (even if it's inconvenient to our plans).
    Be courageous about facing reality without judgment.
     
  8. Know in your heart that your children are temporarily in your care while you raise them to be competent, responsible and compassionate adults. You raise them to maturity and then they leave. Your primary relationship is with your spouse. (in other words, be wary of situations that align one parent with a child and isolate the other parent. This gives a confusing and problematic message to a child about his or her power and position in the family system.)
    Be courageous about letting your children grow up and be independent.
     
  9. Regardless of how anyone in or out of the family responds, live a healthy life style: reasonable and healthful portions of various foods in regular meals presented and eaten with grace; reasonable and healthful amounts of regular exercise; reasonable and healthful amounts of regular sleep; reasonable and healthful amounts of work and play.
    Be courageous about caring for yourself.
     
  10. Know that living an honest and healthy life yourself, loving and honoring your spouse, respecting boundaries and being there for each other will affect your child in positive ways and, over time, contribute greatly to his or her healing.
    Be courageous about trusting that a healthy present will bring a healthy future.
     
Source: Joanna Poppink, M.F.T. www.poppink.com/tenacts.html


BOOKS

Helping Your Child Overcome an Eating Disorder: What You Can Do at Home by Bethany A. Teachman, Marlene B. Schwartz, Bonnie S. Gordic (click here to order)

Eating Disorders: A Parent's Guide by Ra Bryant-Waugh (click here to order)

When Your Child Has an Eating Disorder: A Step-By-Step Workbook for Parents and Other Caregivers by Abigail H. Natenshon (click here to order)

 

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