Confessions of a Borderline Binge Eater
Pages in this Story:
- My Wake-Up Call
- Hunger vs. Head Games
- Falling Off the Wagon
- Is Bingeing in My Genes?
- Nip Your Next Binge in the Bud
My Wake-Up Call
Last week I went out for Mexican food. One basket of chips, a cup of salsa, three margaritas, a bowl of guacamole, a steak burrito covered in sour cream, and a side order of rice and beans later, I wanted to vomit. I held my protruding stomach and looked up in pain at my boyfriend, who patted my belly and laughed. "You did it again," he said.
I didn't laugh. I felt fat, out of control.
My parents always said I had the appetite of a truck driver. And I do -- I can eat and eat...then realize I'm about to get violently ill. I remember vacationing at a beach house with my family when I was 6 years old. After dinner, I sneaked to the fridge and ate an entire jar of dill pickles. At 2 a.m. my mom was cleaning vomit off my bunk bed. It's as if I lacked the brain mechanism to tell me I was full.
If you look at me -- five foot eight and 145 pounds -- you wouldn't guess I was a binge eater. Maybe I'm blessed with a good metabolism, or I stay active enough with running and biking that the extra calories don't affect me too much. Either way, I know that what I do isn't normal -- and it definitely isn't healthy. And if statistics bear out, it will eventually make me overweight.
Shortly after the episode in the Mexican restaurant, I decided it was past time to address my bingeing. First stop: health journals. According to a Harvard Medical School study, 3.5 percent of American women have binge-eating disorder (BED). The name sounds an awful lot like what I do, but by the clinical definition -- "eating larger amounts of food than normal during a two-hour period at least twice a week for six months" -- I don't qualify. (Mine is more of a 30-minute, four times a month habit.) Then why do I still feel like I have a problem?
Seeking clarification, I called Martin Binks, PhD, the director of behavioral health and research at the Duke Diet and Fitness Center in Durham, North Carolina. "Just because you don't meet the diagnostic criteria doesn't mean you don't suffer," Binks assured me. "There's an eating continuum -- varying levels of eating 'discontrol.' Regular mini binges, for example [hundreds instead of thousands of extra calories a day] eventually add up, and the psychological and health damage may be even greater."
I think back to nights when I've been full from dinner but still managed to wolf down seven or eight Oreos. Or lunches when I've eaten my sandwich in record time -- then moved on to the chips on my friend's plate. I cringe. Living on the verge of an eating disorder is a tricky place to find yourself. On the one hand, I'm pretty open about it with friends. When I order another hot dog after devouring my first two, it becomes a joke: "Where are you putting that one, your big toe?" We have a good laugh, and then they dot their lips with napkins while I continue chowing down. On the other hand, there are lonely moments when I'm terrified that if I can't control something as basic as eating, how am I supposed to control other aspects of adulthood, like paying down a mortgage and raising children? (Neither of which I've yet to attempt.)
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I was a binge eater as a teen, a bulimic borderlining on anorexia in my 20's, and now in my 40's I'm back to binge eating. Guilt, self-hate, disgust, misery, fear of looking in the mirror.... Thanks for sharing your story; it's nice to know I am not alone.
2/25/2013 07:11:50 PM Report AbuseI loved this article! I became aware of my binge eating after eatin 2 cookies, a muffin, and chips all in 30 minutes. The advice here sounds wonderfulk and i cant wait to try it out for myself!!
5/4/2012 06:31:47 PM Report AbuseRight now I am following the Diet Plan for You blog by nutrition specialist Kate Hill. Kate helped me lose weight in a healthy way in few weeks, without starving! If you want to lose weight, just visit Kate's blog at: http://dietplanforyou.blogspot.com
3/4/2012 03:28:03 AM Report AbuseThis is great, I'm glad I'm not the only one. I'm 5'8 148, so not overweight, but like you I binge a couple times a week. I'm trying to learn how to eat like a normal person again too, so far I have good days and bad. Today was a bad day but its never too late to start the day over.
1/21/2012 03:34:32 PM Report AbuseThank you for this piece. I have (unknowingly) been binge eating since I've lost 20 pounds in the last year. When I binge eat, I eat in denial. I tell myself, "it's just a couple of cookies and that's all I'm gonna eat!" The approach that the author took to curbing the urge to binge has worked for me, but it takes practice and a lot of will power... It's nice to read an article I can resonate with.
10/16/2011 09:15:40 PM Report Abuse