A Plate of Food: What Do You See?
While sitting at a Vietnamese restaurant with a steaming hot bowl of bún bò huế for lunch, guest contributor Minh-Hai Alex, MS, RDN, RYT, shares the memories, joys, and fears she sees while looking at the food before her. By sharing what she sees when she looks at her plate, Minh-Hai invites readers to connect with food through story and comfort, memory and appreciation—an uplifting perspective that all can benefit from.
Dear Eating Disorder, From a Family Member
In a letter to the eating disorder that “came into our home, unannounced and uninvited” and affected a family member, guest contributor Barri Leiner Grant describes the tremendous grief she experiences as a result. In learning to acknowledge her own grief, Barri reaches out to other caretakers and family members, offering validation that their grief is also real and deserves time and space to heal.
Re-Introducing My Body to My Mind
Guest contributor Taylor Bowman loved to move as a child. From bopping her head or tapping her toe or shaking her hips, movement was a natural part of her. But this all changed when critical comments about her maturing and changing body caused Taylor to begin judging her body, which resulted in an eating disorder. In this blog post, Taylor shares her pain of feeling unworthy to move or exist in her body, and her triumph of reconnecting with her body through dance, yoga, and other forms of movement on her healing path to self-acceptance.
What if I Told You Yoga Studios Can be as Harmful as They Are Healing?
Guest contributor and trauma-informed yoga instructor Kierstin Graham opens up about why yoga studios were unhelpful environments during the early phases of her eating disorder recovery. From diet culture influences to an emphasis on competition and working out as “punishment,” Kierstin identifies aspects of yoga studio culture (in general, not all!) that could be harmful for individuals going through recovery, and with examples from her own story, sheds light on alternative places and ways to practice yoga so that it is the healing and supportive practice it is intended to be.
How Yoga is Putting Me One Step Closer to Recovery
Guest contributor, Rachel, shares how she turned to yoga when she began her eating disorder recovery. Like recovery, her experience practicing yoga has not been linear. Rachel shares the challenges she’s faced and the gifts she’s gained from practicing yoga, and how yin yoga, particularly, is helping her foster self-compassion.
I'm an Eating Disorder Dietitian and I Didn’t Know I had an Eating Disorder
In her 20s, guest contributor Rebecca Berg, MS, RDN (she/her/hers), became obsessed with exercise and controlling her food intake and weight, only to realize that she was experiencing an eating disorder at the very same time she was studying to become a Registered Dietitian. Rebecca bravely shares what it meant to her to acknowledge she had an eating disorder and how she reframed the stories that were keeping her stuck. Rebecca’s story is an invitation for everyone—including those in the helping and healing professions—to recognize that their struggles do not diminish their worth.
Understanding Emotional Eating Through a Non-Judgmental Lens
“When we step back and observe emotional eating as a natural behavior we use to help us cope with hard feelings like anxiety, loneliness, sadness, and anger, we can begin to let go of judgement. Instead, we can look at emotional eating through a kind, understanding lens.” Read this latest blog post by Caroline L. Young, MS, RD, LD, RYT, to learn why emotional eating is normal, how to release judgment for coping with food, and to remember your ability to choose from a variety of ways of cope with hard feelings.
How Letting Go of the "Health Nut" Mask Set Me Free
The health nut identity is far too common in our culture. It's often actually an eating disorder in disguise: orthorexia, an obsession with "healthy" eating. Caroline Young, MS, RD, LD, RYT, reflects on her years suffering from orthorexia and shares how she reclaimed her worth by letting go of her “health nut” mask.
Power Players: Exploring How Systems of Power Impact Eating Disorder Recovery
In her final blog of our 12-month series, Niya Bajaj explores how the experiences of systemic exclusion and the power imbalance in healthcare systems impact how people seek help for eating disorders, and how yoga therapy can support inclusive recovery.