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Although
I grew up in an extremely nice home in Berkeley, Calif., with my parents and
two little brothers, I wouldn’t say I had a normal childhood. My parents are
pretty high-powered—my dad is a
successful international lawyer, and my mom is a systems analyst. They are
the ultimate perfectionists, so they raised me to be an overachiever in
everything I did. This is how bad it was: When I was 5, my aunt offered to
take me to see Beauty and the Beast. I told her I couldn’t go because
“my schedule was too tight.”
My whole life, I’ve tried to be No. 1 at everything. I was one of
the best players on my soccer team, I always got the highest grades in
school, and I was extremely popular. But even with all that, I never felt I
was good enough.

I grew up believing that, to be
beautiful, you have to be thin. No surprise, my mom was super-skinny. In
seventh grade, I became overweight and just hated my body. Soon, I made it
my goal to get thin.
By the end of seventh grade, I was dying to get away from Berkeley
and from my parents because they were so overly critical of my body and
everything else I did. So they agreed to let me attend boarding school in
England. At first, it was really exciting—the
school was so interesting, and I met some amazing people. But after a short
while, the academic challenge was gone, and I was totally bored and unhappy.
One of my friends at the school was anorexic. Although I hated to
watch what she was doing to herself, at the same time, I was secretly
impressed with how she was mastering her body. It wasn’t long before another
girl at school told me how she purged so she wouldn’t have to diet. I
honestly thought to myself, “That is so cool!”
That November, I visited my parents, who were living in Paris
temporarily. They decided that, since I was so unhappy in England, I should
attend an international school in Paris. I was only 14 but, after being
academically tested, I was advanced to the 11th grade. That was so
difficult, because everyone in my class was between 17 and 19 years old! I
became totally overwhelmed by the pressure, and I quickly gained another 10
pounds. That’s when I decided to try purging as a way of getting a handle on
my weight. I remember having such a sense of power the first time I put my
fingers down my throat. Finally, I had control over my body.

My parents found out about my vomiting two weeks later, when they
noticed some remnants in the toilet. They said, “Kathryn, we’re so
disappointed. You have to snap out of it!” That only made me feel more
alienated. I knew my problem went much deeper―and
I knew I couldn’t stop myself. I was just totally stressed out trying to be
older than I was and, at the same time, still shooting for perfection. I
purged to feel like I had control over something in my life, since
everything else seemed to be totally out of control.
Soon, I was purging about five times a day―at
home, school, clubs, parties, wherever. I’d just turn on the water in the
bathroom to mask the sound of my vomiting, and then I’d wash my face and
chew gum to refresh my breath. But I was miserable. Binging and purging
actually had control over me rather than the other way around. My teeth
became discolored because of the acid from my vomit, and I developed a scar
around the knuckle of my index finger from constantly sticking my finger
down my throat.
My parents sent me to a psychiatrist, who prescribed
anti-depressants. That turned out to be horrible for me. I had a reverse
reaction to the drugs and ended up getting more anxious than before. Little
did anyone know I was entering the scariest phase of my illness—I
was having frequent thoughts of killing myself. That’s how desperate 1 felt.

In March, my mom moved with me back to England. She felt I should
go back to the boarding school. One afternoon, I got a knife from the
kitchen to slit my wrists when, luckily, my mom came home. I was crying
uncontrollably and I told her I couldn’t deal with my life anymore. I’d
completely fallen apart. I told her I felt like a failure and that I was
willing to do anything to get better
My Parents immediately sent me back to California for a weeklong
eating disorders program at Stanford University. I was 15 by that time.
Basically, the doctors’ tactic was to Scare me into quitting my purging by
explaining what it was doing to my body. They told my parents 1 was on the
verge of heart failure due to all the damage I’d caused my body. To top it
off, my hair Was thinning and my throat was bleeding. The treatment helped,
and I stopped purging altogether
I repeated my junior year in Berkeley, while continuing to see a
therapist. Although I was really popular and kept up a Straight-A average,
my intense self-pressure kicked in once again and, after two months I
started vomiting again. Every time I purged, I hated myself, feeling so
ashamed and alone.
One day, after a horrible binge, I was in my room crying and
depressed and thought, “I can’t deal with this anymore!” I was so distraught
and felt like no one noticed how miserable I was. So I went into my mom’s
bathroom and took a bottle of pills in an attempt to kill myself. But then
I freaked, thinking, “I don’t want to die!” My mom was downstairs, so I
screamed for her. She gave me some medicine that caused me to throw up the
pills, then took me to the hospital.

Shortly after my attempted suicide, my parents sent me to
The Center, an
eating disorders clinic in Washington. By then, I had turned 16. The
therapists made me feel really good about myself, because I could talk out
my problems. Finally, it hit home that losing weight wasn’t ever going to
give me what I really needed―self-worth.
Gradually, I stopped purging. I learned to eat better, take
vitamins and work out. Now, I’m much stronger, physically and mentally Sure,
there are still days I get really sad and am hard on myself, but not at all
like before. I haven’t purged for months now. I think what really healed me
was recognizing I can’t possibly achieve everything I want to achieve if I
continue to be sick with bulimia. In fact, I probably wouldn’t have even
survived if I had kept it up.
Over time, I figured out that my problem wasn’t about being thin—it
was that I wanted to be accepted and loved unconditionally. I know my
parents love me, but they’ve always been way too critical of me. I really
think that’s why I was trying to control my weight—I
wanted to be perfect so that maybe, just maybe, I’d be lovable to them. Now,
I finally believe I am lovable just by being me and that it never mattered
how perfect—or imperfect—I
was.
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Bulimia involves misusing food to feel better about yourself, to
feel a sense of control or to avoid feeling at all. Bulimia is
characterized by a cycle of eating compulsively and then
throwing up, or taking laxatives or pills to lose weight-it's a
serious and deadly eating disorder. |
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Are
you or someone you know suffering from Bulimia or another Eating Disorder?
The Center for Counseling & Health
Resources, Inc. is here to help.
Not sure
if you or your friend has an eating disorder?
Want to know how to help a friend with an eating disorder?
Go to our Eating
Disorder Special Reports. |