Part Five (Continued)
Mary Grows Up - Adult Stages of Being an Overeater
Observing the adult Mary who chronically overeats and binges, we notice
seemingly inexplicable traits. She has limited and odd childhood memories.
She cannot remember the old living room, but she does remember the TV.
She doesn't want her children playing with crayons. She continually tries
to please her father with gifts and attention. She is angry at her mother
most of the time.
She will not have furniture with wooden legs in her home. She refuses to be
in a room with any man, including her husband, while he is reading a newspaper.
She is afraid to laugh in public. She has many secrets. She may steal little
sweets in the grocery store or in social settings when she thinks others are
not looking. She will refuse to attend violent movies. Yet she may have
sadism/masochism fantasies, perhaps secret, perhaps acted out.
She may blank out at times. On careful observation we might notice that
these mental blanks occur when someone around her has body, facial or verbal
mannerisms similar to her father.
She has deep bouts of sorrow and loneliness where no one can cheer her up.
She feels alone, ugly, bad, scared and is the worst person in the world to
herself. She gets angry and sad when people will not change rules or
behavior for
her. If they do change to accommodate her wishes, she will be briefly
grateful but will feel the changes are not enough. She surprises people by
not remembering them or their kindness. She doesn't remember needing people.
She overeats regularly. Sometimes she vomits on purpose. When she feels
familiar despair she will binge.
Mary is trapped in the overeater's prison.
Mary exercises. She reads diet books. She doesn't understand why she can't
stop overeating. She believes she overeats and feels bad because she is bad.
She is certain that if she stopped overeating her life would be fine, and
she would be happy and a good person. She feels humiliated and helpless
because she
can't stop.
Mary is not curious about her feelings. Her main concern is stopping her
feelings, not understanding them. Her lack of curiosity and her insistence
on making food her main point of focus are crucial in maintaining her
ignorance about herself.
As long as her secrets remain unknown to herself, Mary will continue to feel
she is in constant danger. Because she is oblivious to the torture and
heartbreak she experienced in her past, she has not learned to recognize and
avoid abuse in her present. She may allow abusive people in her life, even
invite them, because she doesn't know she has more power than she did as a
child. For her, abuse is more than familiar. Abuse feels like home.
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