My Eating Disorder Came Back At Age 50 | HuffPost HuffPost Personal - Action News
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Posted: 2024-07-13T11:29:30Z | Updated: 2024-07-13T11:29:30Z

For 25 years, making fun of my weight was a national sport, Oprah Winfrey recently said, when she revealed that shes been taking the weight loss drug Ozempic. Thats in addition to using the Weight Watchers point system, having her last meal at 4 p.m., and drinking a gallon of water each day. I wished I couldnt comprehend the desire of a woman who had it all to want one thing more: a thinner body. But I did understand, intimately.

Your eating disorder will always be your Achilles heel, a red-haired nurse told me when I was 21.

I was shocked and offended. Id left college to enter Waltham-Weston Hospital in Massachusetts in 1994. Unintended weight loss at the start of freshman year had given me a dieters high. If I had lost 5 pounds by accident, how much could I lose if I really tried? After two years of bulimia and anorexia, I found out the answer: 30 pounds. No number on the scale was ever low enough, though. Part of me wanted to get better. The other part of me wanted to get thinner.

By the fall of junior year, my better self won out. I was ready, as my best friend suggested, to give myself over to the program. This was a hospital, right? I was there for the cure.