A lot of things have changed in my life since the last time I wrote. That was solely me losing my password, so sorry about that. I want to talk today about giving up.
On may 13th of 2011, I was diagnosed with Celiac disease. I had been sick for about two months prior and no one could determine what was wrong with me. That was a huge life-changer for me. A lot of people told me that it wouldn't be that hard and I would adapt quickly, but I guess they would have to actually be in my shoes to understand just hard it was....and is. I didn't even know what the disease was before I was diagnosed, which gave me fear in eating anything. I was told by the doctors that I would have to live with this and there was no cure for my particular situation. There were essentially two types of Celiac disease. One was from a dermatological perspective and the other was from an intestinal perspective. I had the very uncommon occurrence of developing both. Even if I wanted to eat gluten, I couldn't because I would break out into hives and get the worst stomach aches you could possibly imagine. This new change was not only difficult for me, but my family as well.I would lay awake screaming and holding my stomach because of the pain I was in and eventually I gained such a familiarity with these reactions that I began to not even feel pain anymore. This is what later triggered my depression. Not only was I not getting all my nutrition, but the food group that gives you energy was the one that I couldn't touch. I slept all the time and never had enough energy to go out. I started losing friends. For days at a time I would never leave the house except for doctors appointments. Depression finally kicked in when I began cutting myself mid-summer. I then began my counseling and was immediately put on anti-depressants and sleeping medication. Before I was able to grasp all of this quick change, my senior year had started.
Thinking about it now, I can't believe how I wasn't able to see the signs that I was developing an eating disorder. I had lost over 20 pounds from being a Celiac and it turned into an obsession. I was constantly comparing myself to others, body checking, eating habits, everything. I started a tumblr account that contained all things related to not eating. I would re-blog what other people had said such as "Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels" and "stop eating fatty." I thought nothing of it. I wanted to be skinny so bad.
Before I knew it, I had become underweight for my height. A lot of people told me I didn't look any different, but what people have to understand is that when your body reaches starvation mode it will do anything to keep the fat it has left. I lost any muscle I had and any spark that was left in me. I started cutting again and restricting my calories to less than 500 a day. It was actually working for about 3 weeks until I started fainting. I became dehydrated and couldn't even hold myself up for more than a few minutes. I was then diagnosed with anorexia, as if things couldn't get any worse.
I was soon put into a program named "The Emily Program" (Ironic.) They told my parents that I needed to be in IDP which stands for intensive day program. I would be removed from my current school and be at programming for 8am-7pm everyday. My parents didn't want to do this to me so they settled on an agreement for 3 days a week 4-7pm and I had to eat lunch at home. At this point I was so depressed about everything in my life that I didn't even have the energy to keep fighting.
On Tuesday, February 2nd I made some very bad choices in hurting myself. I was so desperate to feel something, an emotion, anything. Pain was the only thing I could feel, and even that wasn't enough. I slashed and carved into my legs things like the word "fat" but it still wasn't enough. The pain didn't last long enough. I endured my first "attack" I guess you could say. Before I knew what was happening, my parents were both holding me down trying to get me to stop screaming. I was yelling that I didn't want to live and I was worth nothing. I can't even imagine what that did to them. My brother, was crying. Never in my life had I ever seen an occurrence such as that. I knew it had to stop. Today I will be going to the program to re-assess and come up with a more vigorous recovery plan.
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