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Archive of Resistance: Anti-anorexia/anti-bulimia

 

© David Epston, All rights reserved

16

Relationships- pro or anti-anorexic?

 

12 April 2001

David Epston and Rebecca

December 11th, 1997

 

 

 

Dear Rebecca:

 

Well, this Bulimic come-back was short-lived and very edifying, was it not?

You summed up the circumstances that brought Bulimia back into your life as

not something seemingly out of the blue but rather it had to do "with when

I want to voice something but instead get talked into things that I don't

agree with. I acquiesce". You then provided me with a very recent example

of this. "Jim and I were discussing our Christmas plans. We talked about

it loosely and he had made up his mind to be in Christchurch. I had been

hoping we'd be up here for New Years". And that had a particular

significance to you in that you had never spent New Year's Eve together

with your previous partner over the seven years of your relationship. As

you put it, "It was really important to me". However, "I didn't say

anything...I just agreed". On reflection, you realised that "I was not

voicing what I really would have liked" and not surprisingly, later than

night, you were "shattered" by the return of Bulimia. But instead of being

taken out to sea by Bulimia, "I stated straightaway what I wanted and there

was no problem at all". He said - 'If it's important to you, I'll be

there!'

 

This then led us onto considerations of what an anti-bulimic relationship

might be and how it might be practised. So far, you said that "I haven't

really been that aware of making my relationship with Jim an anti-bulimic

relationship". We changed tact and wondered how this relationship could

turn into a bulimic one. You thought that "I would invite anorexic/bulimic

thinking into our relationship...I would always be doubting myself and

fishing for reassurance". On the other hand, you told me that Jim

"thinks I'm wonderful" and that your friends are commenting that "he's so

much like you...so much more to your taste".

 

We compared this relationship to your relationship with Lance. Here you

"never felt important as a person" and looking back on it, are "shocked

what I put up with...I wouldn't stand for it now". Rebecca, why wouldn't

you? What is there about this 1997 Rebecca that would not tolerate such a

relationship? You went on to say that "I always felt he was testing me". By

that, Rebecca, were you never sure if you measured up? You added that "I

felt less than my self which meant there was some mind room for

Anorexia/Bulimia to come into my life". Rebecca, does that mean if Bulimia

were to try to make another come-back that that would be a sign that you

were getting eroded away, one way or another? You summed up those 7 years

of relationship history as "a perfect breeding ground for

Anorexia/Bulimia...I don't think I was respected".

 

You then went on to describe yourself as "a different kind of person and

I've attracted a different kind of person to me". I asked for more details

about your new person and you said - "I'm really outspoken." Compare this:

"Before, I tended not to say anything and let Bulimia take over." You

said too that you have a different order of significances for your life.

For example, "I now really appreciate little things such as the scent of

the Christmas tree, over flowers". You considered you now have "a fuller

life". I enquire as to what bulimia gave significance to. I suppose your

answers were no surprise to me. "How much I weigh! How I looked!" But you

observed how Bulimia led you "into destructive relationships with men, men

who would weigh me up and look me over".

 

Rebecca, you then smiled and told me - "I can honestly say that now at 26,

I like myself". And when I asked what your mother's response to your

self-liking was, you guessed that "she gets real pleasure seeing this in

me". We then wondered if she had inspired you to speak out for yourself by

speaking out for herself in her relationship with your father. You thought

that you had "inspired each other to speak out". You said how your mother

had "smothered her desires to measure up to him...mum is so much more

passionate about life now they have separated". Isn't it interesting that

everyone "adores" Jim? Do you think their fondness for him has anything

to do with having witnessed the effect on your life of your 7 year long

relationship with Lance?

 

I then asked in general what would a young woman guard against in a

relationship so that relationship wouldn't be so welcoming of Bulimia. Your

reply was astute: "You could guard against any part of you being taken

away or not heard. That can happen so subtly. I have to be more vigilant

and on guard. Self-policing would be a sign that this was happening. or

comparing myself with other women. Weighing myself.. And the old Bulimic

ways of thinking". I enquired as to how your anti-Bulimic ways of thinking

would operate here. "I would have some idea of who I am. I would know that

I am worth getting to know. Before I was just on show. I was so obsessive

about things that weren't important. Now I've got perspective on things

that are important". "Such as?" I asked. "What my body needs and listening

to these needs. Jim. My family".

 

Rebecca, would you be willing to share this letter with Jim so you might

put him in the 'picture' of how you might constitute an anti-Bulimia

relationship and by the same token, make a Bulimic relationship. We

discussed how your parent's relationship was something of a template for

relationships. And in theirs, you told me that "my father never took my

mother seriously...never sponsored her. She supported him in everything

he's ever done". Rebecca, would Jim be willing to support you to the

same extent I suspect you are willing to support him? Or will it be 'you

be sensitive to me and I will be sensitive to myself' relationship?

 

I look forward to finding out which way your Relationship will go. However,

it seems to me that to 'go against the grain' of male-female relationships

requires care and attention.

 

Yours anti-bulimically,

David.

 

 

 

 

 

Dean Lobovits, David Epston, Jennifer Freeman
narrative@comcast.net
Date Last Modified: 3/21/2k
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