Foreign.
Speaker BWelcome back my friends.
Speaker BI am so happy you are here.
Speaker BMy hope for you is that you can take a breath and feel a sense of calm while you are here.
Speaker BThe upcoming holiday season can add a few stressors to your plate for sure.
Speaker BIt is one of my very favorite times of the year, but also one that has me begging for three days of downtime by December 26th.
Speaker BDoes that sound familiar to anyone?
Speaker BOne of the biggest concerns this time of year is coming out to relatives and handling those who are non affirming.
Speaker BNovember 29's episode will walk you through tips and how to's, so make sure you are subscribed so that you get the episode as soon as it drops.
Speaker BMy guest today is going to talk about a topic that we have not discussed yet and it is well past time that we've do.
Speaker BI want to give a trigger alert right now though, for all who struggle with eating?
Speaker BI know this is a sensitive topic.
Speaker BOne of the reasons I wanted Dr.
Speaker BTeresa Bussert on Just Breathe is because she has such a calming, non judgmental approach to disordered eating and eating disorders.
Speaker BBut I also want you to have the opportunity to skip this episode.
Speaker BIf you aren't quite ready, I'm sending you a big hug right through this microphone and a gentle reminder that you are loved.
Speaker BWelcome to Just Breathe Parenting your LGBTQ team, the podcast transforming the conversation around loving and raising an LGBTQ child.
Speaker BMy name is Heather Hester and I am so grateful you are here.
Speaker BI want you to take a deep breath and know that for the time we are together, you are in the safety of the Just Breathe nest.
Speaker BWhether today's show is an amazing guest or me sharing stories, resources, strategies, or lessons I've learned along our journey, I want you to feel like we're just hanging out at a coffee shop having a cozy chat.
Speaker BMost of all, I want you to remember that wherever you are on this journey right now, in this moment in time, you are not alone.
Speaker BRaise your hand if you've ever been in conversation with your LGBTQIA child or friend and felt confused or embarrassed or even frustrated because you didn't understand the meaning of the words or phrases that they used.
Speaker BCome on, it's nothing to be ashamed of.
Speaker BMy hand is raised.
Speaker BWe've all been there.
Speaker BWhich is why I created a guide for us called the language of LGBTQIA.
Speaker BIt's a 50 page book of comprehensive yet easy to digest explanations.
Speaker BText breathe to 55444 to access this amazing book that's B R E a t h e 255444 Dr.
Speaker BTeresa, as her clients and patients know her, has been a therapist, coach, educator and advocate for people who struggle with who they are beyond disordered eating for the past 20 years.
Speaker BShe has helped her clients find a new path moving forward, leaving disordered eating and self critical thoughts in the past.
Speaker BShe is trained in clinical social work, psychology and mindfulness and uses this wisdom to help support her clients journey through recovery.
Speaker BTeresa is offering a Stop Binge Eating guide to all of my listeners, so check out the show notes for the link for this.
Speaker BShe is also holding a Holiday Survival Strategic Plan webinar workshop this Wednesday, November 16th.
Speaker BThat's tomorrow Wednesday, November 16th.
Speaker BThe link to register for this is also in the show notes.
Speaker BI learned so much from Teresa and I can't wait for you to hear our conversation.
Speaker AOkay, great.
Speaker AWell Teresa, I am so, so glad to have you here on the show on Just Breathe to share just your vast knowledge.
Speaker AI'm so intrigued.
Speaker AWhen you reached out to me, it was really perfect timing because I think I had shared with you that I had a client who had just been asking about disordered eating and eating disorders.
Speaker AAnd so I would love to kind of start right there with you because I think that is something that's a little bit confusing for those of us who are just kind of learning about it and just having that definition or those the differences is a great place to start and then we can go from there.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CThank you so much for having me.
Speaker CI'm very excited actually to be here and talk about some of the things that I see in the eating disorder community and in really all communities, but specifically with adolescents.
Speaker CSo I'll tell you a little bit about myself.
Speaker CSo I'm a therapist.
Speaker CI've been working for over 20 years in the eating disorder community.
Speaker CI'm a body positive advocate and I like to do educational opportunities in the world so that people can learn about the differences of exactly an eating disorder versus disordered eating.
Speaker CAnd if you think of it on a continuum, it's like a spectrum, more of a continuum I think, because it's all kind interrelated.
Speaker CDisordered eating is about eating unhealthfully.
Speaker CSo maybe that would be binging while watching a TV show or restricting because the holidays are coming up and we don't want, you know, we want to be able to eat those holiday meals.
Speaker CSo we're restricting just to be able to do that or we're over exercising to accommodate for that.
Speaker CSo that can be unhealthy and not necessarily serve our Best self and growth.
Speaker CWhen it evolves to a place where it affects your functionality, your ability to be you in the world, whether it's work, school, family, friends, it becomes more of a disorder.
Speaker CAnd oftentimes we fuse our sense of self with the eating disorder behaviors, and that's when you're talking about an actual eating disorder.
Speaker CSo I'm a big fan that anywhere along that continuum, you can get resources and support, therapy or programs if it gets to that place, but that's really what you're talking about.
Speaker CSo when I refer to eating disorders or disordered eating, to me, they're kind of somewhere along that continuum.
Speaker CAnd you can, you know, go back and forth on the continuum throughout life if that's part of the challenges for you.
Speaker AOkay, that's really helpful.
Speaker ASo for someone who, let's say, struggles to eat, or struggles to eat in front of other people, or struggles with food choices and not necessarily based on calories or any kind of nutrient, but just where does that fall and what would be kind of advice for that person?
Speaker CSo when you're thinking in terms of disordered eating on any level, I want you to think about thoughts.
Speaker CThe way we see ourselves, the way we think about the food, the way we think about the event, those kinds of things.
Speaker CAnd then behaviors restricting, binging, limiting our variety of what we'll eat, and then the action.
Speaker CLike, I feel the impulse to exercise because I'm going to go out to dinner with, you know, to.
Speaker CTo a big meal, so I'm gonna.
Speaker CI'm gonna run five extra miles or something like that.
Speaker CThose three elements are what create an eating disorder, and it also creates recovery.
Speaker CSo when you're talking, when you're seeing someone doing behaviors, you know, calling them out on that isn't necessarily very helpful.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CI think we were talking a little earlier and the.
Speaker CThe term food shaming came up, you know, and it's really like the person is feeling the shame and the guilt because you're saying you're not eating and everyone else is eating, and why aren't you doing that?
Speaker CAnd not necessarily I'm worried about you, but it could be I'm worried about you, but it's focused on the food and not the person.
Speaker CAnd so the healing comes from focusing on the person.
Speaker CAnd the reason I say that is, you know, one of the things that we see in the eating disorder community is a lot of times it happens in adolescence where at least the client identifies that they've been having the struggle.
Speaker CThey may have had thoughts previously, but it Starts to become part of their sense of self and what they're doing.
Speaker CAnd the reason is, the developmental task in adolescence really is, you know, who am I?
Speaker CLike, I'm going to go hang out with these people and figure out if I fit there, and if I don't fit there, I'm going to go hang out with these people and figure that out, or both of those groups freak me out.
Speaker CSo I'm just going to stay home and not, like, associate with anybody and get online and just live on the online world.
Speaker CSo adolescence has so many complicated layers of figuring out who you are, and if you bring the element of external sense of identity, you know, like.
Speaker CLike, for example, like, you're hanging out in gym class in the locker room, and.
Speaker CAnd everybody's talking about, you know, how they're not going to eat lunch because they're going to the dance and they want to look really good and things like that, and you want to be part of that group.
Speaker CYou start to take on those behaviors because you want to be included.
Speaker CAnd so if you and I both were hanging out in the locker room, and we both decided, as, you know, as a collaborative, we're both going to restrict so that we can go to the dance and look really great, you know, and you may do that and not eat, you know, lunch for three days and think you look great in your dress.
Speaker CI may do that, but then feel like I can't eat now when I go to the dance, because if I eat now, my stomach's gonna bloat, and then I'm gonna look fat, and so I'm not gonna.
Speaker CI'm not gonna have the.
Speaker CThe meal there.
Speaker CAnd then over the weekend, like, oh, well, you know, I got a lot of compliments, so I'm not going to eat this weekend.
Speaker CAnd then the eating disorder takes on a life of its own.
Speaker CSo it's really about your sense of self, your sense of identity.
Speaker CDoes that make sense?
Speaker AIt does.
Speaker AOh, my goodness, yes.
Speaker AAnd how quickly.
Speaker AThat's such a great visual for how quickly that can happen.
Speaker CAnd people often are predisposed to eating disorders, which is why you and I could have the same conversation and the same feelings, But I develop the eating disorder, and you don't.
Speaker CSo if you and I are friends, you'd be like, well, what is your problem?
Speaker CWhy do you keep doing that?
Speaker CBecause obviously, you just have to eat and you're fine.
Speaker CBut that's not my experience, because now I'm fusing my worth with how I look in that dress or who's Coming to hang out with me or if I get invited to this party.
Speaker CAnd so healing from an eating disorder is often about diffusing that.
Speaker CSeparating.
Speaker CSeparating the element of who I am versus the eating disorder.
Speaker CWe often personify it as Ed.
Speaker CYou know, is that an Ed thought or is that a, you know, Teresa thought?
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd then you start to create that sense of, well, maybe this isn't who I am.
Speaker CI wonder who I really am.
Speaker CAnd then you can put the behaviors aside, and then you can start figuring out who you are.
Speaker CSo that's a long answer to your question.
Speaker CI'm not sure if I actually answered it.
Speaker AYou absolutely did.
Speaker AAnd I think that's so kind of just honing in on that last part.
Speaker AI mean, that is complicated for anyone to do, let alone an adolescent, because just thinking about.
Speaker AI mean, if you had that just in a vacuum, let's figure out who you are.
Speaker ALike, that's what adolescents are doing, right?
Speaker ALike, that's a base layer of, like, the hundred layers, right.
Speaker AOf things that are going on in adolescence.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd that is.
Speaker AI mean, that's tough.
Speaker AThat's tough.
Speaker AWithout any external.
Speaker AWithout any, you know, predispos.
Speaker APredisposition to anything else.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo it is easy to see how that can so quickly become intertwined and how that could easily be like, well, I'm just going to kind of grab onto this because this feels easier.
Speaker AThis feels better than trying to figure out who I am.
Speaker AAnd then, you know, very organic sense, or just in a, you know, without all these other.
Speaker ABecause it's kind of a maladaptive one.
Speaker ABut it's a coping technique, right?
Speaker CWell, it is definitely a strategy of figuring out, you know, who you are, because now you have a community and people are concerned about you.
Speaker CBut you get compliments initially, let's say, if you're restricting and your body's changing, but when it takes on a life of its own, you lose those relationships because you have to live your life in service of your eating disorder.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd it affects your health, obviously, because you're still physically developing in adolescence, so that could be lifelong problems.
Speaker CSo that's why when we look at, like, the behaviors and the thoughts, there are interventions when we get to the eating disorder, part of it, of the continuum, where interventions sometimes have to take place without.
Speaker CWithout the full commitment of the individual, because they don't see that challenge.
Speaker CThey just see that this is working for me.
Speaker CAnd if you ask me to stop doing these things, I don't know who I am without that.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CAnd that's A very scary concept like, who are we?
Speaker CAnd that's independent of the world we live in and all the images that the young people are exposed to and the societal norms or expectations, filters on online and things like that.
Speaker CSo they live in that world and, and get images all the time that are creating their sense of reality.
Speaker CAnd in normal adolescence, you're out trying to figure that out anyway.
Speaker CLike, you see somebody that you think is cool and you're mimicking them, and that's just part of figuring out where you are.
Speaker CBut when your algorithms are focused entirely on losing weight, body image, things like that, that's the world that you live in.
Speaker CIt's really hard to break, break free from that until you start to get a sense of, I am not my eating disorder.
Speaker CAnd so that's a big part of, in my opinion, recovery is like wherever you are in life dealing with this stuff, you got to figure out that this has served me very well at some stage of my life.
Speaker CIt no longer serves my authentic self, my higher person.
Speaker CAnd, and that's a challenge, I think for a lot of us in a lot of ways.
Speaker AIt absolutely is.
Speaker AIt absolutely is.
Speaker AAnd that whole piece of, if you're able to stay connected to yourself, then you're able to kind of create that separation.
Speaker ABut if you don't really know who you are, and certainly adolescence of, I mean, like we keep saying they're figuring out who they are.
Speaker ASo that makes it that much harder to stay connected and to not like grab onto something else to be like, well, I'm going to connect to that because that makes me feel good right now in this moment.
Speaker AAnd that's fascinating.
Speaker AI love how you broke that down.
Speaker AAnd I like the, the, you know, the kind of the thoughts, feelings, actions, the, you know, what you're thinking about, the behaviors, the feelings.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd then the action, which is something that, you know, formula that you can use in so many different ways.
Speaker CWell, and it's so much more helpful than you need to eat.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker CYou need to eat.
Speaker CYou need to just say, I'm going to sit here until you're done with what you're supposed to eat on your plate.
Speaker CLike, that's not helpful.
Speaker CThat's not telling me or helping me understand why I feel so compelled to utilize these behaviors.
Speaker CRight, right.
Speaker CParents and loved ones, you know, we often think we know better than the person versus trying to encourage the person for self discovery.
Speaker CAnd that can be really a complicated, complicated task.
Speaker AIt can be.
Speaker AIt can be.
Speaker AAnd I think so many of us were, you know, Our, our generation really was not brought up to check in with our feelings.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ATo check in with who we are and how that connects to everything.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASo eating is very separate from who you are in the world in the way that we were kind of grown up, grow.
Speaker AI mean, that's very simplified.
Speaker ABut just thinking as, so now as we're parents and we have our children, we're thinking, well, you need to eat because that's how you grow.
Speaker AInstead of kind of taking that step back and being like, okay, well, let's look at this from a different angle.
Speaker ALet's look at this, you know, from a, you know, this is.
Speaker AWhat don't you, like, why are.
Speaker AAnd maybe these are not good questions, but, you know, what about eating?
Speaker AAnd you can tell me, actually, as I'm asking these questions, if these are even good questions to ask because they're just coming to me.
Speaker ABut, you know, why, why doesn't that seem appealing to you?
Speaker AOr what, Is there something that sounds better?
Speaker AOr is there.
Speaker ABecause I'm thinking, as I'm asking these questions, thinking, like you said earlier, we want to take that focus off of the food.
Speaker CCorrect.
Speaker AAnd put it on the person.
Speaker ASo I'm thinking, what are the questions that we could really ask that can help our child really connect to, like, think about it in a way that's a healthy way to think about it.
Speaker ANot, I'm just not going to eat it.
Speaker CSo there is a, There is a great book that we often encourage people that are starting recovery to read.
Speaker CIt's called Life Without Ed, and it's written by Jenny Shaffer.
Speaker CShe's an artist, musician, and eating disorder recovery guru.
Speaker CAnd she wrote it when she was, I think she was in her 20s.
Speaker CAnd she wrote it with her therapist, which was very controversial at the time, but now it's a little bit more okay, I guess.
Speaker CAnd what she did was she basically shared moments in her recovery where she struggled with her sense of self and what she should or shouldn't do or how she wants to react to her parents or how people can support her.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd then she would explain how she, she went through the prep, she worked through that.
Speaker CAnd then her therapist would throw a little bit of his.
Speaker CHis, like how he experienced it in.
Speaker CSo it's a great book if you're trying to understand how I'm defining that Persona, like my sense of self separate from the eating disorder.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CBut when she started the book, she starts it and I think it's the intro.
Speaker CIt could be the first chapter.
Speaker CI'm not sure.
Speaker CBut she basically writes a letter to her eating disorder, and she.
Speaker CShe talks to him directly, and she says, I'm going to divorce you.
Speaker CAnd she personified him as an abuser, that he bullies her, he manipulates her, he lies to her, he takes her away from her friends, he takes her away from relationships.
Speaker CHe.
Speaker CHe says he's more important than her parents, her loved ones and that kind of thing.
Speaker CAnd she believed him, so she followed what he was saying.
Speaker CAnd her.
Speaker CHer sense of, I think it's my declaration to divorce at.
Speaker COr something like that, but it's the declaration of, I'm no longer going to.
Speaker CTo listen to you.
Speaker CYou are no longer in control of me.
Speaker CAnd that is the first step in getting a sense of.
Speaker CI know I'm doing these behaviors and I'm thinking these thoughts, and maybe they're not actually really helpful, and they're probably bad for me, and maybe they're not serving me the way they did when I started this, but I'm going to start separated from.
Speaker CI'm going to start to.
Speaker CTo break free from that.
Speaker CSo I encourage both clients and family members to read that book because I think it's just really simply written, and it's written very much in a young person's.
Speaker CYoung.
Speaker CYoung, meaning like, you know, teens, 20s, person's voice that can kind of help you get a sense of what your loved one is going through.
Speaker CSo there are specific things you can do at meal times and things like that, but without the foundation of you are not your eating disorder, it's really hard to support that person because they're not.
Speaker CAll they're going to do is hear you telling them to do the opposite of what the voice in their head is telling them.
Speaker CAnd the voice in their head solved a problem somewhere along the way for them.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CSo that's.
Speaker CThat's kind of like the foundation to build from, if that makes sense.
Speaker CAnd then.
Speaker CThen you can say, what do you need from me?
Speaker CYou know, how can I help you?
Speaker CHow can I support you?
Speaker CYou know, I'm doing a webinar next week for people in recovery from eating disorders for holiday stress.
Speaker CAnd we're going to talk about some of those challenges and how we're going to kind of navigate, you know, the holidays, food, family, how do you take care of yourself?
Speaker CThere's a lot of perfectionism in the ability to restrict if that's what you do with your eating disorder.
Speaker CAnd perfectionism always makes our calendar very, very busy.
Speaker CSo it's about learning how to.
Speaker CHow to.
Speaker CHow to Be in the moment and not in your disorder.
Speaker CAnd so I think, I think maybe that's a way to approach it, is get a little bit more understanding of.
Speaker COf what the eating disorder or disordered eating is and how it's serving that person to be able to have those dialogues.
Speaker CAnd once, once both of you kind of get that, you can be more honest about, you know, what do you need from me?
Speaker CYou know, is this helpful?
Speaker CBecause sometimes it is helpful for mom to lay out the food on the plate if you're working, let's say, with a therapist and a dietitian.
Speaker CSo the therapist, let's say, will work with the thoughts and kind of help you process through that.
Speaker CAnd then a dietitian helps you understand why a variety of foods is important, why a certain amount of calories is important, where you are physiologically developing, and why restricting or binging or just manipulating, you know, how you're eating can affect that development.
Speaker CSo you're giving that person information they didn't have to have a better sense of understanding that this coping strategy is going to be more destructive than it was initially.
Speaker CAnd, and I think, you know, if you look at that, it really helps both the family and the person get a better sense of it.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AIt's a lot of awareness.
Speaker CIt's a lot of awareness and it's a lot of, you know, I don't know.
Speaker CI don't know if this is right.
Speaker CThis is the way I see it, but it's like narrowing your focus to see where you are before you expand your lens.
Speaker CYou know, we can sit here and talk about how culture is, is perpetuating this.
Speaker CAnd, you know, the diet mentality and the binge purge, popular actions in high schools and colleges, you know, they all jump on board and do certain behaviors.
Speaker CThere's binge drinking and all kinds of things going on, but that's not going to help Susie, who's trying to figure out how to survive feeling very alone but being very popular, let's say, or just not feeling like they fit in the world that they're in.
Speaker CAnd how do I get a sense of who I am when everybody around me is telling me I'm somebody else?
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd I think eating disorders, as they get stronger, can leave a sense of emptiness inside.
Speaker CSo we don't.
Speaker CWhen I, When I say to someone, you know, well, who are you without your eating disorder?
Speaker CThere is literally like this detachment of like, I don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker CWho would I be without it?
Speaker CLike, it's.
Speaker CIt's how I.
Speaker CIt's how I engage with the world, it's how I engage with my friends, it's how I control my body.
Speaker CIt's all of those things.
Speaker CI'm like, yes, but if you weren't doing that, think of how much time you might have in your life and what would you do with time?
Speaker CAnd those ideas are really hard to conceptualize when you're in the throes of it.
Speaker AAbsolutely they are.
Speaker AI mean, again, kind of circling back to that.
Speaker AThat's a tough question for any adolescent.
Speaker CFor some of us grown ups, I think.
Speaker AWell, I was just gonna say it's really.
Speaker AIt is a tough question for many, many people.
Speaker AI mean, that is a.
Speaker AIf you have to stop and think about it, like, you could give like a.
Speaker AI'm a, you know, I'm a therapist, I'm a podcaster, I'm an author, I'm a.
Speaker AWell, that's like a description of what we do, right?
Speaker ALike, who are we?
Speaker AAnd so that is.
Speaker AWhich is a much scarier question to answer and.
Speaker CBecause what if you're wrong, right?
Speaker CWhat if your thought of who you are is wrong?
Speaker CThere's vulnerability in that.
Speaker AA ton of vulnerability in that.
Speaker AAnd so, I mean, again, that's scary for a grown adult.
Speaker ASo, you know, just thinking about, you know, as we think all think about our kids, right?
Speaker AAs we're thinking about this question.
Speaker AHoly cow, that is.
Speaker ABut I think too, like, the gift of this conversation and, and of this awareness is that we can then pass this on to, to our kids, creating a very safe space for them to be vulnerable and to really explore that in a way that, you know, they maybe wouldn't have been able to before or we weren't able to before, or, you know, whatever the case is.
Speaker AAnd that can open up conversations for, you know, so many different things, right?
Speaker CSo many, so many.
Speaker AI mean, I'm sitting here thinking as we're talking, I mean, the parallels of, you know, supporting a child who has an eating disorder or disordered eating and supporting a child who is in the process of coming out, it's very similar, right?
Speaker AI mean, there's.
Speaker AOn the part of the parent, there's so much the need for awareness and understanding and, and it's nothing that you're like, well, you, you're doing this wrong.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AThose are things that we just don't inherently know, right?
Speaker AThat's not built into our knowledge base.
Speaker ASo these, this is information that we have to actively seek and understand so that we can be aware, so that we can create the safe space.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so I'm.
Speaker AI'm really.
Speaker AI think these.
Speaker AThese parallels are just.
Speaker AThis is kind of fascinating for me, and it also.
Speaker AI think this is a good little.
Speaker AA little segue into, you know, you and I were talking about.
Speaker AThis is a very common struggle with LGBTQ youth and young adults.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, I'd love to talk about that a little bit and why, you know, it's almost disproportionately so and.
Speaker AAnd why that might be and if there are, you know, kind of specific things that either lead to that or that can be done to support.
Speaker CSo the National Eating Disorder association, nida, and the Trevor Trevor Foundation, I think, Project.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker CBoth did studies on eating disorders in the community and found out that 54%.
Speaker C54% of youths within the community, from, I think 13 to 23 is what I'm thinking somewhere in there, identify as having disordered eating or an eating disorder.
Speaker CAnd that is astronomically high.
Speaker CAnd that is vastly different than when we're talking about the diet culture.
Speaker CSo, you know, you can say, well, in America, everybody has an eating disorder because we're all hyper focused on body image and what we're eating and not eating and things like that.
Speaker CBut a lot of that is diet culture, and not necessarily my sense of self is related to how I eat and how I see my body or how I see my gender or any of those kinds of things.
Speaker CThat's all intertwined with some of the challenges that the youth are going through.
Speaker CAnother statistic I wrote down because I thought this was fascinating, so I don't remember where this came from, because I didn't write it down.
Speaker CShame on the researcher in me.
Speaker C5% of males in.
Speaker CIn the United States identify, I think, as gay, was the statistic I saw.
Speaker CAnd of that 5%, 42% identify.
Speaker COh, 40.
Speaker CWait, hold on.
Speaker CLet me see what I wrote here.
Speaker COf the eating disorder males that come into treatment.
Speaker CI apologize.
Speaker COf the eating disorder males that come into treatment, 42 of them.
Speaker C42% of them identify as gay.
Speaker CSo 5% of the United States males identify as gay.
Speaker CBut within the eating disorder community, the people that seek treatment, which is not always a very high percentage.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker C2% of them identify as gay.
Speaker CSo they are struggling at such a high level and utilizing this coping strategy, which, again, if we think of it in terms of my sense of self, isn't that a big part of coming out?
Speaker CLike, how do I do that?
Speaker CIs this okay?
Speaker CWill you still love me?
Speaker CWill I have a place, Will I get more bullied?
Speaker CDo I want anyone to know this is happening?
Speaker CIs this just a phase?
Speaker CAm I wrong?
Speaker CSo all the questions that you go through can be put on the back burner.
Speaker CLet's say if your health is compromised because you have a full blown eating disorder, now we have an identity that we have to address.
Speaker CThat's the priority.
Speaker CWe don't necessarily have to deal with the other crises or stressors in our life because this takes priority.
Speaker CThen we stabilize the eating disorder and we're back to that sense of who we are.
Speaker CThose parallels, I think, are exasperated because of the challenges of who we are and how, whether it's okay to be who we are, who we see ourselves.
Speaker CAnd, and if I see myself this way, what does that mean?
Speaker CBecause I'm, I'm grown up in a, in a family that doesn't believe any of this is real or it's a phase, or we're not going to talk about it until you get over it.
Speaker CAnd so, you know, they channel the energy in other coping strategies.
Speaker CSo, you know, eating disorders, drugs, withdrawal, Internet, all kinds of different things.
Speaker CInstead of being resourced into a community that will allow them to explore who they are, that will allow them to try on different hats, which is really a healthy way of going through adolescence, right?
Speaker CWe're like, I'm gonna be a burnout this week and I'm gonna.
Speaker CDo they still say that I'm gonna be a popular person, I'm gonna be a musician, you know, but you try those on to figure out who you are.
Speaker CAnd if you're not allowed to do that, then you're going to figure out another way of moving through that developmental task.
Speaker CI'm a little lost because I'm shady here today, but I think if you think in terms of how can I help my loved one figure out who they are and where they're going to fit in the world, how do I help create that for them?
Speaker CThen you're really addressing the core issue.
Speaker CIn addition to stabilizing, I'm going to tell you a really quick, completely unrelated story, that of my own life.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CBut it kind of, kind of overlaps with this.
Speaker CSo I adopted my son from Ethiopia when he was 10 months old.
Speaker CAnd he was very, very sick.
Speaker CVery, very malnourished and very sick.
Speaker CSo he came here and, and got all kinds of, of treatments, but really it was nutrition and antibiotics, but it was a year's worth of them.
Speaker CAnd then he stabilized and became this, you know, amazing child.
Speaker CAnd as he grew up, I Had a sense that he'd have some challenges because of his early, his early days.
Speaker CYou know, there were several times when he almost didn't make it in Ethiopia.
Speaker CHe grew up in, like a tribal community, so it was very different from where I am.
Speaker CAnd, and then as he grew up and went into school, we found out that he, he falls under the autism spectrum and he's got, you know, a little bit attention deficit sprinkled in for, for fun.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo, and, and I got such interesting reactions from my community.
Speaker CHow are you going to do this?
Speaker CI'm a single parent.
Speaker CI adopted him as a single parent.
Speaker CSo how are you going to handle this?
Speaker CHow are you going to be able to do these things?
Speaker CAnd I, and I just, I found that so curious because my initial thought was, well, okay, I'm going to create a world that makes sense to him so he can be the best version of him.
Speaker CI don't know what that world looks like.
Speaker CI have no idea.
Speaker CBecause I've never been in the special needs community outside of like a therapeutic help of family.
Speaker CGet resources.
Speaker CAnd so I figure it out as I go.
Speaker CWe kind of wing it.
Speaker CSometimes we're awkward about it and sometimes we're great.
Speaker CAnd sometimes we have to set boundaries and do things in different places because it's better for him and us.
Speaker CBut, but I figured that out as I go.
Speaker CSo I think it's the same, it's the same dynamic.
Speaker CYou don't get to choose what your, your children are faced with in life, but you can teach them that there are communities, there's resources.
Speaker CYou know, my son is never going to play a sport, but he can do Special Olympics and be a rock star in his community and happy and get all of those things that he needs in the right environment, the right community.
Speaker CBut if I don't let him do that, and I just try and make him fit and get through school and use the resources the school gives me, he won't evolve to his best self.
Speaker CHe'll evolve to the best he can be within what society tells him he should be.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CSo tangents, okay?
Speaker ANo, not at all.
Speaker AI think that is such a perfect story because, I mean, for so many reasons.
Speaker AFirst of all, bravo.
Speaker AAnd oh my gosh.
Speaker AAnd your son is so lucky to have you.
Speaker CHe's amazing.
Speaker AAnd just having that, I think you, you know, a bunch of things that you touched on that are so important, but having that sense of.
Speaker AAnd I think this is a little bit of like tapping into our intuition instead of like paying attention to what Those around us are saying, or society is saying, but tapping into our, our knowledge, right?
Speaker ALike our internal strength and being like, okay, I've got this.
Speaker AWe can figure this out.
Speaker AIt's going to be messy, right?
Speaker ABecause life is.
Speaker AWe can figure this out, right?
Speaker AThere's.
Speaker AThere's always a solution.
Speaker AThere are always choices.
Speaker AAnd I think one of the most important things for these kids and for us is to know, you know, you brought up the, you know, community several times, that there is community and that we are not alone in this.
Speaker ASo, and, and conversely, if we kind of force into the box that, you know, society likes to have the boxes.
Speaker ASo if we force our kids into those boxes, then they are going to feel alone, and we are going to feel alone because they are going to struggle, struggle because of that.
Speaker AAnd so it's a whole, like, I just like the kind of the circle there of just tap into your, you know, once again, it goes back to that, tapping into yourself, listening to that, yourself, your intuition and following that and being like, I've got this.
Speaker AI can do this.
Speaker CThe therapist in me is coming up with, like, little terms I want to say as you're talking.
Speaker CLike, I want to say drop the woulda, coulda, shoulda.
Speaker CI would do this.
Speaker CI should do this.
Speaker CI could have done this.
Speaker CBecause they don't serve anyone.
Speaker CThey just keep your box, right?
Speaker CAnd drop the phrase I can't and replace it with I'm resourceful because I don't know what this challenges as a parent, let's say with.
Speaker CWith an eating disorder, loved one, because it could be anybody in your, in your family, right?
Speaker CI don't really know what that means, but I'm resourceful, so I'm going to help you figure it out or I'm going to sit with you and go through it.
Speaker CSo if, let's say your challenge is eating a meal, I can sit with you and I can distract you while you get the food in you so you can get past that hump.
Speaker CAnd then we can talk about the food later.
Speaker CBut at the table, never talk about the food.
Speaker CAt the buffet, never talk about the food.
Speaker CIf they go to a holiday or a party or a family event, be their ally, be the person that they can go to, give you a look, have some code that they can do.
Speaker CLike that out, help me and that.
Speaker CJust be that person to help them move past the anxiety so that they can continue with whatever the task is.
Speaker CSo like, like, let's say the holiday would be the task of going and having fun, right?
Speaker CIf I'M so hyper focused on what they're serving.
Speaker CI'm not present, I'm not having fun.
Speaker CI don't know what the heck everybody's been doing since COVID whether it ended in their world or not kind of thing.
Speaker CI'm just focused on when the food's coming out and how I'm going to fill my plate to look like I'm eating and those kinds of things.
Speaker CSo be the person's ally, you know, let them go and eat the food that feels safe because their anxiety of going to this event that's food focused is the bigger picture than whether they had turkey and mashed potatoes and whatever else they're being served.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CSo be their ally.
Speaker CCreate that world and be resourceful.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker CI love that.
Speaker AThat is.
Speaker AI mean, that's.
Speaker AAnd it just.
Speaker AI have to giggle because I.
Speaker ATwo of the phrases I used are literally directly from my therapist, which I mean you and you are welcome to this one because it's one of my favorite.
Speaker AIs don't, don't should on yourself.
Speaker AShe said don't shut on yourself.
Speaker ARight, right.
Speaker ALove.
Speaker AAnd I use it all the time.
Speaker AAnd then the idea that we have choices, which for me, I was like, oh, I do.
Speaker ALike, I don't have to do that.
Speaker AThere are choice.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AWe have.
Speaker AThere are always choices.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo I love that you said all of that because I'm like, yeah.
Speaker CYou know, if you don't acknowledge choices, your world gets really small.
Speaker AYes, it does.
Speaker AAnd scary.
Speaker CAnd scary.
Speaker CBecause anything outside of what you're controlling is dangerous and overwhelming.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker CThere's also joy and love, connection, community, and all those things outside of that, that safety, that cocoon that you.
Speaker CThat we create around us sometimes.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker AVery true.
Speaker CThere's a place in the world for everybody there.
Speaker AYes, there is.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's why we do what we do.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AOh, my goodness.
Speaker AWell, I have loved having this conversation.
Speaker AIs there is anything else that you'd like to add before we wrap up?
Speaker AI just know this is going to be incredibly helpful and kind of, you know, mind expanding, mind blowing for people.
Speaker CSo, you know, I have loved having this conversation.
Speaker CI feel like I went off on tangents, so I'm hoping it all comes together for the listener.
Speaker CBut if you have any questions, concerns, feel free to reach out to me.
Speaker CI can be contacted@teresateresabusser.com that's my website.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd if you're interested, I'm going to do a holiday webinar.
Speaker CHow to survive the holidays.
Speaker CFood, family and Festivities, and that'll be next week.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd maybe we'll do another one further down as we get closer to December.
Speaker CBut.
Speaker CBut, yeah, I mean, I think those things.
Speaker CI also have a guide if anyone's interested.
Speaker CI think you.
Speaker CYou'll share with them as well.
Speaker CI'm binge eating.
Speaker CThat was my.
Speaker CMy doctoral project was binge eating and mindfulness.
Speaker CSo we created a little.
Speaker CA little guide to help people with that.
Speaker CBut.
Speaker CBut I've loved this conversation, and I just want anyone who.
Speaker CAnything that we talked about that resonates with them, please know you're not alone.
Speaker CThere are resources.
Speaker CThere are communities out there.
Speaker CI'm going to say really quickly because I should have intertwined this, but NEHA National Eating Disorder association is a phenomenal resource.
Speaker CAn ED is a resource for.
Speaker CIf you want to look for a local support group, they run support groups.
Speaker CAnd then there's just several other things that are out there.
Speaker CIf you're specific to struggling with anorexia, bulimia, binge eating, or any other level of disordered eating.
Speaker CSo those things are out there as well.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd just remember, it's about thoughts, it's about behaviors, and it's about actions.
Speaker CAnd what we do when we're in it is serving us or has served us.
Speaker CSo we don't villainize it.
Speaker CWe just try to recognize that it's no longer serving us and we want to come back to our sense of self.
Speaker AThat is awesome.
Speaker AThere's literally nothing I can add to that other than I am going to link all of this in the show notes.
Speaker ASo if any of these things resonated, please know that this is in the show notes and you will be able to click through right from there.
Speaker AAnd I'm going to link some of these things on my website as well.
Speaker ASo this will be a standing resource.
Speaker AStanding resources there.
Speaker AAnd I know you said next week, but I want to give the actual date because this is going to post next week.
Speaker ASo it will be November 16th, correct.
Speaker CAt 10:00am Central Time.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker CAnd yeah, we can just reach out in the zoom link and go from there.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYes, I will have that connected, but I just wanted to clarify that because I didn't want just.
Speaker AJust as people are listening to know exactly the date and the time so much.
Speaker AYou are very welcome.
Speaker CKeep doing what you're doing, Heather.
Speaker CKeep doing what you're doing.
Speaker AThank you, thank you, thank you.
Speaker CAll right, take care.
Speaker BAnd now it's time for your parenting LGBTQ and A.
Speaker BSo today is day 14 of my magic Mind Challenge.
Speaker BAnd again.
Speaker BAnd I'm honestly really pleasantly surprised.
Speaker BIt has been a lovely addition to my morning routine and it has allowed me to increase my water intake because I'm not craving that caffeine pickup like I was before.
Speaker BSo I think it's a total win win.
Speaker BI also have to say that even though the lingering fatigue from my running in with COVID has been super annoying, I also feel like this magic little shot has helped with the focus factor even while my body has been recovering.
Speaker BSo here is my verdict of magic mind at the end of my 14 days each day, my energy levels and my ability to stay in my productive zone have gotten a little bit longer.
Speaker BAnd when I'm craving the taste and the warmth of coffee, I can go full decaf because I don't need that added boost in the afternoon.
Speaker BThe really great news is that you can still take advantage of 20% off your entire purchase using the code BREATHE14.
Speaker BThat's B R E A T H E 14 this is good until the end of November, November 30th.
Speaker BSo please jump on there, take advantage and try this out.
Speaker BAll of these details are in the show notes and on social media.
Speaker BAnd Remember to tag 14 Days of Magic to help save the Amazon.
Speaker BThis episode's LGBTQ A touches on the very popular question who gets to tell who and when?
Speaker BAs I mentioned at the beginning of the episode November 29th episode, we'll go in depth on this, but with American Thanksgiving falling next week, I thought I'd give a few quick 1.
Speaker BThis is a fabulous opportunity to connect with your child and work to get on the same page.
Speaker BIf you have one driving thought, let it be this.
Speaker BThis is their story.
Speaker BYour child's story.
Speaker BYou are a supporting actor, so to speak, when it comes to who to tell and when.
Speaker B2.
Speaker BAsk them these three questions.
Speaker BWho do they want to tell and when?
Speaker B2.
Speaker BWho do they want you to tell and when?
Speaker BAnd three who do they want to tell and have you present while they are telling them?
Speaker BNumber three if there are points of disagreement, take a breath and ask calm, clarifying questions.
Speaker BAnd four if your child is adamant about telling someone and you are struggling with that for whatever reason, I'm going to circle back to this.
Speaker BThis is your child's story.
Speaker BYour job is to support and protect your child, not shield others feelings.
Speaker BYour child needs to know that you have their back no matter what.
Speaker BWork out your stuff on your own time and let others work out theirs.
Speaker BAnd that's it.
Speaker BNo need to make it difficult.
Speaker BYou have enough on your plate right now.
Speaker BRemember to subscribe to the podcast and sign up up for my emails to get notifications of new episodes.
Speaker BUntil next time.
Speaker BThanks so much for joining me today.
Speaker BIf you enjoyed today's episode, I would be so grateful.
Speaker BFor a rating or a review.
Speaker BClick on the link in the show notes or go to my website chrysalismama.com to stay up to date on my latest resources as well as to learn how you can work with me.
Speaker BPlease share this podcast with anyone who needs to know that they are not alone and remember to just breathe until next time.
Speaker AIt.