For #WorldDiabetesDay , let’s take a moment to remember that no one sweets their way into diabetes even though our culture loves to blame people with type 2 diabetes for bringing it onto themselves.
When someone says, “I just ate 2 pieces of cake and probably gave myself diabetes,” that’s not funny. That’s damaging and painful to those who have diabetes. It’s insinuating that those who have diabetes deserve it because they did it to themselves.
We need to consider what we’re inferring by those “jokes and how harmful those jokes are to people living with diabetes. #WorldDiabetesDay
Genetics play a big role in the development of diabetes as does stress and many other factors. We need to stop simplifying this complex disease, and more importantly we need to stop the blaming. #haes
And as @theantidietplan said so perfectly: Diabetes is a complex multifactorial illness and this reductionist way of thinking contributes to weight bias which actually IS associated with increased risk of diabetes and metabolic disease.
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Every time I get on a plane, I feel absolutely sick to my stomach — terrified that the person sitting next to me will take a picture of me and I’ll end up being mocked on the internet.
Put your anger on the airlines for making seats smaller & smaller.
Interesting how it’s never a picture of a really tall person impeding the other person’s space.
Instead, we are supposed to be discuss whether a fat person deserves basic humanity and dignity.
If body size was a choice like so many people think it is, do you think I’d choose to have a body that is hated, mocked, and ridiculed? A body that denies me safe medical care and the ability to travel comfortably?
It’s so easy to call us lazy and undisciplined, huh?
If you need to eat this Yom Kippur because you’re in ED recovery, please know that eating is not just permissible, but a MITZVAH.
Your connection & spirituality happens through eating, not restricting. Hashem doesn’t want you to be harming yourself in the name of religion.
Obviously, please confirm with a treatment team + Rabbi who understands eating disorders and mental health. But your mental and physical health comes first. 💗
I want to clarify that this is referring to ALL eating disorders. Not just anorexia. Your mental health and recovery is a priority whether you struggle with restricting, bingeing, purging, or any other ED behaviors.
I used to be concerned that sharing my negative experiences in ED treatment would be harmful to people attempting to get help.
But no more beating around the bush. ED treatment is built for thin, rich white women and it’s a broken system that doesn’t work.
I said what I said.
I’m not trying to be an asshole but until treatment is created for ALL people in mind, more people will continue to be harmed and retraumatized in treatment.
Black people, trans people, fat people... they deserve safe care. And the current system does not provide that.
Also, OBVIOUSLY there are exceptions! Of course there are people who’ve found treatment lifesaving but overall, the system is often ineffective if not not harmful and it’s important to be talking about this.
When I was around 19 & roughly the weight I am now,I went to an endocrinologist bec my RD & I couldn’t figure out why I was my size given how I ate.
(Spoiler alert: body diversity is a thing but my ED RD wasn’t aware)
It was also the only period of recovery I’d ever experienced
TW calories
The endo forced me on the scale after I pleaded not to &then said I had 2 options.I could get WLS or I could eat less than 1k cal a day w 1 hour vigorous exercise daily.
Yes, she was aware of my ED of 10 yrs (at that pt) that I was was just starting to recover from
Imagining what it could’ve been like to have been told, your body isn’t broken, you aren’t broken. You can trust your body and it’s okay.