-451 there are certain mental problems you will never understand or have sympathy for, like eating disorders and depression... just get over it, amirite?

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I don't understand or have sympathy for people who //pretend// to have those conditions, but I don't think just getting over it is a good solution for any medical issue.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I have symphony for them, but I just don't understand it. But by no means, do they need to just "get over it".

by Anonymous 11 years ago

hehe symphony

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I seriously sat here for like 5 minutes trying to figure out how to spell that. Damn.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

ono

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Most of use JOHNNY, COME ON.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

troll or idiot? hmm either way, still an idiot

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I know I'm gonna get downvoted to hell for this, but that's how I feel about eating disorders, not depression though.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I just find it hard to believe that a person who is skin and bones can look in the mirror and see someone fat enough to break a chair. I'm not saying that they're all seeking for attention, but it's much harder to sympathize with a condition that you don't understand how it can even happen. I'm also not saying that I judge people with anorexia and bulimia, or any other eating disorder, because I've never been through it, so I have no right. All I'm saying is that I don't fully understand the possibility of the disease even occuring. I don't understand how someone can be that delusional.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Control was the biggest factor for me. I felt like I had absolutely zero control over anything except for that.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

It's a fact that eating disorders are real. You can't just not believe in them..

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Lol I never said I didn't believe in them. I said I found it hard to believe. There's a huge difference. I understand they're real, I just don't see how they happen.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

You agree with the post when it comes to eating disorders..I'm pointing out that you can't just get over it or whatever..

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I think the fact that a lot of teenage girls exaggerate their insecurities to the point where it seems as though they have an eating disorder makes it harder for those with actual eating disorders to be understood. Eating disorders are an unhealthy way of dealing with - actually, avoiding - one's problems. Whenever something goes wrong, the eating disordered person turns to their bad habits to cope. It's an incredibly hard thing to grapple with. A lot of people with eating disorders say "It's about the weight, but it's not about the weight at all" and I think that's the best way to put it.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Oh I know. I admit that it's a true disorder and that you just can't "get over it" for the fact that it is a mental disorder. I agreed with the part that said "there are certain mental problems you will never understand or have sympathy for". I'm that way with eating disorders. I'm weird in that if I can't empathize with something, I can't sympathize with it.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Definitely talk to someone about that, anon. BDD can be so bad. The fact that you acknowledge something's not quite right is a good thing, despite its horror.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

:( I'm sorry, anon.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Certain mental problems like stupidity. Hey look you have that!

by Anonymous 11 years ago

...how did this get on the homepage?

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Because it's going to get completely slaughtered. =)

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I would go in and on about how my disorders have shaped my life and how they are not to be ignored, but you are obviously a troll. That's why you're anonymous.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

You obviously have no idea what clinical depression is. It's completely different from the depression all those angst-y teenagers think they have.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

What was most difficult about my depression when I was a teenager (I was diagnosed by my doctor and on anti-depressants) was the fact that even my own mother would not (and still hasnt) believe it, and yet she would go on about how depressed she was, and vent to me things that a sixteen year old should never have to worry about (like the problems her and my dad were having). The fact that she has never accepted that I was clinically depressed, even when she knows what it's like, made it so much harder to recover. I still get "bad days" sometimes, yet she tells me that I'm just tired or hungry and it makes me just want to fall back to where I used to be. ** I'm not sure if that all makes sense, I'm on mobile so it's hard to read over.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I understand, and yes it made sense. It's a crappy situation when parents decide to put their problems on you, especially when they complain and then don't try to understand your issues.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Telling someone with depression to "just get over it" is just like telling a blind man to just see.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Well...This is retarded.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

You're an ass. Both of those are physical problems. They are brain chemicals gone wrong. No one chooses it. No one can just fuckin fix it.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

You don't understand it, nor do you want to understand it. That's like saying someone chose to have bone cancer. They didn't ask for it. It bothers the hell out of me that people are so sympathetic for any illnesses below the neck. But from the neck up, it's a "choice". It's not a fucking choice. If you are 75 pounds and look in the mirror and still feel fat, is that not an illness? If you feel suicidal and depressed all the time and can't help it, is that not an illness? You wouldn't tell an AIDS patient to just get over it and be happy. You would take them to a doctor and get them checked regularly. Same goes for mental disorders. How is this so hard to understand?

by Anonymous 11 years ago

For some reason, this post reminded me to go get another prescription. And maybe ask about upping my dosage.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Motherfucker, you better be trolling.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I'm probably going to get some flak for this, but fuck it. Depression is a purely psychological thing. There's nothing you can do. Everything you think is completely controlled by neurotransmitters. If they are being released in abnormal quantities, then there's not a damn thing you can do without altering you brain chemistry. The same thing goes for issues concerning self-image. You can't help being delusional about the shape your body is in. HOWEVER. BIG HOWEVER, I have zero sympathy for people with eating disorders. It's not a choice to think you are ugly, but it is 100% your conscious choice to not eat/make yourself vomit. Someone can absolutely get over that. It's not like they lose control over their actions, so I believe responsibility lies with them as far as the eating disorder itself goes.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

You clearly have no idea what the fuck you're talking about. If it's 100% our choice to starve ourselves or b/p, then please explain how people have DIED from anorexia or bulimia. If someone is fifty pounds underweight, has multiple health problems and can't even walk for five minutes without feeling tired, don't you think they know they have a problem? Don't you think, that they would do anything to stop? Recovery isn't just getting over it. You don't just wake up and think, hey I should totally stop starving myself or b/p-ing, then go eat a nice healthy breakfast and never have problems again. Recovery is a long, horrible process. You're trying to let go of what life has been like for you every single day of your life for years and years, and your eating disorder is doing everything to hold on.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Or perhaps you just don't want to accept responsibility for your actions? I'm just warning you right now, I'm going to be very rude and cold throughout this response. I'm tired of people limiting themselves and then bitching about it. What do you mean explain how people have died from being malnourished? Are you fucking stupid? If you do not supply your body with nutrients, it will stop functioning. In order to supply your body with nutrients, you must actively do so. Being able to actively do so means you can actively refrain from doing so. People can hold their breathe until they pass out. By your logic, they didn't CHOOSE to do so, it just happened. People can, and do, choose to forgo eating/keeping food down. Their problem is that they limit themselves. There's exactly nothing except their self-imposed fates that stops them from eating like a normal fucking person. It's funny how people jump all over fatties about how they have no self control, and the solution to our problem would be to put down the fork. Here I am, though, criticizing people who don't eat as having a similar self control issue, and people are jumping to their defense.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

They can't control how they see themselves, I understand that. I understand that all too well. However, it becomes their fault when they choose to take a radical approach to the situation. It's not like they're ignorant to what's going on; you said that much yourself. You'd love to believe it's not your fault, because you're human. Anyone is fully capable of rectifying their eating disorder at any given moment. Diverting blame away from them creates a cushion for their ego. People can't stand the thought that they may not be as strong as they'd like to think they are, and they can masquerade as brave and strong under the guise that they can't control their actions. The human mind is not built accept the fact that we are imperfect creatures, and actively tries to reject flaws. Telling them that their eating disorder isn't their fault is only hurting them. Reassure them that they are powerless, and they will remain powerless. We need to get over ourselves and wake the fuck up. Our greatest fear is not that we are powerless, but that we are powerful beyond all measure. Perhaps you've heard that quote or something similar. There is massive truth in those words.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Tbh you're just an ignorant fuck. By 'explain how people have died' I meant EXPLAIN HOW THEY FUCKING GOT THAT WAY. Because I'm pretty sure if you fucking die from a disease/mental disorder then it's not your fault and you don't have '100% choice' over it. Grow a fucking brain and stop being so ignorant towards something you know nothing about. Maybe one day YOU'LL get an eating disorder and then maybe you'll understand how much of a dumb shit you're being.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

OMG THANK YOU. PocketPie you are the chilliest.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

*chillest

by Anonymous 11 years ago

@Turnip: No, you are the ignorant fuck. YEAH, THEY GOT THAT WAY BY CHOOSING NOT TO EAT, YOU STUPID FUCKING PERSON. Human's don't just automatically eat, we have to do it ourselves. They choose not to do it. They still feel hunger, they can still eat, they just choose to ignore those feelings and not eat. There is no biological process preventing them from taking food, ingesting it, and digesting it. A human being is capable of almost anything if they put their mind to it, including starving themselves to death. NOT EATING ISN'T A DISEASE, THE POOR SELF IMAGE IS. I have an eating disorder. I overeat a lot. I can stop any time I want. My life is just not immediately in danger and I don't see it as worth it to stop. I take full responsibility for how I am. Fuck you, I do understand. I'm sorry I just don't cater to the fragile ego of people who can't stand hearing that their situation is there fault. They've done studies, people with anorexia nervosa have a higher concentration of the hormone that tells us we are hungry than the average person. They are just ignoring that feeling. Injecting more of the hormone intravenously increases their food intake. Again, fuck you.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

@Pocketpie: Do you think it's a normal state of mind to eat more than what is healthy? Anorexics are unhealthily thin because they REFUSE to maintain a healthy BMI. They REFUSE TO EAT ENOUGH. There's nothing stopping them EXCEPT THEM-MOTHERFUCKING-SELVES. I already went over this above, their brains are telling them to eat. They have more of the hormone telling them they're hungry than the average person does. They just ignore it. The brain can only instill emotions in someone, at no point does it actually take over muscle function except for autonomic reflexes like blinking or flinching in the case of perceived impact. If what you were saying were true, people would not be able to commit suicide because their bodies wouldn't allow them to. People commit suicide all the time. It is absolutely as simple as "eat or die", and anorexics that die just chose die. They decided that a thin figure was more important than living. THAT PART is what I will admit is out of their control, and what I have been saying this whole time. However, if they value living, then they're the only thing preventing them from eating.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Egh just FUCK OFF. You're making yourself look like an asshole. Oh right, you are one.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I reeeeally don't give half of a fuck what most people think of me. You are certainly not one of the few whose opinion I value. In fact, several people I care about have struggled with eating disorders. Doesn't change my opinion a single bit. Nothing short of empirical evidence proving that there is a legitimate biological process physically preventing people with an eating disorder from ingesting food in a normal, healthy manner will change my opinion on the subject. I don't fucking care what anyone thinks of this answer, the fragile human ego can go fuck itself. The truth is not measured in emotional appeal, it's based of factual information. Until proven otherwise, what I've said is likely to be the truth. So, for the third time, FUUUUUCK YOOOOOOU.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I know everything you said, but I forgot the exact science. The idea is the same, though. The brain controls autonomic function. The brain SUPPLIES the signals for muscles to contract and relax, but it does not make any sort of conscious decision. If I choose not to do anything, my heart will continue to beat and my lungs will continue to cycle air. I have to choose to type this, though. When I eat, I have to make the decision to eat. neurotransmitters and hormones give us the desire to eat, but we still have to decide to do it. "So, I knowingly endangered us anyway, because my only other option was to eat breakfast, and I didn't want to." You didn't want to eat. You chose not to eat. You decided that not feeling like a failure was more important than your safety. Whether that is a reasonable or rational choice is completely irrelevant, you still made that choice. That's why you're quick to say you had no choice. If you don't believe you had any control, then your ego is protected from feelings of responsibility. You said yourself that you'd rather not eat than feel like a failure. If you believed it was your fault you didn't eat, wouldn't you feel like a failure?

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Hibernation is a completely irrelevant process. The animal's metabolism drops, their internal body temperature drops, and they fall in to a state in which external stimuli will no longer rouse them. That's not a choice, that's something their body automatically does. If you take the blood of a hibernating squirrel and inject it in to a squirrel that is not hibernating, that squirrel will hibernate. There's an actual chemical trigger that can even be used on organs alone to preserve them for organ transplants. I'm not arguing that anorexics don't think it's worth it not to eat, I'm just arguing that they physically can. You were completely capable of eating before driving your friend, you CHOSE not to in order to avoid negative feelings. You're arguing whether or not you are responsible to avoid negative feelings. It's all about acceptance. If you accept something is wrong, you can rectify it. The human will is stronger than you think. I am physically capable of sawing my own arm off, I just choose not to because it's a bad idea. Anorexics are capable of eating, they choose not to because it's a bad idea to them.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Insomniacs are a bad example, as well. Just about any comparison you can come up with is a bad comparison, because they're different things. Insomniacs TRY to sleep. There's a change in the chemical balance of your brain from being awake to being asleep. They can't simply go to sleep, because their body will not go in to sleep mode. Anorexics can eat, because all biological processes regarding eating still function just fine. Of course they know all this, they just make the decision not to eat. It's not that fucking difficult to understand. Their brain prevents life from being a priority over not eating, but they are still fully able to eat. Since it's not impossible for them to eat, they must fucking choose not to eat. I didn't mention the fucking reflex arc, I'm not talking about that, so I'm not incorrect about anything regarding that. I'm not capable of sawing my arm off? Try telling that to anyone who had to make the conscious decision to saw their appendage off for whatever reason. http://lksk.in/5079 http://lksk.in/5080 http://lksk.in/5081

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Against the 'anorexics can eat normally, they choose not to' arguement: If you have binge/purge bulimia or anorexia b/p type, then you may eventually get acid reflux, which is where (I think) you throw up everything you eat or drink. This means you can physically NOT eat. I have anorexia with binge/restricting (officially diagnosed with anorexia, self diagnosed with b/r) and sometimes it physically hurts to eat. Like once the food gets to my stomach, it's like 'noooo man what are you doing?!' and hurts and stuff. Also, if you have been constantly restricting for ages, you can't just eat like a normal person. You can't wake up someday and eat whatever, your stomach won't allow it. You'll probably just throw up meals. Oh, and like PocketPie said, if you fast for a few days, you'll have trouble eating.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

mike_hawk totally lost this argument lol

by Anonymous 11 years ago

No, actually, I didn't. I gave up because it's pointless to argue with people when they're blinded by emotion. The majority's opinion does not become fact. There are groups advocating drunk driving. If you went on their forums and denounced the acceptability of drunk driving, you would be the minority. Does that mean you lost the argument? No.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

You have no facts that are relevant to the discussion. You just say things not based in reality. That's exactly what it is. People don't just lie down and accept fact. You yourself said you are delusional. That means, by definition, you have the capacity to act against fact.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

"and that mentally it is as hard for an anorexic to eat normally as it is for you to chop off your arm" BOOM. MENTALLY. Thank you for proving my whole point. Anorexia deals with no physical handicap preventing people from eating, it is a psychological disorder. Cannabis has proven effective in the treatment of anorexia nervosa. Know why? Because it treats the psychological reasons for them not eating. It acts as an antiemetic, allowing for the people who can't eat normally to keep food down, but has no physiological effects outside of that. If it weren't a choice, then therapy and cannabis WOULD NOT BE EFFECTIVE TREATMENTS. You can't treat a wound with therapy, because it's a physical problem. You can treat anorexia with therapy because it is a mental problem; a problem in which the patient chooses not to eat. Their reasons are not logical, but it's a choice nonetheless. You still don't have any sort of valid, scientific reason for why I would not be able to cut my arm off in a non-life or death situation. I am completely able, otherwise I wouldn't be able to do it in a life or death situation.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

That aspect only comes in to play after the person has abstained from eating for a long enough period of time. It's entirely possible to recover full gastrointestinal function if done correctly. It's not an automatic death sentence. A mental problem is different from a physical problem, though. A physical problem cannot be overcome without physical changes in the body.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Yes, but it doesn't physically impair one from doing things (generally). I, personally, have a phobia regarding vomit. I cannot stand looking at people vomit, hearing people vomit, or being near vomit. However, I am able to overcome this mental problem in order to help people I care about if they happen to be extremely sick. It makes it extremely difficult, but I can do it. This can be almost completely overcome with things such as exposure therapy. However, if someone walked up to me and severed the tendons to my fingers, it would not be physically possible to use my fingers. No amount of mental therapy or will power would allow me to flex my fingers. In no situation, life or death, would those fingers be usable. I would have to get them physically repaired.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

"A mental problem is different from a physical problem, though. A physical problem cannot be overcome without physical changes in the body." Actually, a big part of overcoming an eating disorder IS making physical changes. You can't recover if you're thirty pounds underweight, it's impossible. Having an ED is not a choice. Maybe not eating enough, or in the case of bulimia, binge/purging is a choice, but everything else - calorie counting, self hate, distorted views on your body, distorted views on others bodies, food obsession, fear of gaining weight, compulsive binge eating, etc - is not. " We didn't choose to have all the bad thoughts, or the mental symptoms of anorexia/bulimia. Do you think I fucking enjoy looking in the mirror and hating my body? Do you think I fucking enjoy arguing with myself every day over calorie intake? Do you think, the people who are 30lbs underweight or b/p every few hours, the people who are the 'sickest', do you think they love having an eating disorder?

by Anonymous 11 years ago

"Having an ED is not a choice. Maybe not eating enough, or in the case of bulimia, binge/purging is a choice, but everything else - calorie counting, self hate, distorted views on your body, distorted views on others bodies, food obsession, fear of gaining weight, compulsive binge eating, etc - is not." GOOD MOTHERFUCKING LORD. THIS IS WHAT I'VE BEEN ARGUING THE WHOLE TIME. HOLY JESUS SHIT ON A BUN, HAVE YOU SEEN ME AT ANY POINT SAY THAT THE BODY IMAGE PROBLEMS WERE A CHOICE??!?!? I've been saying that they are not, but the actual act of not eating is a choice. I haven't been saying they are mentally healthy, but they are still making a choice not to eat/purge. I'm done arguing with you in particular, because with the paragraph in quotations, you have absolutely summed up my stance throughout this entire argument. Have a good day.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Also, 'you can't fix a physical injury with therapy' works the other way round as well. You can't cure a mental disorder with medication. Maybe it eases symptoms, but it doesn't cure it properly, it does teach the sufferer coping skills and it doesn't provide emotional support. Anyway, wounds heal with time but a mental disorder will always be with you, even if you do get better.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Someone had anger issues

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I do. I have a very low tolerance for frustration. It's very frustrating arguing with someone who proceeds to admit your point.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Ugh you're an insensitive prick w/e It's 12:23am I'm done

by Anonymous 11 years ago

YOU admit my point, and that makes me an insensitive prick? smirk I am an insensitive prick, though. I don't care. It's more than likely Asperger's Syndrome or Antisocial Personality Disorder.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

K W/e it's like 12:26 over here my brain's not working but what Changing my point: maybe you can physically eat, may you can physically digest food, but that doesn't change your mental disorder. Unless you're being force fed, putting food to your mouth is something you have to do, technically a 'choice'. HOWEVER, the mental block that stops you from doing so, a mental symptom, is not something you choose to have. The mental block is just as hard to overcome as a physical problem. I do not have bulimia (unless b/r counts), but I'll try to apply the above point to it & stuff. Maybe, when you binge, you are the one putting food into your mouth, but that doesn't mean you want to. It's a compulsion, something you can't control. When you purge, sure, you're the one doing it. But the only reason you do is from the crippling fear you'll gain weight, among other fears and reasons. Say you have trichotillomania. Yeah, you're the one breaking off your hair, or pulling it out, but it's a compulsion, you can't control it. It's the same with EDs. Btw, is there anyone with bulimia here? Like, have I been accurate and stuff?

by Anonymous 11 years ago

You're still directly within the boundaries of exactly what I am arguing. I knew a kid with trichotillomania. He was able to stop the behavior if it was pointed out to him. He had conscious control over it when he wanted to.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

No, I'm not. You're arguing that it's just a choice whether you eat or not. I'm arguing that while you can technically eat, the mental block is just as powerful as a physical one. To eat, you have to put the food in your mouth, but the mental pain of doing that is just as crimpling as a physical one.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

*crippling

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Ah, well that's false. With a physical block, it's not even technically possible.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Except, you know, NOT AT ALL. A mental block can be overcome with therapy and will power. A physical block is impossible to overcome through absolutely any realistic measure short of altering the physical structure of the deficit.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Hey Mike, wanna know something funny? I have a vomiting phobia too. It's the biggest trigger for my severe anxiety and frequent panic attacks; legitimate chemical imbalances, right? Well what's funny is that my vomiting phobia sometimes makes me too scares to even eat. At my worst I'll go two or three days having barely eaten anything except 'safe foods'. I technically have an eating disorder, which came about through the effects of both my terrible anxiety as well as an intestinal disorder. I don't want your sympathy, though. I just wanted to make you aware that not everyone with an eating disorder is a cheerleader trying to get skinny, because that's what you seem to think.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I never, not even once, mentioned cheerleaders who want to be skinny. Perhaps you're the one making the assumption? I only mentioned people were were delusional and thought they were grotesquely overweight. In regards to your specific situation, I'd wager cannabis would greatly help your problem. If you're in a state that offers medical marijuana, I advise you seek it out.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

It annoys me when people assume girls with anorexia are like 'I want to be skinny like this model!' Most of the time there are way more reasons than that.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

You'd better not be accusing me of thinking or saying that, ever. If you are, I suggest you reread the whole thread in excruciating detail.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Pfft. Weed gives me panic attacks. Thanks for the prescription though, doctor, I'm sure your many years of studying psychiatry and practicing in the field of psychological medicine is what let you to male that assumption about a person over the internet.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

@Monstrosity: I gave a bit of advice that I thought may help you, and that's how you react? Are you serious? That's really nice. I'm not a doctor, but that doesn't make me completely clueless. I made that recommendation based on the fact that THC is an incredibly effective antiemetic and stimulates appetite, and CBD is effective at reducing panic and stress. Let's just completely ignore the fact that cannabis has been successfully used to treat eating disorders AND panic attacks. If it doesn't work for you specifically, I'm sorry, but how was I supposed to know? @Pocketpie: Obviously that's not a fucking eating disorder, but it's a cause, no? I realize there are other reasons people have eating disorders, but I also realize that not all of them are relevant to what I am arguing. I don't //fully// understand eating disorders as a whole, so I choose not to speak about them as a whole. For example, I realize that people undergoing treatment for cancer may be unable to eat due to the constant nausea, and may develop an eating disorder as a result. However, they can't physically keep their food down without the aid of an antiemetic, so their case is irrelevant to my argument.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

People with BDD are still physically capable of eating. Of course, if they go without food for too long they aren't, but they were still capable until they let themselves get to that point. They //do// fall under what I'm arguing, so I used them as the standard.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Holy fucking shit, you are nitpicking at the most ridiculous, retarded, and completely irrelevant details. I never said that all people with BDD have an eating disorder. I'm talking about people who happen to have BDD and an ED at the same time, and that ED happened to be caused by the aforementioned BDD. That's it. I never intentionally suggested that all people with an ED have BDD, and I never intentionally suggested that all people with BDD have an ED. I never intentionally suggested that all people with an ED have it solely because of psychological problems. There, can we stop getting off-topic and misinterpreting what I'm saying?

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I'm just going to go ahead and point out that 2 + 2 = 4. Obviously, you didn't know that because you haven't explicitly stated that you do. I'm discussing them because they fit what I'm arguing. My argument isn't specific to them, though, they are the example for other EDs caused by psychological problem.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

And the worst part, is that there are people out there who will agree with you.

by Anonymous 11 years ago

I feel like this explains it pretty well: http://hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com/2011/10/adventures-in-depression.html

by Anonymous 11 years ago

Grow a brain and stop being so ignorant.

by Anonymous 11 years ago