I want to share one of the responses I received from the interview I did for writer Danielle Friedman on the connection between vegetarianism and veganism and eating disorders. In an email I was asked if I was misquoted (see Friedman's article below): did I really think parents should be discouraging if not outright prohibiting their pre-college aged children from becoming vegetarian or vegan? Here is my response:
I was not misquoted, but I think you missed an important point. I said: "Most families don't have the time to prepare vegetarian entrées." In fact both of my children (now young adults) were vegetarians as teenagers. As a parent, I made sure that we offered high protein vegetarian entrees at every meal. In a lot of families, when one child goes vegetarian, all it means is that they don't eat the meat, chicken or fish dishes, but no alternatives are provided. This is a child that could end up with a nutrient deficiency. Of note, my son is still a vegetarian, my daughter had to give it up when she had fainting spells due to low iron. Some people have no problem getting iron out of plant foods, others due to genetics need animal based iron to be healthy. I am the same way.
Let me add here that if parents have any concerns about their child being at risk for developing an eating disorder then this is a child who should not be allowed to experiment with vegetarianism until reaching adulthood.
When Veganism Is an
Eating Disorder
Danielle
Friedman has worked as a nonfiction book editor for Hudson Street Press and
Plume, two imprints of Penguin Group. Her writing has been published in the
Miami Herald, and on DoubleX and CNN.com. She is a graduate of the Columbia
University Graduate School of Journalism.
For people who refuse to consume any animal
products, acceptable food can be hard to come by—which makes veganism a perfect
cover for those hiding their anorexia.
When Jill
Miller reflects on her long, painful dance with veganism, anorexia, and
bulimia, she remembers standing alone in her kitchen, binge-eating a tofu-cream
pie.
These
episodes of stuffing herself with whipped soy—when what she really wanted was a
pint of Ben & Jerry’s—stand out in her mind as a sign that her commitment
to veganism was a cover for something darker. As do the many times that she
turned down food with the seemingly innocent, even noble excuse that no one
could argue with: Oh, sorry. I can’t eat that—I’m vegan.
“No prime
rib and Yorkshire pudding at New Year’s with Grandpa,” says Miller. “This
happened at every family event.”
“I seized on
the food theory of veganism to justify my desire to restrict,” says one former
vegan. “It was a convenient way to eliminate fat and calories.”
The shame,
discomfort, and self-loathing represented by her eating habits defined much of her
early life. When she was just 13, Miller became a vegetarian, in part for
philosophical reasons, but mainly as an excuse to avoid her mom’s New
Orleans-style chicken-fried steak and jambalaya. As she forged a career in yoga
instruction, she further
restricted her diet by going vegan, all the while struggling with an eating
disorder that she kept under wraps.
“I seized on
the food theory of veganism to justify my desire to restrict,” she told The
Daily Beast. “It was a convenient way to eliminate fat and calories.”
A
breakthrough came shortly after she turned 30. She realized that the only way
to fight her illness—and be happy—was to stop saying “no” to so many foods, and
begin saying “yes.” She’s now an omnivorous yoga
guruhttp://www.jillmilleryoga.com/,
starring in dozens of instructional DVDs, and she’s never felt better.
As veganism
moves from the fringes to the mainstream of American culture, with A-listers
like Natalie Portman and Jonathan Safran Foer loudly endorsing it, more
Americans are giving it a whirl. Five percent of people in this country
identify as vegan, according to a 2002 Time/CNN poll. And for most, becoming
vegan can mark a healthy shift toward wholesome eating and concern for the
welfare of animals. But for those at risk of developing an eating disorder, it
can mask or trigger an illness, providing a socially conscious excuse not to
partake in family barbeques or dinners out with friends.
According to
Dr. Angela Guarda, director of the Johns
Hopkins Eating Disorders Program, many vegans (and vegetarians) who enter
her treatment center initially deny an underlying problem—only to later confess
that their efforts to avoid animal products were really an effort to avoid food
in general. “In most of our patients, the vegetarianism is in the service of
the eating disorder,” she said.
For this
reason, Guarda and her staff try to dissuade patients from observing any form
of vegetarianism while undergoing treatment, encouraging them to broaden their
food repertoire to include some meat. Other eating disorder and nutrition
specialists report similar approaches.
Dr. Marcia
Herrin, founder of the Dartmouth College Eating Disorders Prevention, Education
and Treatment Program and now a dietician in private
practice, takes a stricter (if potentially problematic) approach: Herrin
tells parents not to let their kids be vegetarian until they go to college,
echoing that the diet can create a “ruse” that loved ones can’t see through.
“Most families don’t have the time to prepare vegetarian entrées,” she said.
“What’s at risk is the child’s growth and development, and potentially an
eating disorder.”
Herrin may
be onto something: A 2009
study in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association revealed that
young adults ages 15 to 23 who reported being vegetarian were, at some point,
more likely to have also engaged in unhealthy weight-loss behaviors like
bingeing, purging, and using diet pills or laxatives. And surveys show that the
prevalence of vegetarianism among eating-disorder patients is higher than in
the general population.
It’s
important to note that for most of the country’s roughly 3 million vegans, who
don’t consume or wear any animal products, their eating habits never veer into
mental illness. Many consider veganism a lifestyle, says Annie Hartnett, an
animal-rights activist and blogger for Change.org,
or a protest against cruel farming practices. And studies have found that the
physical benefits of veganism, when observed in a healthy way, are
extraordinary, including lowered risk of chronic disease, improved heart
health, and increased energy.
Problems
arise when individuals approach veganism primarily as a vehicle for weight
loss, and indeed, more than ever, it’s being marketed by certain proponents as
an extreme diet. Last month, actress Jessica Simpson tweeted that she’s going
vegan, along with drinking a popular weight-loss tea. While she later
claimed the veganism isn’t to shed pounds, tabloids have since treated it as if
it were the next Atkins
Diet. Then there’s the bestselling Skinny
Bitch series, a vegan manifesto in diet-book
packaging. Even PETA is guilty:
This past May, the organization proposed placing an ad on the Great Wall of
China, depicting an overweight American tourist, with the caption: “It’s the
Wall That We Should See From Space, Not You. Go Vegan.”
At the most
toxic end of the eating-disorder spectrum, “Pro-ana” websites pitch
veganism as a trick of the trade, so to speak—as both a weight-loss plan and a
front so no one will notice you’re anorexic. When Georgia Hollenbeck, 24, was
in her early teens and spiraling into anorexia and bulimia, the veterinary
worker decided to give veganism a try after reading about it on one of these
sites. “I’m from Michigan, so we eat a lot of meat here,” she said. As such,
becoming vegan allowed her to say “no, thanks” to meals much of the time, and
allowed her eating disorders to flourish in secret.
Of course,
some embark on vegan diets for all the seemingly right reasons, only to find
themselves on a slippery slope to disordered eating. As with alcohol or
cigarettes, exposure combined with biological predisposition can lead to abuse.
“Going on any kind of diet where you’re paying a lot of attention to what you
eat or don’t eat puts you at risk for an eating disorder,” says Herrin.
“Especially when you label certain foods as ‘bad.’”
Recently,
reports of “orthorexia” have captured headlines. Those who suffer from the
controversial new disorder compulsively avoid foods thought to be unhealthy or
unnatural, including products with trans fats, artificial colors, or flavors,
high-fructose corn syrup, and preservatives. Often, orthorexics opt for a
strict vegan diet. Some say orthorexia represents this dangerous slide from
health to pathology.
To ensure
both physical and psychological health, emerging vegans should educate
themselves on how to maintain balanced nutrition and weight, says Keri Gans, a
spokesman for the American Dietetic
Association and a practicing dietician in Manhattan.
Replacing meat and dairy with plant-based sources of protein and fat is crucial,
as is taking certain vitamin supplements. If they’re not vigilant, vegans can
become lethargic and malnourished; they’re particularly at risk for Vitamin
B-12 deficiency, which can lead to deterioration of the spinal cord.
“A person
who undertakes veganism as a lifestyle, not related to any kind of eating
disorder, will know that they have to replace the foods they’ve eliminated with
new foods,” says Gans. “If they’re saying to me, ‘Let’s talk about ways to add
more foods into my diet, I’m not afraid of healthy fats,’ I’ll say to myself,
‘OK, this person gets it.’” If not, the veganism may be a red flag.
Perhaps
counterintuitively, some who are in recovery from an eating disorder say
adopting a vegan diet helped to nurse them back to health. After struggling
with anorexia and drug use in her 20s, Mandi Babkes embarked on an all-raw,
vegan diet. She now runs a holistic health practice and raw-food vegan catering business in
Pittsburgh, explaining that while her eating disorders were about
self-destruction, her veganism is about self-love. "Being a vegan and raw
foodist really helped me to feel better, to feel cleaner, to feel more
energized,” she said. “I sleep better, and I have a brighter outlook.”
Still, many
dieticians and eating-disorder specialists hesitate to recommend a vegan diet
as a path to recovery. “It’s like an alcoholic who likes to spend time in
bars,” says Herrin. “It’s very risky to take on any system of eating that’s
restrictive and passes judgment on food that’s not founded on health
principles.”
Perhaps above all, clinicians and vegan advocates alike tend to emphasize one underlying message: At its most basic level, veganism is about practicing non-violence toward animals. And in keeping with this philosophy, its followers should look out for their own well-being, too.
Marcia
Marcia Herrin and Nancy Matsumoto, co-authors of The Parent’s Guide to Eating Disorders, Gūrze Books, (www.childhoodeatingdisorders.com).


Where do I find out about: at what age my daughter is allowed to participate in high school setting? Has there been a law passed that will allow her to continue until 22? She will be 21 on June 8. Her graduation/last day of school is June 1. At this time it would be better to our family situation/and her needs that she continues 1 more year. Is it true?
Posted by: jordan retro 5 | October 09, 2010 at 01:31 AM