Frequently,
young girls and women approach me concerning their disordered eating issues and
the recovery processes. And, quite often, they want support.
However, my
perspective is that the word “support” is often code for something else
instead. It is code for approval of their choices and even help with
self-destructive behaviors.
A young
woman in recovery (let’s call her “Sissy”) I have known for years recently
started a conversation with the following: “Can ask you a question?”
My first
reaction to that question, already, contained great trepidation. I usually
brace myself for certain questions asking for weight loss or secrecy tips. It’s
happened like that too many times before. So, I said yes. And, sure enough,
Sissy asked me if I would help her calculate her BMI (body mass index). I asked
some why questions, trying to get to the root of its importance. At that point,
she became defensive, adamantly stating she was “recovered,” had finished her
treatment and was not going back.
At one
point, she also stated, “It’s okay. You don’t have to support me.”
It was here,
the following scripture was ringing in my ears:
“Instead, speaking the truth in love, we
will grow to become in every respect the mature body of him who is the head,
that is, Christ.”
Ephesians 4:15
That’s what
I was trying to do, repeatedly expressing my concern for her well- being and
the subtle triggers which can affect eating disorder behavior and recovery.
And it’s a
delicate line to walk because I know God is powerful, a miracle working healer;
I also know each individual’s recovery story is unique.
But, all too
often, I think, as human beings, we mistake support for approval or
endorsement. It’s akin to asking for advice as well. Do we really want to hear the truth? Or, do we want to hear what we want
to hear?
In my own
life, I’ve had a few “intervention moments.” During college, especially, family
and college roommates tried to express their concerns for what they saw in me:
disordered eating, weight loss, followed by extreme weight gain, stealing food,
eating out of the garbage. The list goes on and on. And, as they expressed
their concern, my reaction, of course, to
that concern was defensiveness, anger, feelings of betrayal and hurt. But,
I wasn’t in a healthy place to see anything but
those things. I bought the subtle lie of my eating disorder behavior and because
of it, I would/could not hear anything, God included, which opposed that line
of thinking.
Again,
scripture states:
“Keep thy heart with all diligence;
for out of it are the issues of life.”
Proverbs 4:23
The truth is
only God fully knows what our issues are and how they’re affecting us. Each of
us, however, in life, is vulnerable to temptation, to imperfection and to sin. There
may, indeed, be incredible miracle deliverances. But, for most of us in
addictions and disorders of any kind, it, more often than not, is a daily
process, requiring our attention to healing and healthy choices. And support,
in real terms, may not always feel great, warm and fluffy. We may not always
hear what we want to hear.
And, even God doesn’t always tell us what we want
to hear. Yet, He still loves us:
“For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth;
even as a father the son in whom he delighteth.”
Proverbs 3:12
So, we need
to remember that truth, in the context of support. Do we want something to
tickle our ears and tell us everything’s okay, or do we want the truth and real
help? It is a challenge for any of us. What does support really mean? Are we
getting it now or are we even rejecting
it?
Let’s
examine what support means, is and is not
to our own recoveries and life situations. And let’s never say, to the
true, helpful and healing kind of definition, “You don’t have to support me.”
Copyright © 2015 by
Sheryle Cruse
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