Thursday, July 16, 2020

Should You Externalize Your Eating Disorder

Should You Externalize Your Eating Disorder Eating Disorders Treatment Print Should You Externalize Your (or Your Loved Ones) Eating Disorder? Who is Ed Anyway? By Lauren Muhlheim, PsyD, CEDS facebook twitter linkedin Lauren Muhlheim, PsyD, is a certified eating disorders expert and clinical psychologist who provides cognitive behavioral psychotherapy. Learn about our editorial policy Lauren Muhlheim, PsyD, CEDS Medically reviewed by Medically reviewed by Rachel Goldman, PhD, FTOS on January 30, 2020 Rachel Goldman, PhD FTOS is a licensed psychologist, clinical assistant professor, speaker, wellness expert specializing in weight management and eating behaviors.   Learn about our Medical Review Board Rachel Goldman, PhD, FTOS Updated on February 18, 2020 More in Eating Disorders Treatment Symptoms Diagnosis Awareness and Prevention Externalization of the eating disorder is a therapeutic technique popularized in the book Life Without Ed, by Jenni Schaefer and Thom Rutledge. In her recovery, which is summarized in the book, Jenni Schaefer personified the eating disorder as “Ed,” an abusive boyfriend. As Jenni explains on her website, “By thinking of her eating disorder as a unique personality separate from her own, [she] was able to break up with Ed once and for all.” In the book, she and Thom (her therapist) describe the various exercises she used, including talking back to the eating disorder and creating a “divorce decree.” In an Academy for Eating Disorders (AED) tweetchat (2014) on the topic, Jenni Schaefer tweeted, “Ed could say whatever he wanted. To be in recovery, I had to make the decision to disagree with and disobey him.” The strategy itself, referred to as “externalizing” the eating disorder, stems from narrative therapy. A central tenet of narrative therapy is that the person is not the problem â€" rather, the problem is the problem. The person is in a relationship with the problem. Through externalization, the problem is viewed as being something that is affecting the person rather than being a part of the person. Family-based treatment (FBT), an evidence-based treatment for adolescent eating disorders, borrows the process of externalizing the eating disorder from narrative therapy. In FBT, clinicians work to separate the adolescent from the eating disorder. In consultation with the family, they use a metaphor to paint a picture of an external force having invaded the youngster and hijacked their brain. It is common to assign a name to the illness such as “the monster” or “Voldemort” and encourage parents to unite to help their teen fight off the eating disorder. For many patients and family members, externalizing the illness makes sense because the individual does appear to become a “different person” under the influence of the eating disorder. The externalization reframes the situation: rather than saying that the patient wants to restrict their eating, we say that the eating disorder is an alien force that makes them do this. While externalization has gained popularity, research cannot answer definitively whether it is a helpful technique. We do have evidence on the efficacy of FBT, of which externalization is a key component, but FBT includes so many elements that for all we know FBT might work without it. We would need dismantling studies (studies that look at each individual component of a full treatment)  to determine the contribution of externalization to the overall treatment outcome; this is a low-ranking research priority. Potential advantages of externalizing the eating disorder: It offers an efficient and simple metaphor, The eating disorder is possessing you/your teen.It may be helpful in separating patients from symptoms that are egosyntonic (meaning not bothersome to them).It may help mobilize the patient to fight back against the eating disorder by seeing it as separate and alien from their self.It may help families and caregivers direct their anger towards the eating disorder and, as a result, retain empathy for the sufferer.It can put everyone on the same team fighting a common enemy (the eating disorder).It can help the patient be accountable for his or her own recovery by learning to disagree with and disobey Ed. Potential disadvantages of externalizing the eating disorder: Some professionals worry that:Giving the eating disorder its own persona gives the eating disorder too much power.It might allow a patient to blame the eating disorder and not take responsibility for their recovery.Externalization might reinforce dichotomous thinking and helplessness on the part of the patient.This framing can seem to idealize the “true self” and absolves the patient of all responsibility.Patients may:Dislike the idea of separating the eating disorder as it feels like a part of them.Find this technique dismissive or invalidating of their experience.Be angry when their family members externalize the eating disorder.Since many of the characteristics of patients with eating disorders are actually personality traits that are not in and of themselves problematic, there is a risk of inadvertently demonizing the patientSome people find externalizationâ€"which is essentially only a metaphorâ€"too (for lack of a better word) “cutesy” and are put off as a result. So, Should You Do It? Clinicians and family members wanting to use externalization will benefit by considering the potential risks and benefits of using this strategy. If you are a person in recovery and this metaphor makes sense to you, you can learn more about the technique by reading Life Without Ed. If you are a family member of a person in recovery and/or a parent doing FBT, it can also be helpful to consider this as a strategy for talking about the eating disorder with your loved one. Life Without Ed is also good reading for parents and even some adolescents in recovery. An exercise based on this technique can also be found here. If you are supporting a person in recovery and he or she dislikes talking  about the eating disorder as an external force, then you can still use it for your own understanding while minimizing talking about it in front of your loved one. Similar but alternative strategies to externalize include the following. You can listen to the patient and use their words to refer to the eating disorder. An alternative strategy used by eating disorder expert Carolyn Costin, MA, MED, MFT is to think of the patient as having two aspects of their own self, a “healthy self” and an “eating disorder self.” Another option espoused by eating disorder researcher Kelly Vitousek, Ph.D. is to abandon the metaphor altogether and explain these behaviors to the patient as symptoms of starvation. Any of these alternatives can similarly highlight for a patient his or her own ambivalence about recovery. Finally, it is important to emphasize that, regardless of the way an eating disorder is framed, cognitive behavioral change is critical for recovery because individuals with eating disorders need to work on the problematic cognitions that are keeping them from potentially making healthy behavior changes.  Many of the symptoms and dangers of an eating disorder can be related to nutritional deficits and these symptoms are often improved with proper nutrition and normalization of eating behaviors. Medical supervision is usually recommended to manage recovery from an eating disorder.