Anglojęzyczne motywacyjno-uświadamiające artykuły

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01. What does someone with eating disorder look like? 
(jenniferrollin.com)


02. 8 things you need to let go of the recover from your eating disorder 
(recoverywarriors.com)


03. Can I maintain long-term recovery from an eating disorder after suffering relapses? (eatingdisorderhope.com)


04. 13 lies about eating disorders that almost stopped me from reaching recovery 
(elitedaily.com/wellness)



05. Confessions of a recovering perfectionist
(eatingdisordersblogs.com)



06. What eating disorder recovery actually looks like
(themighty.com)

07. To the person with an eating disorder who feels like giving up on recovery
You deserve a full life
(huffingtonpost.com)


08. How to catch a relapse before it happens  (recoverywarriors.com)



09. Defining recovery: Life after an eating disorder
 (edbites.com)



10. Creating a relapse prevention plan in eating disorder recovery
 (huffingtonpost.com)



11. Reality of ed
(reclaiming-emily.tumblr.com)



12. What recovery means to me 
(medainc.org)

13. 280 reasons to recover (ehealthforum.com)

14. 11 reasons why recovery is worth it
(proud2bme.org)

15. The pros and cons of using instagram in recovery
(recoverywarriors.com)

16. Not being the thinnest any more - how to adjust
Coping with a changing body in recovery from anorexia (psychologytoday.com)

17. Feel good about your eating and your weight
(psychologytoday.com)



18. Relapse warning signs
(mirror-mirror.org)


19. What anorexics really feel about food liking food but not wanting it may be 
at the heart of anorexia
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)



20. How to help someone with an eating disorder. Thoughts on doing more good than harm 
when someone you care about is ill
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)


21. The road long past recovery… called life? Making short-term rules to be freer in the long term
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)



22. Why control won’t bring you happiness recovery from anorexia starts by taking control, 
but can end stronger still
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)



23. Taking, losing, and letting go of control in anorexia
 (psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)

24. Recovering from anorexia: how and why to start
How to help your understanding of your illness lead to active recovery
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)

25. Recovery from anorexia: Why the rules do apply to you
Anorexia and the illusion of individualism
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)

26. Eating Disorders in the Online World
The dangerous trend of ‘thinspirational’ web content.
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)

27. Not leaving recovery 'Til It's too late
One more reason not to defer making changes
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)


28. Wasting time: symptom and enemy of anorexia
 (psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)

29. What's the difference between being fussy and having an eating disorder?
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)


30. Where next after anorexia: death, recovery, or another eating disorder?
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)


31. Fully recovered, but not quite: the long post-anorexic road
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)


32. How to reunite work and life after anorexia
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)


33. The physical effects of weight gain after starvation
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)


34. Is 100% recovery from an eating disorder possible?
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)

35. Five anorexia myths exploded
(psychologytoday.com/blog/hunger-artist)


36. What recovery means to me
(medainc.org)

37. Research shows how brain can override hunger in eating disorders 
(eatingdisorderhope.com)

38. Dealing with grief in eating disorder recovery
(eatingdisorderhope.com)

39. Why I don't like the word ‘recovery’ as someone with an eating disorder
 (themighty.com)


40. The conversations that remind me the ghosts of my eating disorder haven't died
(themighty.com)


41. When an eating disorder is triggered by trauma
(themighty.com)



42. What it's like hearing 'disordered eating talk' when you live with an eating disorder
(themighty.com)


43. Learning the language of eating disorder recovery
(themighty.com)

44. Do you aspire to recover from your eating disorder?
(aspire-network.blogspot.com)

45. 11 things I wish my friends and family understood about my eating disorder
(themighty.com)

46. What's wrong with how we talk about eating disorders in the media and in ED communities - part 1 (scienceofeds.org)

47. What's wrong with how we talk about eating disorders in the media and in ED communities - part 2 (scienceofeds.org)

48. Factors associated with recovery from anorexia nervosa (scienceofeds.org)


49. What's the point of bingeing and purging? And why can't you just stop? (scienceofeds.org)

50. Rigid food rules in eating disorders: is perfectionis to blame? (scienceofeds.org)

51. In anorexia, separating mind from body is impossible
Mental illnesses don't exist separate from the body. (psychologytoday.com)

52. Escaping from Anorexia. What makes someone with anorexia start eating again? (psychologytoday.com)

53. Escaping from anorexia, Part II. Q&A on what makes eating seem impossible for anorexics
(psychologytoday.com)

54. Evolution and Anorexia Nervosa. Biochemical insights into self-starvation (psychologytoday.com)

55. Can eating disorders be contagious? (scienceofeds.org)

56. How do anorexia nervosa patients define recovery and engage in treatment? The need for individualized treatment (scienceofeds.org)

57. What are you re-covering? Critical coversations about eating disorder recovery (scienceofeds.org)

58. Unpacking eating disorder recovery part 1: The recovery model (scienceofeds.org)

59. Unpacking recovery part 2: The multiple facets of recovery (scienceofeds.org)

60. Unpacking recovert part 3: Can patients image recovery? (scienceofeds.org)


61. Unpacking recovery part 4: Are we all on the same page? (scienceofeds.org)

62. Unpacking recovery part 5: Clinical recovery without a clinic? (scienceofeds.org)

63. Narrative therapy and eating disorders: help or hype? (scienceofeds.org)

64. Asking the impossible? Eating disorder recovery in context (scienceofeds.org)



65. I asked, “Are you in recovery right now? Why or why not?” Here's what you answered (and more): exploring seds reader's experiences (scienceofeds.org)

66. “Our results are unexpected, so the participants must have been in denial”: exploring a worrying trend in eating disorders research (scienceofeds.org)

67. Calorie restriction, anorexia nervosa, and memory gaps (scienceofeds.org)



68. What are you re-covering? Critical conversations about eating disorder recovery (scienceofeds.org)


69. Beyond simple solutions: the need for complex ideas in anorexia nervosa (scienceofeds.org)

70. What causes someone to develop an eating disorder? (psychologytoday.com)

71. Two Psychiatrists Weigh in on Netflix’s 'To the Bone' (psychologytoday.com)

72. Chilled...To The Bone. An eating disorder therapist's take on this highly publicized new movie (psychologytoday.com)

73. Will "To the Bone" Trigger Eating Disorders? Why this new controversial Netflix film has mental health professionals worried (psychologytoday.com)

74. An App for Recovery from Anorexia Baby steps towards a new way of helping full recovery happen (psychologytoday.com)

75. Anorexia Recovery: Why is it that treatment seems to serve my eating disorder better than it serves my recovery? (tabithafarrar.com)

76. Eating disorders: 'I lay awake at night and miss my anorexia' (telegraph.co.uk)

77. The Eating Disorder No One Ever Talks About - "Chewing and spitting" (refinery29.com)

78. Chewing and spitting: a neglected symptom in eating disorders? (scienceofeds.org)

79. Your body’s response to chewing & spitting: the role of ghrelin and obestatin – science of eating disorders (scienceofeds.org)



80. An aside: anorexia will not finish with me (lizzieporter.wordpress.com)

81. No eating disorder movie is helpful (youvegotpotential.wordpress.com)

82. Finding Recovery Motivation - Scrapping the Anorexia Identity (tabithafarrar.com)

83. Can you separate your triggers from your eating disorder? (tabithafarrar.com)

84. How ex-sufferers can help the eating disorder community (tabithafarrar.com)