What Not To Say
You just found out that your student/loved one has an eating disorder. Or perhaps an acquaintance revealed their struggle during the course of a conversation. You want to be understanding. You want to help in any way you can. You want to encourage, affirm, support, validate. But what you thought were kind words seem to offend, even injure the person you so wished to show your empathy.
What went wrong? It’s hard for someone without an eating disordered mind to comprehend the right and wrong things to say. Consequently, both you and your friend are left unsettled, unsatisfied, maybe even angry to a point that might damage your relationship.
Some of the worst offenders to an anorexic might sound benign to you at first read, but once you understand how your student/loved one hears things, you’ll find your relationship vastly improved. I hate to say it, but this is one case where it’s not the thought that counts.
Bad Reactions
- Why? (Eating disorders are complex mental illnesses with multiple factors, and the last thing you want to do is put him/her on the spot, after a vulnerable revelation.)
- But you don’t look like you have an eating disorder! (Sounds like: “You’re fat!”)
- If you want to lose weight, why don’t you just diet and exercise? (This is like telling an alcoholic to just have a “few” drinks.)
- It’s what’s on the inside that counts. (Sounds like: “You’re ugly.”)
- You look great to me! (You do not know if this is his/her healthy weight, or what s/he may have done to get here.)
- How long has it been since you’ve eaten? (This is unimportant, and sounds callous. Eating disorders are never, at the heart, about food.)
- I had a friend once whose sister was bulimic, and she… (Invalidates him/her as an individual; sounds like you think you know it all. No two eating-disordered people are the same.)
- Just eat what you want! (Sounds like: “It’s not a big deal.”)
- Nice weather we’re having. (Ignoring the pink elephant in the room.)
- ____ (Saying nothing isn’t helpful either.)
