Coming from someone who has experienced eating disorders…
-be extremely supportive and patient
-Avoid commenting on appearance or weight. People with eating disorders are already overly focused on their bodies. Even assurances that they’re not fat play into their preoccupation with being thin. Instead, steer the conversation to their feelings. Why are they afraid of being fat? What do they think they’ll achieve by being thin?
-Avoid giving simple solutions. For example, “All you have to do is accept yourself.” Eating disorders are complex problems. If it were that easy, your loved one wouldn’t be suffering.
Answer:
keep down music if you are wearing headphonrs
Answer:
well i have that problem too
Explanation:
i think what happens is i lose so much in my life or i'm so sad that when someone shows affection to me i get attached so easily and i feel so stupid sometimes for it, but sometimes that is just the type of person they're and when you address it they won't take it seriously because they don't view you in the same way and it hurts when that something or someone that was keeping you from being alone with your thoughts leave. the best advice i can give is you can either do what makes you happy, meaning any of your hobbies. Singing, dancing, drawing, gaming, cooking, binging shows, teach yourself not to rely on someone else for your own happiness and try teaching yourself that not everyone is worth your time or your long paragraph's. you give it more time, more time to see what type of person they are, more time for you to adjust to being around them, more time for you guys to bond so you both feel the same and it's not just you one sided.
Um, i think probably so... it depends on if the doctor fully healed it or not...
<span>Medicare Severity-Diagnosis Related Group </span>