Journal of Eating Disorders (Jul 2024)

“It’s like building a new person”: lived experience perspectives on eating disorder recovery processes

  • Andrea LaMarre,
  • Megan Hellner,
  • Scout Silverstein,
  • Jessica H. Baker,
  • Bek Urban,
  • Jacqlyn Yourell,
  • Hannah Wolfe,
  • Taylor Perry,
  • Dori Steinberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-024-01045-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background Deeply engaging with the expertise of those who have experienced or supported someone with an eating disorder can add to a growing body of knowledge about recovery processes. In this qualitative study, we sought to explore and generate nuanced understandings of recovery experiences of people with a lived ED experience (first hand or as a caregiver) who were working as mentors in the field. To do this, we focused on changes that occur in personality, traits, and interests over the course of an eating disorder and into recovery. Method We conducted semi-structured interviews with 27 people with an eating disorder history, either through personal lived experience (n = 14) or as a caregiver of a loved one with an eating disorder (n = 13). We undertook a reflexive thematic analysis of the data through a critical realist lens. Results We developed three themes, which illustrate the nonlinearity, relationality, and systemically linked nature of changes across experiences of having and recovering from an eating disorder. The first theme focuses on expansion; participants described how their worlds got bigger as they explored who they were becoming and discovered new ways of living in line with their values. The second theme emphasizes the balance between support and autonomy participants described as important for enabling change to occur across the recovery process. The last theme highlights the ways in which changes throughout the recovery process entwined with systemic factors, including actively pushing back against diet culture and weight stigma. Conclusions Participants’ stories highlight interactions between individual, relational, and societal shifts that occur throughout the course of an ED and into recovery. They support ongoing calls to orient to ED recovery as situated within a broader social milieu, which invites us to build supportive environments to enable expansion and flourishing.