Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

“You Look Healthy:” Why These Words Can Be So Hard to Hear

For so many of us in recovery, being “healthy” creates quite a conundrum. Although we commit to health and desire the benefits that come from being healthy, it can be painfully difficult to hear the words: “You look healthy.” Here I open up about the trouble I had with this word, and how I eventually learned to expand my definition of healthy from one rooted in eating disorder thinking to one that aligns with recovery values.

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Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

My Body is My Home: How Yoga Helped Me to Journey Inward

Meet guest contributor Evie Rose, who shares about making the brave, hard choice to leave university to seek help for an eating disorder and addiction. Evie describes how she’s integrated yoga into her recovery journey, and the many ways the practice has helped her feel again and move her body with intention and compassion. If you could use a little hope today that recovery is possible, give Evie’s post a read.

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Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

The Power of Everyday Wonder on Body Image

How might cultivating everyday wonder be helpful with alleviating body image distress? This is the question guest contributor Minh-Hai Alex, MS, RDN, RYT, explores in her latest blog post. Drawing on personal insights, research, and expertise from body image experts, Minh-Hai invites us to pay attention to how small doses of wonder —whether grand or small—in our everyday life impacts our relationship to our bodies.

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Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

I’m So Tired of Beating Myself Up for Being an Imperfect Human

Guest contributor Steph Hillier (she/her) writes with honesty and humor about the fears, challenges, and hopes of going through eating disorder recovery. Read Steph’s story to learn how living with anorexia ultimately exhausted her of beating herself up for being an imperfect human, leading her to commit to walking the path of recovery wearing “kick-ass love glasses and self-compassion capes.”

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Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

Food Guilt & Diet Culture: Why It’s Not Personal

Guest contributor Minh-Hai Alex, MS, RDN, RYT, helps understand why food guilt, which feels so personal, is an internalized response to eating because we are “a society that’s so inundated with dieting propaganda, often times imperceptibly, that it affects how we relate to ourselves and each other.”

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Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

"Body Budget": A Helpful Way To Think About Replenishing Your Body

Guest contributor Minh-Hai Alex, MS, RDN, RYT, is back with a helpful blog on paying attention to what people, places and things depletes and replenishes our body. The framework offered can be used to gain awareness in our recovery and life about how each choice we make affects our “body budget.”

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Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

coalesce: a poem

A beautiful poem about healing and forgiveness by Dr. Jo, an anorexia survivor who now helps women celebrate their unique identities, boldly use their voices, and proudly take up space.

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Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

A Plate of Food: What Do You See?

While sitting at a Vietnamese restaurant with a steaming hot bowl of bún bò huế for lunch, guest contributor Minh-Hai Alex, MS, RDN, RYT, shares the memories, joys, and fears she sees while looking at the food before her. By sharing what she sees when she looks at her plate, Minh-Hai invites readers to connect with food through story and comfort, memory and appreciation—an uplifting perspective that all can benefit from.

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Jennifer Kreatsoulas Jennifer Kreatsoulas

Dear Eating Disorder, From a Family Member

In a letter to the eating disorder that “came into our home, unannounced and uninvited” and affected a family member, guest contributor Barri Leiner Grant describes the tremendous grief she experiences as a result. In learning to acknowledge her own grief, Barri reaches out to other caretakers and family members, offering validation that their grief is also real and deserves time and space to heal.

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