• ‘I just thought about food every hour of every day’

  • 2022/04/13
  • 再生時間: 58 分
  • ポッドキャスト

‘I just thought about food every hour of every day’

  • サマリー

  • Warning: This episode discusses eating disorders and suicide.

    Molli was convinced she had to be thin to be a dancer and started copying restrictive eating advice she was seeing on YouTube. Alex became obsessed with attaining an “ideal” muscular body after a break-up, and ended up nearly losing his life. Melani used binge-eating to cope with loneliness and became afraid to go to parties.

    Eating disorders took control of their minds until all they could think about was food. 

    There remains a widespread lack of recognition that eating disorders are a mental illness. Some experts say awareness is a decade behind that of depression and anxiety.

    Eating disorders thrive in isolation and during the pandemic, calls for eating disorder lines doubled, with young people most vulnerable. 

    As Molli, Alex and Melani have gone through treatment, they’ve worked at reframing their relationship with food, exercise and their bodies. 

    If you need help, support is available. Call the Butterfly Foundation on 1300 224 636 or Eating Disorders Victoria on 1300 550 236. Crisis support is available 24/7 at Lifeline, call 13 11 14 or text 0477 131 114. 

    You can also contact Headspace for support at headspace.org.au or on 1800 650 890, as well as Kids Helpline at kidshelpline.com.au or on 1800 55 1800.

    Get in touch! If you have a question about mental health you'd like answered, leave us a voicemail on +61 2 9906 9915 or email us at enoughpodcast@theage.com.au or enoughpodcast@smh.com.a

    Enough is brought to you by the The Age & Sydney Morning Herald. 

    If you enjoyed this series, leave a review and recommend us to a friend. To read more, and to watch the videos referenced in this episode, head to our website. 

    Our supporters power our newsrooms and are critical for the sustainability of news coverage. Click on the links to subscribe to The Age or The Sydney Morning Herald.

    Reporters: Jewel Topsfield and Sophie Aubrey

    Producer: Margaret Gordon

    Sound mix: Kyle Hopkins

    Production assistance: Julia Carr-Catzel, Tammy Mills

    Head of premium content: Chris Paine

    Head of audio: Tom McKendrick

    Executive producer of audio: Nathanael Cooper

    Support our journalism: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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あらすじ・解説

Warning: This episode discusses eating disorders and suicide.

Molli was convinced she had to be thin to be a dancer and started copying restrictive eating advice she was seeing on YouTube. Alex became obsessed with attaining an “ideal” muscular body after a break-up, and ended up nearly losing his life. Melani used binge-eating to cope with loneliness and became afraid to go to parties.

Eating disorders took control of their minds until all they could think about was food. 

There remains a widespread lack of recognition that eating disorders are a mental illness. Some experts say awareness is a decade behind that of depression and anxiety.

Eating disorders thrive in isolation and during the pandemic, calls for eating disorder lines doubled, with young people most vulnerable. 

As Molli, Alex and Melani have gone through treatment, they’ve worked at reframing their relationship with food, exercise and their bodies. 

If you need help, support is available. Call the Butterfly Foundation on 1300 224 636 or Eating Disorders Victoria on 1300 550 236. Crisis support is available 24/7 at Lifeline, call 13 11 14 or text 0477 131 114. 

You can also contact Headspace for support at headspace.org.au or on 1800 650 890, as well as Kids Helpline at kidshelpline.com.au or on 1800 55 1800.

Get in touch! If you have a question about mental health you'd like answered, leave us a voicemail on +61 2 9906 9915 or email us at enoughpodcast@theage.com.au or enoughpodcast@smh.com.a

Enough is brought to you by the The Age & Sydney Morning Herald. 

If you enjoyed this series, leave a review and recommend us to a friend. To read more, and to watch the videos referenced in this episode, head to our website. 

Our supporters power our newsrooms and are critical for the sustainability of news coverage. Click on the links to subscribe to The Age or The Sydney Morning Herald.

Reporters: Jewel Topsfield and Sophie Aubrey

Producer: Margaret Gordon

Sound mix: Kyle Hopkins

Production assistance: Julia Carr-Catzel, Tammy Mills

Head of premium content: Chris Paine

Head of audio: Tom McKendrick

Executive producer of audio: Nathanael Cooper

Support our journalism: https://subscribe.smh.com.au/

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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