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Unhealthy eating that trapped Bryony Gordon hasn't gone away
Summary
Bryony Gordon describes a long struggle with bulimia and later recovery, and says the diet culture that helped trap her in the 1990s still exists today, sometimes appearing in the form of weight‑loss injections that users report cause intense hunger when stopped.
Content
Bryony Gordon writes about beginning a cycle of bingeing and purging in her late teens and living with disordered eating for many years. She says pregnancy and, later, specialist therapy helped her change how she fed herself. Gordon connects her experience to a wider culture of dieting that was common in the 1990s and beyond. She also references contemporary reports that some people feel extreme hunger when they stop prescription weight‑loss injections.
Key points:
- Gordon reports starting to purge at about 18 and describes a long period of binge/purge behaviour that affected her physical and emotional wellbeing.
- Pregnancy and subsequent therapy were turning points that helped her work toward recovery and learn about the link between restricting and bingeing.
- The article notes the Minnesota Starvation Experiment as a reference used by Gordon’s therapist to explain how restriction can increase preoccupation with food.
- Gordon observes that diet culture persists and says some users report intense hunger and weight regain after stopping certain weight‑loss injections.
Summary:
Gordon frames her personal history as evidence that patterns of restrictive eating and loss of control around food remain present decades on, and she highlights how those patterns can reappear in new forms such as prescription treatments. Undetermined at this time.
