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Entitlement in Eating Disorder Recovery, Part II

Saturday, September 17th, 2011

“Entitlement” means having rights, feeling deserving, having a sense of permission. A strong eating disorder recovery includes feeling entitled to:

  1. have and express your own needs (see “Having Needs of Your Own in Eating Disorder Recovery, Parts I & II”)
  2. comfortably be who you are, just as you are (appearance, personality, assets and liabilities, and so forth)

No one can confer these important entitlements upon you. Part of recovery will include learning to give them to yourself.

In my last post I invited you to start exploring your personal rules for entitlement. Exactly what do I mean by “rules”? Rules in this sense are guidelines—often unconscious—for how you should respond and what you believe you are allowed in certain situations. Social consensus only accounts for some of these guidelines. The rest are remnants of your personal history. They usually include conclusions drawn from your particular experiences plus the ways you adapted to them. For example, if your natural exuberance annoyed one or both of your parents, you may have learned you are too much as you are and to squelch your appetites and instincts.

Reward and Shame

Reward and shame are powerful shapers of beliefs about personal entitlement. Maybe you were praised or got attention when you took care of a caretaker, but ignored when it came to your own needs.  You probably feel most confident and worthy when you focus on others, but become anxious, uncomfortable, even guilty about focusing on yourself.

Caretakers are the most obvious sources of experiences about entitlement. But peer responses, especially in adolescence when you first are focusing hard on how to make your way in the social world outside your family, can have major impact on beliefs about how a person gets accepted or rejected. At least half the women I treat for eating disorders experienced some kind of peer trauma as teens, resulting in or reinforcing sharp restrictions on how they think they can act, look or even think, and still be accepted by others.

Modeling of Caretakers

A caretaker who can’t treat his or her own needs as important makes an indelible mark on  entitlement learning. This seems to be especially true for the caretaker of the same sex as you. A mother who can ask for nothing for herself makes it very hard for a daughter to feel entitled to more.

Identifying Unconscious Rules

When you experience anxiety, guilt, shame or any other sense of discomfort in relation to your own needs, wishes, desires or preferences, this is a sure sign you’ve bumped up against a restrictive entitlement rule. Sometimes the threat associated with such feelings is so great, it’s caused even the feelings to go underground. I often run across people with entitlement issues who can’t even risk knowing they have preferences. Or who believe they honestly would always rather do what the other person wants. In these instances, you recognize entitlement problems by a consistent pattern of behavior. (I believe these one–sided patterns can only go on so long before resentment starts to seep in and corrode a relationship. This is the source of a lot of what we call passive–aggressive behavior, when the doer can’t risk knowing or expressing anger more directly.)

It’s common to project limiting rules of entitlement onto others, meaning you believe other people view the limits of your entitlement in the same way you do. If you project your rules, you will experience other people as potentially dangerous, as if you are still as vulnerable as you were with your caretakers as a kid. Others’ opinions can feel way too powerful if seen from a kid’s eye view where rejection and disapproval can be disastrous.

Expanding Your Range of Entitlement

Let’s go back to the exercise I offered in my last post. Remember to honor your felt sense of what you can do without being triggered or overwhelmed. Start with whatever you filled in for yourself for each sentence.

I have to be thin to be entitled to _________________________.  (wear a bathing suit; wear a short skirt, dance in public, eat an ice cream cone in public, get my way, get angry…)

I have to ____________________________ to be entitled to eat. (lose 10 pounds, run 5 miles, skip a meal, be perfect…)

I have to (be) __________________________ to be entitled to __________________.

For each statement, try to come up with the following substitution: I prefer to believe_______________________________.

For example, if you believe: I have to lose 10 pounds to be entitled to eat, you might decide you prefer to believe: I deserve to treat my body with respect and care whatever my weight or I deserve to take up space, or My weight doesn’t determine my worth or entitlement to anything.

Sometimes a preferred belief can seem unrealistic or unattainable. If so, you might try one or more of the following steps and notice if you feel a little closer:

  • Think of someone you know and admire who is not model slim but eats with enjoyment and treats her body with respect.
  • Consider what makes you think of other people as worthwhile that has nothing to do with their weight.
  • Think of situations in which you have felt others responding to you as a worthwhile person that had nothing to do with your weight.
  • Try to imagine just for a moment that your weight and your worth are two entirely separate things.

In the opening paragraph of this post I said that recovery involves learning to entitle yourself. A better model still might be found in the Cowardly Lion and the Tin Woodsman from the “Wizard of Oz.” In the end Oz reveals to the two seekers that they already possess the qualities they are asking him to confer. They have only failed to recognize them! So I invite you to imagine that the entitlement to validate your own needs and wishes and to be who you most truly are as you are is already there for the taking.

Warmest wishes as you continue in recovery,

Susan

Labor Day Break

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

Wise Words is on vacation this weekend. Be sure to check back in two weeks for my second post on Entitlement in Eating Disorder Recovery.

Meanwhile, wishing you all a refreshing break as we honor the nation’s labor force, wind down the summer and head into fall.

Warm regards,

Susan

Entitlement in Eating Disorder Recovery

Friday, August 19th, 2011

Most of the eating disordered people I know have rigid rules about what they are or aren’t entitled to and under what conditions. The most common entitlement rule is:  I have to be thin to be entitled to eat. Sound familiar? Some people hold themselves to variants like I have to be thin to be entitled to eat in public.

Sometimes these rules are conscious, sometimes not. Either way, they interfere with healthy recovery. They affect not only your eating practices, but also your self–esteem. What are your entitlement rules? You can use the following examples to jump–start your thinking:

I have to be thin to be entitled to _________________________. (wear a bathing suit; wear a short skirt, dance in public, eat an ice cream cone in public, get my way, get angry…)

I have to  ____________________________ to be entitled to eat. (lose 10 pounds, run 5 miles, skip a meal, be perfect…)

I have to  __________________________ to be entitled to

_____________________________.

Join me next time to talk about how entitlement rules get to be part of an eating disorder and what you can do to free yourself from their negative effects.

Until then, enjoy these last weeks of summer!

Warmly,

Susan