Thoughts from a Quarantined Autistic

I’m writing this post from self-quarantine, practicing social distancing. Luckily, I have no COVID-19 symptoms (so far). I am isolating myself to help slow the spread of this deadly virus, as well as protecting myself as I’m in the higher-risk category. I’ve had a lot on my mind during this first week of isolation and have been struggling with some pretty tremendous mental health concerns.

Despite all of this, I’ve also found some ways to find some calm and order. I want to share some of them with all of my readers—Autistic or not. As a multiply disabled, introverted Autistic, I have a unique perspectives to offer. I generally don’t leave my house much when I can help it; I have a lot of online friends; I’ve been bed- or couch-bound countless time in my life. Social distancing is kind of my default, even if it’s not always my choice.

While my thoughts aren’t going to help everyone, they may help someone. And that’s all I can hope for.

1) Keeping any routine possible; Adapting what has to change

This is something I practice anytime I cannot follow my normal routine in general. Keeping to a routine—even an adapted one—is key to my mental health. Because I also have ADHD, that can sometimes be tricky, but routine doesn’t have to look like a rigid frame. It can be bendy and flexible if that’s what works for you. A step in your routine can be as simple as “In the mornings I will do something relaxing before work.”

Even though I am working remotely now, I have been doing my best to get up and go to bed at the same times. I eat breakfast at the same time, and start work at the same time. That familiarity and rhythm brings comfort and certainty in a very uncertain time.

But what about things that have to be changed? For example, what if you usually visit your favorite coffee shop with a friend after work? In cases like that, I Skype that friend, brew some tea together and talk as usual. Usually go to the gym at night? Look up YouTube videos of workouts you can do at home, and work out during your usual time.

It’s not the same, but it’s familiar and that can bring calm. It’s taken several days of my “new normal” routine to feel natural, but now it brings me a lot of comfort when I’m anxious.

2) Putting locks on social media apps & limiting news

I often compulsively check social media during my downtime, partly because so many of my friendships are online, and partly because I find social media to be a nice distraction. But right now, that’s not the case. I find myself getting sucked into hyper-focusing on news, perseverating on local events, and worrying about friends and family (and everyone in general).

I ended up setting up Screen Time on my phone for all social media apps. That’s a setting on iPhones that can help you control your app habits; there are similar things for other phones. I gave myself a 30 minute cut off for social media. That means when I reach that 30 minutes, a notification will pop up and let me know. I then have the option to snooze that reminder for 15 more minutes of viewing time, turn it off for the day, or just close that app.

I’m finding that this helps with executive dysfunction and getting trapped in a loop, losing hours of time to stress and panic. It’s nice because it also doesn’t make me feel out of control. I am able to dismiss the reminder, and it will remind me again after 15 minutes when I can then decide again if I need a break or not. It holds me accountable, but also gives me the power of choice when my brain can’t necessarily regulate itself.

3) Dual tasking when I need distraction

I’ve found that if I try to sit down and do something to relax and distract myself from the current situation, I will end up either doing something else by accident or heavily dissociating. (Sometimes both because I’m an overachiever.) That’s not helpful, and actually really distressing!

In the last week I have turned to giving my brain dual tasks. For example, I will cross stitch while listening to the TV. I’ll listen to an audiobook while I play a simple game. Color and listen/sing to music. That’s been the key to me sticking with a distraction long enough to actually de-stress! I’ve finally been able to relax now with that strategy and it’s doing a world of good for my mental health.

4) Being gentle with myself regarding mental health

(Content warning: eating disorder, OCD, mental health spirals, etc.)

In the last few weeks, I’ve definitely noticed an uptick of mental health issues in myself. My eating disorders—even though I’ve been doing really well in treatment—tell me that if I eat too much we will run out of food. Then my wife will have to leave the house and of course she’ll get sick and she’ll die and then I’ll suffer and then I’ll die… Oof. The eating disorder is latching onto very real fears and just running with it.

I’ve also seen a huge relapse with obsessive compulsive issues. I had pretty severe OCD as a kid, but have recovered to the point that I have only really have mild OCD tendencies. In the last week in particular, I’ve really struggled. For example, one night I got “stuck” in the shower for 30 minutes, washing my whole body several times, then standing there as my brain told me I still have the virus on me and if I get out now I will murder everyone I know and love. I couldn’t seem to make my body move. So I thought maybe should call to my wife to come help me, but my brain said if I did, maybe she would trip on the way up the stairs and hit her head! (OCD is a real piece of crap.)

My agoraphobia—which I always struggle with to a certain extent—is absolutely and positively thrilled to have a logical reason to not leave the house. So I struggle to even go on short walks. And I won’t even start on anxiety because… it makes me anxious. Hah!

So yes, it’s been really rough. But ultimately, I have realized that I gain nothing by being critical of myself. This situation is hard. It’s scary. It’s really horrifying. And my brain is actually doing it’s best right now. Strange as it sounds, it’s trying to protect me and it’s just sort of… glitching. It’s similar to the concept that I talked about regarding my chronic illnesses in 28: Chronic Illness: Am I “Broken”?. My body and mind are compromised. And they’re doing the best they can right now. What I can do is be gentle and give myself time to rest and recharge.

5) Positive output

The last thing that’s been incredibly helpful for me is making something positive. My wife and I made a cover video of the song “Tomorrow” from Annie to share with our loved ones. It started as us unwinding at lunchtime and evolved into my wife writing a piano arrangement. We made the video because we needed it ourselves. We feel so helpless and powerless. We did it to uplift our family and community, but we also just needed to do… something, anything! Something to put a bit of happiness and hope out into what is an extra dark and scary world right now.

Putting something out into the world doesn’t have to be extravagant. It can be sending an email to a friend, making a piece of art, sending a gift to a neighbor, or donating money to someone in need… something to remind yourself and others that the sun will shine again.

A picture taken in the woods during fall when the trees are radiant orange. The sun shines through the trunks toward the viewer.
“Tomorrow”, taken by Alex Earhart

27: Eating Disorder Treatment

I’ve now been in treatment for about a month. My first steps out the gate might be best described more as stumbles and falls, but every scrape I earn on the way down is a badge of honor that I hang proudly in my mental trophy room.

Why? Because each time I slip and fall, I learn something new and often profound about myself. And each time I get back up, I reenforce the fact that I can do this.

I have an eating disorder. And I’m gonna kick its butt!


[Content Warning: eating disorders, weight, food, restriction, bingeing, treatment]

It’s taken a lot (and I mean A LOT) of work to take my first steps in treatment. As I wrote in my first post about my eating disorder, I spent over a year in therapy after diagnosis of disordered eating before I finally felt ready to start treatment.

“I feel like I’m starting out across a tightrope, and I look down and there’s no net that I can see,”  I stated bluntly to my therapist.

“Sometimes I’m scared and I want to crouch down, grab the rope, and head back to safety. But everyone around me—friends in treatment and recovery, family, my wife, books I’m reading, my therapist—is assuring me that I am safe and there actually is a safety net below me. I just can’t see it yet. I just have to trust and keep going.”

A meme with a close-up of a pair of feet and legs of a person balanced on a tightrope. Text reads, "Eating disorder treatment feels like I'm starting out across a tightrope and there's no net that I can see. Sometimes I'm scared and want to head back to safety. Everyone is assuring me that I am safe and there actually is a net below me—I just can't see it yet. I just have to trust and keep going." The words keep going are bigger font.

And here’s the thing: no matter how many rational people you have in your court; no matter how logically you look at your eating at times, an eating disorder will try to whisper (sometimes shout) in your ear that those around you are wrong—that you are wrong. Learning to identify that voice takes a lot of work. It takes even more energy and trust to at least ignore that voice, if not fully defy it.

Some days I can laugh in its face and retort, “You are losing and you know it. That’s why you’re so loud. Shout away!” Other days I cower and bow to the voice, agreeing with it for a moment if only to gain some temporary peace.

And it’s strange… treatment is hard. It can be scary. It’s utterly exhausting. Yet so far, treatment has been far, far less scary than my enormous dread of seeking help was.

I spent so long dreading and fighting the thought of treatment, but a huge part of me feels relief at tackling something that I’ve struggled with for eighteen years. While it’s scary to admit I have an eating disorder, it’s also incredibly liberating. As I do the hard work of therapy, it’s often exhausting and sometimes overwhelming, but it also comes with an all-consuming relief that I can’t quite describe.

Initial Steps of My Treatment

1) Six Meals

I started a six meal a day routine, eating three small meals labeled merely as Meal 1, Meal 2, and Meal 3, and three small snacks a day. This is fairly common in treatment. One of the benefits can be reawakening hunger cues that a body has stopped sending for people who have restricted.

I went into the routine thinking it would be very easy, but also feeling like that was a lot of food to eat. (Interesting how an eating disorder will whisper conflicting information in your ear. Once you start to catch on to its little inconsistencies, it starts to lose its grip on you ever so slightly.)

Through this task, I realized that anorexia has played much more of a role in my life than I had realized, and that my bingeing was often a symptom of both conscious and subconscious restricting.

This was a huge revelation for me because: A) I had always thought of it in reverse, that my bingeing lead to restricting out of shame and B) I had the false assumption that someone has to be underweight to be anorexic. (That is NOT the case at all. Anyone of any size or shape can be diagnosed with anorexia.)

I printed out a chart when I realized how difficult it was to remember to eat and how hard it was to hold myself accountable for it. I worked out the math: I needed to eat something every 2-3 hours or so. The only problem? Seeing what I was eating on paper made me fixate too much on WHAT I was eating. But my fear—that I needed to change everything about my eating habits all at once—was unfounded.

My therapist reassured me that we were breaking things into manageable steps. “Right now, just focus on when you eat, not what. Addressing nutrition comes later!” I was so relieved because she was right—focusing on what I was eating in addition to starting this new routine that challenged 18 years of restricting and bingeing was too much. It was setting me up to crash and burn.

2) Talking to my doctor

Another victory came at a follow-up appointment with my primary care physician. This was not strictly part of my therapy, but I made it part of it because I trust my doctor.

Toward the end of my appointment, I had worked up my courage. “There is one more thing. Something I think you should be aware of as my GP.” I took a huge breath and continued.

“I’m in treatment for an eating disorder and I’ve begun a six small meals a day plan in order to return my hunger cues and manage my restricting and bingeing. So far it’s helped a lot to identify that I wasn’t eating as much as I thought I was which was leading to binge eating. So far it’s helped a lot with dizziness and hypoglycemia.”

I paused and finally looked at him.

“That’s great! Most people should be eating 4 to 5 small meals a day rather than the 3 we do. And if you ever want to try medication, there are some that can help with binge eating.”

I could almost hear my eating disorder groan at this response (it had hoped he would shoot me down and I’d have an excuse to stop treatment), but ultimately I was relieved.

“Thank you! I think treatment is going well so far, so I’ll wait on medication, but it’s good to know there are options. Also…” I paused again, looking down at the notes I had written for the appointment, “I… would like to stop being weighed. It’s very triggering for me; It makes me struggle with restricting more. And it’s hard to avoid seeing it on my charts.”

I held my breath the beat it took him to answer.

“Absolutely. No need to take your weight.”

Phew! Another ally in my court.

3) Challenging the voice of my eating disorder

I have made quite a lot of headway in this regard, but am finding it the most difficult part of treatment. For so long, there’s been this negative narrative in my head regarding food, weight, perfectionism, and control. Identifying that voice was an overwhelming experience as I wrote down all the terrible things that voice says to me.

The next step after learning to separate the eating disorder “voice” from my own has been a little harder. I’m now starting to “reply” to it with snark like “Gee, what a terrible suggestion. Thanks, but no thanks!”

And as a close friend of mine pointed out:  the more progress I make, the more my eating disorder is going to fight to survive. It knows it’s losing, and it will do anything to survive.

But joke’s on it—I’m stronger. And certainly sassier!

4) Journalling and continuing to read

I write notes in my journal about what my goals from therapy are and reminders of things to do and not do. That’s been essential to keeping on track and reminding myself it’s okay when I slip up. I also reflect on things I’ve learned in the books I am reading as part of treatment.

Journalling has also helped me to connect some dots on how my eating disorder controls a vast variety of things in my life. I’ve been astounded, for example, to realize how much my eating is tied to my perfectionism and anxiety, and in some ways, my OCD tendencies.

For example, my need to follow difficult tasks through until the bitter end no matter if I want to or not is slowly, ever so slowly budging. I recently had a small but mighty victory of “cheating” while reading one of my books and skipping over a section that was triggering to me. In the past, I would have slogged through that section to be “self-disciplined” (strange as that sounds) even when my mind and body were signaling “This is not what we need right now!”

Journaling also helped me to realize that binge-eating had been a way to stress-stim for me, and that without it I was much more anxious. It showed me that I needed to start stimming as self-care: coloring, squishing clay and silly putty, singing, flapping my hands, holding fluffy stuffed animals, etc.

I see these victories as tied to my treatment in a very real way, and I wouldn’t have noticed them without journalling. The journal also gives me a place to record moments I’d like to share in therapy, and a place to look back on to see how far I’ve already come.

I’ve got a long road ahead, but for now, I am so happy to look back and see how far I’ve already come.

A meme of a forest path with a blue square of text over it. Text reads, "I have an eating disorder. I began subconsciously using food to cope with sensory overload, to avoid meltdowns and shutdowns, and to find some sense of control in my life. As I start down my long path to recovery, I am reaching out to others to say "You are not alone." I have an eating disorder...and I'm going to kick its butt."

25: I have an eating disorder.

Trigger and content warning: eating, food, weight, eating disorder, bingeing, restricting, treatment, recovery.

I have an eating disorder.

It’s taken me a full year to reach a place where I can say that sentence out loud, but now that I have, I feel a tiny piece of its hold on me slowly peeling away. I was diagnosed well over a year ago, but have only started the nitty-gritty of treatment very recently.

So why am I writing about it on my blog?

Well, for one thing, my blog is a place that I can go to write what I’m feeling and it helps me to process things in a constructive way. In a big way, this space has always and will always be for me. A big part of Autistically Alex is unraveling myself and finding out who I am inside. (Alexa, play the Mulan soundtrack!)

But I also want to be open about it because if it weren’t for people in my life being open about their own struggles, treatments, and roads to recovery (including potholes along the way), I never would have been brave enough to seek help. So another massive reason I am being open about this topic is in order to reach out to others to say, “You are not alone.”

The last big reason I am writing about my disordered eating on Autistically Alex is that it is not unrelated to being Autistic. I began subconsciously, (then more consciously, but to my deep shame and suffering) using food, bingeing, restricting, and overall disordered eating to cope with sensory overload, to avoid meltdowns and shutdowns, and to find some sense of control in my life.

Bingeing has become a type of self-harm stim to me. Restricting has become a way to control at least something in my life when I so frequently am overwhelmed by the world around me, not to mention my various health issues and disabilities. But these are not healthy or productive ways to cope. The fact that I can see that now is not a small baby step, but a giant, giant leap toward my long marathon run toward recovery.

One reason I avoided seeking help for so long is the uncanny ability eating disorders have to convince you that they are no big deal. Cycles of denial and acceptance are pretty much guaranteed companions during anyone’s treatment and recovery. I have no doubts that I will struggle back and forth for months–and probably years–to come, but now that I know that and accept that, it makes it easier to cope.

So how did I decide I really did have a problem I needed to address?

I’ve known for a long time, but the final tipping point was a journal assignment my therapist gave to me. The prompt was, “What is your relationship with food like? Write a letter as if it were a real person.” The two images below are my letter to food.

(If you are using a screen reader, please click the images. Alt-text is attached.)
An image of a purple notebook page with text on it. The date reads January 1, 2019. Above the date is a branch with red buds. Text reads, "Dear Food, We need to talk. My relationship with you has been unhealthy for 18 years. It's true that I can't live without you, but sometimes you make me feel like I can't live with you either. You are nourishment, energy, life, necessity. You are addictive, controlling, an unhealthy coping mechanism. I need you. I love you. I hate you. I hate that I need you. You provide me with escape... and yet I can't seem to escape you. The solace you provide is temporary and leaves behind regret, frustration, and a shame.
The second page of the letter reads, "Where you soothe, you also blister. You are a gulp of cool water laced with poison. We need to talk. We have 28 years to evaluate--18 of them troubled. You know I won't ever leave you, but things between us are about to change. I can't leave, but I can loosen your hold on me. I will no longer use you as a crutch that feeds me lies and self-hate. We need to talk. Sara." Beside Sara's name is a graphic of a pen. Under her name is a branch with blossoming red flowers.

Was I shocked by what I wrote? Extremely. What started out as a seemingly-silly therapy homework assignment that I was doing only grudgingly soon pulled emotions up from deep within me as the words cascaded onto the page. What I expected to be a few lines or bullet points in my journal turned into a chilling look at how I really felt. It captured the push-and-pull, back-and-forth, ebb-and-flow love/hate relationship that I’ve been running from since I was 10.

But, like I said: Denial and acceptance are at constant war within me. The next day, I was back to the complacent “I’m fine” attitude. But this time… I had something to look back on. I looked at that letter and felt those same feelings rising up in me again. And suddenly… I couldn’t turn back. I couldn’t go back to believing everything was fine…

But more importantly, I didn’t want to.

So what now?

Well, I’m diving in to treatment head-first with my therapist, continuing to journal (no matter how silly a prompt seems), talking with my loved ones who have eating disorders, doing seemingly small things like asking doctors not to tell me my weight, and reading lots.

I’m cycling back and forth between two books:

The simple yellow cover of Body Respect: What conventional health books get wrong, leave out, and just plain fail to understand about weight. By Linda Bacon and Lucy Aphramor.

1) Body Respect by Linda Bacon, PhD and Lucy Aphramor, PhD and RD (Amazon link here).

The pretty yet simple white cover of Life Without Ed: How one woman declared independence from her eating disorder and how you can too. By Jenni Schaefer.

2) The 10th anniversary edition of Life Without Ed by Jenni Shaefer (Amazon link here).

Cycling between the two has been invaluable to me so far. Body Respect challenges our views of weight, fatness, calorie counting, dieting and more, while Life Without Ed shows me that I am not alone, shows me recovery is possible, and teaches me very practical techniques that I can use.

Getting to Know the Enemy

One of the most important things I have learned from Life Without Ed so far is the concept of naming my eating disorder. By doing this, I can begin to separate out thoughts and impulses that are genuinely mine and which are from the eating disordered part of my brain. It also gives me something to roll my eyes at and tell to go away!

One exercise I did once I named my disorder was to write down all the things it says to me. Once again, what I thought was kind of a silly activity turned into me easily writing a page and a half of terrible things that it says to me–and has done for 18 years. That was another eye-opening moment for me and one that will stick with me throughout treatment and well past recovery.

So there you have it. I have an eating disorder.

But I’m not terrified like I have been for years. I feel anxious. Sometimes I feel powerless. Sometimes I feel like I can’t do it. Occasionally I still feel denial. But now I know how to recognize these feelings and thoughts as products of my eating disorder, not myself.

I have an eating disorder… and I’m going to kick its butt.

A meme with a photograph of a sunny path through the woods. Text reads, "I have an eating disorder. I began subconsciously using food to cope with sensory overload, to avoid meltdowns and shutdowns, and to find some sense of control in my life. As I start down my long path to recovery, I am reaching out to others to say "You are not alone."I have an eating disorder...and I'm going to kick its butt."

[Featured image, image description: A photograph of a sunny path in the woods with shadows from the trees stretching across it. Text reads “Starting Down My Path to Recovery. Seeking Sara.”]

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