I have just published a little post about a recent little break I had up in North Yorkshire, here is the link if you would like to go take a look at my Mrs Craftypants post x.
Thursday, 1 October 2015
Saturday, 22 August 2015
Life with Rex
It's been quiet on here for some time. Life seemed to be ticking a long nicely. Life's drama's were all being coped with, all was well. Then in June we realised that there was a dinosaur living with us. He had crept in uninvited and was slowly devouring our beloved 14 year old daughter. How can you miss such a creature coming and living with you? Hindsight and talking with friends, youth leaders and each other has helped us to recognise some signs that we missed, though they are all so insidious by themselves that maybe we would never have picked up on them at the time.
It was easiest to start by looking back at when he definitely was NOT around. Christmas is one time I can think back to and know he wasn't here then. However by Easter he was definitely making himself comfortable. I should maybe introduce him properly, his name is Anorexia, Rex for short. We have given him a name as that is the only way we can cope with the voice in my daughters head that shouts and abuses her. We have learnt that it is very important to recognise when Rex is talking and making her behave in certain ways, she is not choosing to have these thoughts.
So what were the signs?
For a couple of weeks she refused to go and see the Dr or get any proffessional help. We managed to get her supervision at lunch times at school, however the food that she was taking was still not enough and she was totally resisting increasing it. Eventually my husband and I went to see our GP by ourselves to talk about her. It was very hard to talk about, especially as I knew that the only route they would probably suggest was that we returned to CAMHS (children and adolescent mental health services). We had such a terrible experience with these guys when my niece came to live with us that just the thought of the service gave me mild anxiety attacks. The GP wanted to see my daughter for herself and I was actually quite surprised when we got home, told her where we had been and that we had made an appointment for her the next day, she was fine about it. I think she was probably quite releived as she knew how serious this had become.
Our CAMHS appoitment came through in less than 2 weeks and it is only now (8 weeks on) that I realise why they saw her so quickly - she was very close to needing hospitalization.
The good news is we hopefully have got intervention just in time. She had not gone through to the stage of total denial that there was a problem, she knew there was a problem and she wanted to get rid of it. We have got a very long road ahead of us. She is currently on a weight gain programme. This involves 3 meals a day, two with puddings and 3 calorie rich snacks a day. She is not allowed to prepare any food for herself (I have found this very hard as she has been making her own breakfast and lunch for years and years!) and all meals have to be supervised for their entirety. Meals usually take about an hour for her to eat and so it often feels as though every day is one long eating marathon. Eating in public is excrutiating for her, and therefore has become so for us as well, so even having folks over for meals as a family has had to decrease enormously.
Weeks of family therapy and weigh in appointments seem to be making time rush by. CAMHS have thankfully changed a lot. It is a completely new team that is now in, but still going into rooms that I have had to sit in with my niece make me very uncomfortable, thankfully the team are lovely and very sensitive to this.
We have had tremendous support from the youth team at church and friends. She has still been able to go on 2 camps over the summer holidays with an appointed leader doing the job that I do at home for her.
It has also been an enormous learning curve for both my husband and I. As an occupational therapist I did a module on eating disorders but did not have any direct contact with anyone, either when I was training or when I was working. It seems to be that you are forever hearing about anorexia on the tv and I knew it was about not eating and having body dysmorphia where you see fat in the mirror where there is none. However I had never come across the condemning voice, that the sufferer has no control over. I have issues with food, but I always feel in control of my over eating and binge eating, from talking with others I know that this is a common issue - the element of choice is definitely still there fore me. For my daughter it is not.
My niece stopped eating and then starting binging and using diet pills when she was in a children's home, which eventually lead to her last admission into a secure unit where she has now been for two years. However this was not Anorexia, this was part of her self harming behaviour, she has voices that condemn her and abuse her but it is not a Rex. Maybe this is why I did not recognise Rex coming to stay, I didn't really understand that he was real, so he could creep in and start his devouring and when you notice the changes, he has already made himself very comfortable and is not going to be easily evicted.
But eviction is what we are now aiming for. Weight gain is required for physical health, however the main purpose of the treatment plan that we are using is to get Rex evicted. So onwards and upwards ( or outwards is maybe more apt), now I had better be going and get a snack down her!!!!!!
It was easiest to start by looking back at when he definitely was NOT around. Christmas is one time I can think back to and know he wasn't here then. However by Easter he was definitely making himself comfortable. I should maybe introduce him properly, his name is Anorexia, Rex for short. We have given him a name as that is the only way we can cope with the voice in my daughters head that shouts and abuses her. We have learnt that it is very important to recognise when Rex is talking and making her behave in certain ways, she is not choosing to have these thoughts.
So what were the signs?
- cutting out certain food groups (until there were no acceptable food groups).
- wanting to make all her own meals.
- going out with friends over meal times and saying she would get food while she was out (but not)
- cutting down portion sizes at meal times.
- taking a very very long time to eat meals, leaving a lot of mess spread around her plate.
- wearing baggy clothing all the time.
- being cold all the time.
- getting blue lips when she exerted herself physically.
- not doing things that she usually enjoyed, eg. yoga, drawing
- becoming more and more withdrawn
- just taking a piece of fruit to school for lunch when we checked with her what she had got.
For a couple of weeks she refused to go and see the Dr or get any proffessional help. We managed to get her supervision at lunch times at school, however the food that she was taking was still not enough and she was totally resisting increasing it. Eventually my husband and I went to see our GP by ourselves to talk about her. It was very hard to talk about, especially as I knew that the only route they would probably suggest was that we returned to CAMHS (children and adolescent mental health services). We had such a terrible experience with these guys when my niece came to live with us that just the thought of the service gave me mild anxiety attacks. The GP wanted to see my daughter for herself and I was actually quite surprised when we got home, told her where we had been and that we had made an appointment for her the next day, she was fine about it. I think she was probably quite releived as she knew how serious this had become.
Our CAMHS appoitment came through in less than 2 weeks and it is only now (8 weeks on) that I realise why they saw her so quickly - she was very close to needing hospitalization.
The good news is we hopefully have got intervention just in time. She had not gone through to the stage of total denial that there was a problem, she knew there was a problem and she wanted to get rid of it. We have got a very long road ahead of us. She is currently on a weight gain programme. This involves 3 meals a day, two with puddings and 3 calorie rich snacks a day. She is not allowed to prepare any food for herself (I have found this very hard as she has been making her own breakfast and lunch for years and years!) and all meals have to be supervised for their entirety. Meals usually take about an hour for her to eat and so it often feels as though every day is one long eating marathon. Eating in public is excrutiating for her, and therefore has become so for us as well, so even having folks over for meals as a family has had to decrease enormously.
Weeks of family therapy and weigh in appointments seem to be making time rush by. CAMHS have thankfully changed a lot. It is a completely new team that is now in, but still going into rooms that I have had to sit in with my niece make me very uncomfortable, thankfully the team are lovely and very sensitive to this.
We have had tremendous support from the youth team at church and friends. She has still been able to go on 2 camps over the summer holidays with an appointed leader doing the job that I do at home for her.
It has also been an enormous learning curve for both my husband and I. As an occupational therapist I did a module on eating disorders but did not have any direct contact with anyone, either when I was training or when I was working. It seems to be that you are forever hearing about anorexia on the tv and I knew it was about not eating and having body dysmorphia where you see fat in the mirror where there is none. However I had never come across the condemning voice, that the sufferer has no control over. I have issues with food, but I always feel in control of my over eating and binge eating, from talking with others I know that this is a common issue - the element of choice is definitely still there fore me. For my daughter it is not.
My niece stopped eating and then starting binging and using diet pills when she was in a children's home, which eventually lead to her last admission into a secure unit where she has now been for two years. However this was not Anorexia, this was part of her self harming behaviour, she has voices that condemn her and abuse her but it is not a Rex. Maybe this is why I did not recognise Rex coming to stay, I didn't really understand that he was real, so he could creep in and start his devouring and when you notice the changes, he has already made himself very comfortable and is not going to be easily evicted.
But eviction is what we are now aiming for. Weight gain is required for physical health, however the main purpose of the treatment plan that we are using is to get Rex evicted. So onwards and upwards ( or outwards is maybe more apt), now I had better be going and get a snack down her!!!!!!
Tuesday, 24 February 2015
Hello!!
I thought I'd better check in, it has been quite a while! As all things have quietened down on the home and health front, we are settling into a nice quiet routine. I am still swimming, most weeks managing to get to the club 3 times and clocking up 6km swam and lots and lots of repetitions of my hydrotherapy exercises completed. My weight is slowly (very slowly) coming off, the good thing about this is that it is staying off, even when I have 'naughty' weeks. I am now the same weight I was about 10 years ago after I had my children, still a long way to go!
When I am not at the club swimming, I have decided to relaunch my crafting shop on folksy, Mrs Craftypants. In addition to making things for my shop, I have also purchased my domain name, so you can find out a little more about me over at www.mrscraftypants.co.uk. There has been the purchasing of business cards and getting out and about touting for business. This is the bit I like least - I wish I could just make and not have to do the selling! However this hobby needs to fund it self and so I wondered off to a little shop near by armed with a selection of Easter bits and pieces and they have agreed to sell it for me on a sale or return basis.
Another new venture is the start of doing workshops. I am starting with a crochet workshop first of all on Saturday 7th March, so I am busy this week writing up patterns, taking photo's to go on the patterns and doing things like writing this blog to distract me from doing what I am really supposed to be doing!!!!!!!!
I will try and keep popping by and keeping up to date with other blog posts, maybe if I set myself a few deadlines then I will spend more time prevaricating and do this more often.
Take care for now xxxxxx
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)