Anorexia: True Story in a Sister's Words

by Kay (pseudonym) presented with author's permission
by Joanna Poppink, M.F.T.

(Only names have been changed to protect the privacy of family members) Followed by author's correspondence with Joanna Poppink, L.M.F.T.

Dear Joanna,

Janet is 36 years old and has been suffering from Anorexia Nervosa since the age of 16. This is her story as told by her sister.I am writing in the hopes of saving my sister Janet. Janet has always been one of my best friends, and my other sister Wilma and I are certain Janet will die if she doesn't t get help.

Janet is 36 years old and has been suffering from Anorexia Nervosa since the age of 16. She has been in an out of treatment and hospitals over the years. It has been about one year since her last 5-month stay at XX (a well known eating disorder treatment center). Since her release last April, she has had 4 hospitalizations and three seizures all caused by her eating disorder.

Janet insists on living in her studio apartment in the city while most of the family is in the suburbs. She comes out to the suburbs often, but despite our efforts to keep her to stay with us she insists on going back to her apartment, and has even called cabs to take her back home.

She can no longer drive because of her seizures and has been on disability for the last year and a half. Janet is also an alcoholic and often turns to binge drinking to escape her problems. On one occasion we picked her up at an El stop bombed drunk. She does not remember the incident.

Janet admits that she drinks to escape her depression. It s a non-ending cycle and I m convinced she will die soon if something drastic doesn't change.

Janet is the middle daughter of three girls. Wilma is 37, and I am 33. In everyone's eyes, Janet is an outgoing person with a bubbly personality. Janet was the lead in many plays in high school. She was an honor student in high school with practically a perfect straight A report card. She was the 2nd runner up in our town beauty pageant at the age of 20.

Janet is a people pleaser. She would do anything to help a friend, relative or stranger. She just can t seem to help herself.

I believe God has saved her time and time again. All of her seizures occurred when she was either around family, or in public. They could just as well have happened while she was alone in her apartment, which is where she spends most of her time these days. When we picked her up, drunk, at the El stop, we found her because she called dad from a payphone. She doesn't remember the incident or the phone call.

My five year old son Chris and Janet have a special bond. Janet lived with us for the first few years of Chris's life. Chris knows Janet is sick because she doesn't t eat. He recently overheard my cries and conversation with my husband in which I stated that I didn't want Janet to die. He pretty much went hysterical crying, "I don t want Auntie Janety to die."

How do you explain Anorexia to a 5 year old? Janet has often said that she doesn't t want to live, but is going on for her nieces and nephew.

Janet loves children. Her first job out of college was teaching preschoolers at a Montessori school. Janet has told me, "The kids love me for me." If only she could love herself the same way.

She has had several bad relationships over the years. The most recent one was with a married lawyer who was getting divorced. This scum was at my house on Thanksgiving a couple of years ago and even held my baby daughter, which now makes me sick to my stomach. He used Janet for very selfish reasons and then Janet found out that his wife was pregnant again. This put Janet over the edge and back in the hospital. Still though, he tracked her down in the hospital and continued to call her.

Because Janet is so sick and has no self-esteem, she immediately got her hopes up and started the relationship back up. Once she was out of the hospital; the relationship resumed and consisted only of lunchtime visits to her apartment for sex. He is now out of the picture because we told his wife.

I have every crazy story you can imagine about the abnormal behavior of a severe anorexic. These memories go back at least 15 years. Janet and I lived together right after I got out of college. This was after her first in-patient stay at a treatment center in Illinois. Janet has specific foods that are okay for her to eat. This list consists of vegetables, diet soda, a morning bagel if you are feeling thin that day, pickles, olives, and pretzels.

She has shared with me every thought that goes through her mind. Nothing I could say helped her. She usually denied that she still had a problem. I've even gone as far as going through the garbage even after it was outside in the trash can to prove to Janet that her anorexia/bulimia was no secret. I found wrappers of all the food she ate during a binge.

We had fights on a regular basis that would end up in tears and hugs. Tough love has never been my expertise. She was staying at our house recently and I asked her to try a little chicken breast on her salad. She did put it on and ate it, but later threw it up. She admitted to me that she threw it up, and broke down in tears saying she had to do it because she ate a lot at mom and dad's the last weekend and gained a few pounds and was freaking out about it.

She also told me in tears that she couldn't t be alone. Sure enough, two days later she demanded going back to her apartment. Her cycle now is to eat when she's visiting us out in the suburbs, and then she starves for 3-5 days.

Her body is so messed up. Among many of her problems is severe osteoporosis. Recent test showed her bones to be as frail as those of a 98 year-old woman. She had to have all her teeth drilled down to just nubs, and have caps put on all of her them because her teeth deteriorated so much due to vomiting. Her blond hair was once healthy. Now, it is thin and sparse.

She started in therapy after her release from the hospital last April at WW, a well-known eating disorder center here. I tried to get her there for the past ten years! I was very hopeful. That didn't last because it required her to go in for weigh-ins and stick to certain commitments.


Janet's story is that she didn't t like the therapist. She said that therapist blamed everything on family issues. Janet simply couldn't stick to the expectations of the program. Janet somehow got her way out of that one.

Janet has been seeing a therapist off and on for several years who does not specialize in anorexia. She says, "He makes me feel better." She s very encouraged by the fact that he recently started reading up on anorexia to learn more about it! Wow, after years of seeing her, he's now reading up on it! Shouldn't we feel so good?

God forbid my parents would ever get cancer, I m sure Janet would just love it if we sent them to a doctor who started reading up on it. She doesn't listen to me when we say that she needs to be going to someone who understands her problem. Making her feel good is indeed a good thing, but a doctor needs to help you make progress toward recovery and this therapist is not doing that.

But I think Janet sees his concern for her, and she sees that he really likes her which is what Janet longs for in any relationship. It s all part of anorexia. She is a people pleaser but continues to damage herself.

Joanna, my parents are at a loss of what to do. My retired father has spent $110,000 of his savings from Janet's most recent stay in the hospital last year. He has hired a lawyer to fight the insurance companies denial of the claims.

Anorexia is NOT just a mental disease I have no doubt Janet would be dead if she didn't t get into that hospital. She would have died because her body stopped working. Isn't that physical? The 200 pages of documentation from doctors, hospitals, and therapists verify this.

We cannot afford for her to go back into in-patient treatment. Her Cobra ends in June. She is applying for social security, but if she doesn't get it, any more hospitalizations will be devastating for my parents. My mother works mostly so they have health insurance. I know what a terrible position it is to have to put money into consideration to save a life, but it's reality.

My dad can t get out of his mind one of her recent seizure episodes where she was laying on the ground and fighting the paramedics in complete hysteria screaming, "Dad, I don't want to die."

I bought Janet the new book by Tracy Gold entitled Room to Grow- An Appetite for Life. Janet read it and is convinced that Tracy went through everything she is! When asking her how Tracey got through it, Janet replied, "She met her husband." Janet doesn't realize this needs to come from within her.

I want to continue my efforts in finding her more help.

Sincerely,

Kay


Dear Kay,

Your letter is moving and heartbreaking. I admire your stamina and dedication as you attempt to help your sister and your family. Your question, how do you explain anorexia to a five year old? lingers in my soul.

I wish you every success in finding the quality treatment your sister needs and the support you and your family need. Please take care of yourself.

Best wishes and peace, peace, peace

Joanna


Dear Kay,

Your letter describing your sister's situation is a most valuable description of what agony anorexia can bring to the individual suffering from the illness and the entire family.

I think many people would benefit from hearing this story. Would you be willing to have your letter be posted on my website?

Please let me know. You can be as public or as anonymous as you wish. I believe your story needs to be told and you tell it clearly and well. Truth, pain and love pour from every sentence.

Best wishes and peace, peace, peace.

Joanna


Dear Joanna,

Yes, Joanna, you can post my letter. The comfort of knowing that it could help someone makes me feel better. I do not care if my email address is attached.

I appreciate your response, and on behalf of everyone you have helped and are helping right now, THANK YOU. I truly believe that 5-10 years from now, the horrors of Anorexia will be much better known and treatment will be accessible and covered by insurance for in-patient treatment for the necessary period of time it takes to help a person. In the meantime, I'm afraid my sister will become a statistic.

If you have any unique suggestions as to how we can get Janet help, please let me know. I know that our distance disables our ability to become a client of yours. I know it really takes the right therapy and commitment of the patient to beat the disease. Janet has lived with this so long, I just don't see her making the change in her lifestyle. It's horrible for me to say that, but it's how I feel. She needs to be forced, and that goes against a lot of the recommendations of doctors for someone with anorexia. She's an adult and she needs to make the change. I just don't know if I can live with the consequences.

Thank you again for your quick response. God bless you.

Attached is a picture of my beautiful sister and my two great kids who adore her more than candy or life itself.

Sincerely,

Kay


Dear Kay,

Thank you for the picture. What beautiful people. For reasons of privacy, legal permissions, etc. I doubt if I could post the picture with your writings. But I wish I could. Your sister and your children are so very lovely. And their beauty is part of the problem in this culture. Even with all the eating disorder awareness and distorted body image publicity moving through our society, it is still difficult for most people to believe or understand that a person can look this good according to current standards of beauty and be in danger of losing her life from an eating disorder.

You wrote: "If you have any unique suggestions as to how we can get Janet help, please let me know. ?... She's an adult and she needs to make the change. I just don't know if I can live with the consequences."

Here's my attempt to respond. You are exhausted from doing everything you possibly can for Janet. Your request is for help for Janet. You write about time, money, energy, heartache, rescue missions all directed at Janet.

But... you and your family are suffering terribly. I'm especially concerned with your sentence, " I just don't know if I can live with the consequences." Not only are there people in your life who love you and whom you love, but you also have young children. You have a five year old who is worried about Aunt Janet dying. Must he also worry about his mother dying?

I invite you to make a major energy direction shift. Tough love sounds like it's behaving harshly to the sick person. But really, it's behaving with love, care and practical day-to-day wisdom as you actively honor and cherish what you honor and cherish.

If you put your own mental, spiritual and physical well being first, you will find that you get more sleep, find more reason to smile, have more positive experiences to share with your children, build health and confidence in yourself and those near to you. The tough love part emerges when your sister discovers that you are putting your energy into health and not her illness.

The aspect of this that confuses people is the issue of support. You want to support your sister. You do not want to support her illness. How to be clear on the difference can be a great challenge. You can offer her love, friendship, normal sharing of activities, and encouragement in terms of health promoting activities. She needs to be responsible for the consequences of her actions, especially the actions that come from acting out her illness.

I also suggest that you explore the possibility of attending al-anon meetings. There you will find people working to create healthy lives despite loving a person with a self-destructive behavior pattern. The meetings can be very helpful for people who love someone with a serious eating disorder. And, of course, you completely qualify because Janet's problems include drinking alcohol to excess.

You say that Janet doesn't remember certain events in her life. Perhaps this is due to alcoholic blackouts or some kind of chemical disruption in her system. But it also could relate to a form of a dissociative illness. Has she been tested for such an illness?

The DES test is a simple pen and paper instrument that can give an indication of whether dissociative experiences are part of her complex diagnosis.

You can go to the website: http://www.issd.org/ The International Society for the Study of Dissociation. Under "online resource for the public" you'll see a number of resources that may be helpful including "treatment guidelines" and useful links.

Also, The Sidran Institute, http://www.sidran.org/ concerns itself with traumatic stress education and advocacy and may have some useful information for you and your sister. Actually Sidran was created by a woman whose sister suffers from a serious and debilitating traumatic stress disorder.

That's all I can think of from this distance, Kay. You may have heard all this before. If you haven't and I've been intrusive with my remarks, please forgive me and let my comments go. If you have heard this before and are open to these thoughts, then my comments may help reinforce what you are already considering.

About posting your letter:

Do you want to keep all the names as they are? If we use your real name then we are also revealing the identity of your sister and other family members. Do you want that? I think the power of your letter will remain unchanged if you use different names, but the choice is yours.

If we include your e-mail, you will get letters. I have no doubt about that. Do you want that correspondence?

My personal suggestion is that you do not leave contact information. You are under enough stress, and the letters can be triggering.

Best wishes, Kay. And yes, people do die from illnesses similar to what your sister is experiencing. But please remember, people also find recovery and live.

Peace, peace, peace

Joanna


Dear Joanna,

Thank you so much for your help. Your words have given me strength, hope, and next steps. The time you took to respond to me way out here in Illinois shows that you are indeed an incredible person.

Yes, you can post my letter and my e-mail. Please change the names.

Sincerely,

Kay


presented with author's permission by Joanna Poppink, M.F.T.

Names of family members and eating disorder treatment programs have been changed to protect and respect the privacy of family members.

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APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, November 30). Anorexia: True Story in a Sister's Words, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/eating-disorders/articles/anorexia-true-story-in-a-sisters-words

Last Updated: April 18, 2016

Vitamin A

Vitamin A is essential to good vision. Vitamin A also plays a role in Alzheimer's Disease, HIV, and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). Learn about the usage, dosage, side-effects of vitamin A.

Vitamin A is essential to good vision. Vitamin A also plays a role in Alzheimer's Disease, HIV, and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). Learn about the usage, dosage, side-effects of vitamin A.

Overview

Vitamin A is very important for maintaining good vision. In fact, the first sign of a vitamin A deficiency is often night blindness. Vitamin A also contributes to the maintenance of healthy skin and mucous membranes that line the nose, sinuses, and mouth. Research has shown that this nutrient is necessary for proper immune system function, growth, bone formation, reproduction, and wound healing. Animal studies also suggest that it provides some protection from toxic chemicals such as dioxins. (Dioxins are released into the air from combustion processes such as commercial waste incineration and burning fuels like wood, coal or oil. These chemicals can also be found in cigarette smoke.)

The liver can store up to a year's supply of vitamin A. However, these stores become depleted when a person is sick or has an infection. Research suggests that parasitic infections such as intestinal worms may deplete the body's vitamin A stores and interfere with its absorption.

Vitamin A is a fat-soluble vitamin derived primarily from animal-based foods. However, the body can also make vitamin A from beta-carotene, a fat-soluble nutrient found in dark green leafy vegetables and the more brightly colored fruits and vegetables such as carrots, sweet potatoes, and cantaloupe.

 


 



Vitamin A Uses

Acne, Psoriasis, and other Skin disorders

Topical and oral preparations containing retinoids (synthetic form of vitamin A) are helpful in clearing up acne and psoriasis and have shown promise for treating other skin disorders such as rosacea, premature aging from the sun, and warts. These are given by prescription.

Eye Disorders

A number of vision disorders involving the retina and cornea are associated with vitamin A deficiencies. Night blindness, for example, and xerophthalmia (characterized by dry eyes) improve with vitamin A supplementation. A large, population-based study conducted in Australia showed that vitamin A had a protective effect against cataracts.

Wounds and Burns

The body needs vitamin A, along with several other nutrients, in order to form new tissue and skin. The body's levels of vitamin A are low immediately after burn injuries, for example. Supplementation with beta-carotene helps the body replenish vitamin A stores, strengthen the immune system, relieve oxidative stress caused by the injury, and aid the body in forming new tissue.

Immune System

Research has shown that vitamin A boosts the immune system by stimulating white blood cell function and increasing the activity of antibodies (proteins that attach to foreign proteins, microorganisms, or toxins in order to neutralize them). Vitamin A deficiency may be associated with increased risk of infection and infections tend to deplete the body's stores of vitamin A.

Vitamin A deficiency, for example, is common among children in many developing countries who are prone to infections, which often results in life-threatening diarrhea. Low levels of vitamin A are also particularly severe among children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Some studies suggest that vitamin A supplements may reduce the risk of death in children infected with HIV. Your doctor will determine whether vitamin A (in addition to standard treatment) is necessary and appropriate.


Measles

People, particularly children, who are deficient in vitamin A are more likely to develop infections (including measles). Vitamin A deficiencies also cause such infections to be more severe, even fatal. Vitamin A supplements reduce the severity and complications of measles in children. Vitamin A also reduces the risk of death in infants with this disease (especially in those who have low levels of the vitamin). In areas of the world where vitamin A deficiency is widespread or where at least 1% of those with measles die, the World Health Organization recommends giving high doses of vitamin A supplements to children with the infection.

Intestinal Parasites

There is evidence that roundworms such as Ascaris deplete vitamin A stores in people, particularly children, leaving them less able to fight off infections. At the same time, it appears that low vitamin A levels can make a person more susceptible to intestinal parasites. There is not enough scientific evidence at this point, however, to suggest that taking vitamin A supplements helps prevent or treat intestinal parasites. More research is underway.

Osteoporosis

An appropriate balance of vitamin A -- not too much and not too little -- is necessary for normal bone development. Low levels of vitamin A may contribute to the development of bone loss or osteoporosis. On the other hand moderately high doses of vitamin A (exceeding 1,500 mcg or 5,000 IU per day) may lead to bone loss. Therefore, for prevention or treatment of osteoporosis, it is best to obtain vitamin A from food sources and not to eat more than the recommended dietary allowance (RDA).

Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)

Many people with IBD (both ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease) have vitamin and mineral deficiencies, including vitamin A. Further research is needed to determine whether supplementation with vitamin A or other individual vitamins or minerals may help treat the symptoms of IBD. In the meantime, healthcare practitioners often recommend a multivitamin to people with this condition.


 


Bone Marrow Disorders

Results from a carefully conducted 7-year clinical study suggest that a modest dose of vitamin A (together with chemotherapy) may help improve survival time in patients with certain bone marrow disorders such as chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML; considered a myeloproliferative disorder). Research suggests that retinoids such as vitamin A have antitumor effects against juvenile CML (which accounts for 3% to 5% of cases of leukemia in children), as well as certain cancer cells grown in the laboratory.

Cancer

Vitamin A, beta-carotene, and other carotenoids from foods may be associated with decreased risk of certain cancers (such as breast, colon, esophageal, and cervical). In addition, some laboratory studies suggest that vitamin A and carotenoids may help fight against certain types of cancer in test tubes. However, there is no proof that these supplements can help prevent or treat cancer in people. In fact, some evidence suggests that beta-carotene and, possibly, vitamin A may put people at increased risk of lung cancer, particularly smokers.

Preliminary evidence suggests that a topical form of vitamin A, applied to the cervix (the opening to the uterus) with sponges or cervical caps shows promise for the treatment of cervical cancer. Also, women with HIV who are deficient in vitamin A may be at greater risk for cervical cancer (a common occurrence in women with HIV) than those with normal levels of this vitamin. More research is needed before conclusions can be drawn about use of vitamin A to treat or prevent cervical cancer or cervical dysplasia (a precancerous change to the cervix).

Similarly, use of retinoids (a synthetic form of vitamin A) for skin cancer is currently under scientific investigation. Vitamin A and beta-carotene levels in the blood tend to be lower in people with certain types of skin cancer. However, results of studies evaluating higher amounts of natural forms of vitamin A or beta-carotene for skin cancer have been mixed.

Tuberculosis

Although early studies showed no improvement in children who took vitamin A with standard treatment for tuberculosis (TB), a very recent study found that this vitamin (together with zinc) may enhance the effects of certain TB drugs. These changes were demonstrated just two months after starting the vitamin A. More research is warranted. Until then, your doctor will determine if the addition of vitamin A is appropriate and safe.

Peritonitis

Although the effects of vitamin A on peritonitis have not been studied in people, animal studies suggest that this vitamin may prove to be useful in combination with antibiotic therapy for the treatment of this condition.


Osteoarthritis

Vitamin A plays an important role in bone formation and also acts as an antioxidant, so some researchers believe that it may help reduce symptoms of osteoarthritis. No studies have investigated this possibility, however.

Food Poisoning

Animal studies suggest that rats who are deficient in vitamin A are more likely to become infected with Salmonella (one type of bacteria that can cause food poisoning). Also, rats infected with Salmonella tend to eliminate the bacteria from their bodies faster when treated with vitamin Athan with placebo. They also gain more weight and have a better immune response than placebo-treated rats. How this ultimately relates to people is not known at this time, however.

Vitamin A and Alzheimer's Disease

Preliminary studies suggest that levels of vitamin A and its precursor, beta-carotene, may be significantly lower in people with Alzheimer's compared to healthy individuals, but the effects of supplementation have not been studied.

Miscarriage

Vitamin A and beta-carotene levels tend to be lower in women who have miscarried. These nutrients are generally found in prenatal vitamins. Your doctor or nutritionist can advise you about the appropriate amount to look for in a vitamin. The amount of vitamin A taken should not exceed the recommendation of your healthcare provider because too much vitamin A can lead to birth defects.

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)

Vitamin A deficiency is fairly common in those with HIV. In addition, pregnant women who have HIV are more likely to transmit the virus to their unborn child if their zinc levels are low compared to HIV-positive women with normal zinc levels. Although more research is needed, vitamin A supplements may delay the progression of HIV to Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), diminish symptoms of HIV and AIDS such as diarrhea, and help to prevent the transmission of the virus from mother to child.


 


Other

Additional conditions for which vitamin A may prove useful include ulcers (crater like lesion of the skin or mucosal membranes) of the cornea, stomach or small intestines (called peptic ulcer), and legs (often due to poor circulation or collection of fluid, called stasis ulcer). Gingivitis (inflammation of the gums) is another condition for which vitamin A may prove useful. Much more research is needed in each of these areas.

 

 


 

Vitamin A Dietary Sources

Vitamin A, in the form of retinyl palmitate, is found in beef, calf, chicken liver; eggs, and fish liver oils as well as dairy products including whole milk, whole milk yogurt, whole milk cottage cheese, butter, and cheese.

Vitamin A can also be produced in the body from beta-carotene and other carotenoids (fat-soluble nutrients found in fruits and vegetables). Most dark-green leafy vegetables and deep yellow/orange vegetables and fruits (sweet potatoes, carrots, pumpkin and other winter squashes, cantaloupe, apricots, peaches,and mangoes) contain substantial amounts of beta-carotene. By eating these beta-carotene rich foods, a person can increase their supply of vitamin A.

 


Vitamin A Available Forms

Vitamin A supplements are available as either retinol or retinyl palmitate. All forms of vitamin A are readily absorbed by the body.

Tablets or capsules are available in 10,000 IU, 25,000 IU, and 50,000 IU doses. A healthcare provider can help determine the appropriate dosage of vitamin A. Most multivitamins contain the recommended dietary allowance (RDA) for vitamin A (see How To Take It).

In many cases, taking beta-carotene (a building block of vitamin A, is a safer alternative to taking vitamin A. Unlike vitamin A, beta-carotene does not build up in the body, so it can be taken in larger amounts without the same risk. This makes it a better alternative for children, adults with liver or kidney disease, and pregnant women in particular.

 

 


How to Take Vitamin A

Vitamin A is a fat-soluble vitamin and is absorbed along with fat in the diet. Foods or supplements containing vitamin A should be taken during or shortly after a meal.

Therapeutic doses have ranged as high as 50,000 IU for adults. However, any high dose therapy (more than 25,000 IU for an adult or 10,000 IU for a child) should be closely monitored by a healthcare professional. The effect of such high doses on children is not known.

Daily dietary intakes for vitamin A are listed below.

Pediatric

  • Infants birth to 6 months: 400 mcg or 1,333 IU of retinol (AI)
  • Infants 7 to 12 months: 500 mcg or 1,667 IU of retinol (AI)
  • Children 1 to 3 years: 300 mcg or 1,000 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Children 4 to 8 years: 400 mcg or 1,333 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Children 9 to 13 years: 600 mcg or 2,000 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Males 14 to 18 years: 900 mcg or 3,000 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Females 14 to 18 years: 700 mcg or 2,333 IU of retinol (RDA)

Adult

  • Males 19 years and older: 900 mcg or 3,000 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Females 19 years and older: 700 mcg or 2,333 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Pregnant females 14 to 18 years: 750 mcg or 2,500 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Pregnant females 19 years and older: 770 mcg or 2,567 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Breastfeeding females 14 to 18 years: 1,200 mcg or 4,000 IU of retinol (RDA)
  • Breastfeeding females 19 years and older: 1,300 mcg or 4,333 IU of retinol (RDA)

 


Precautions

Because of the potential for side effects and interactions with medications, dietary supplements should be taken only under the supervision of a knowledgeable healthcare provider.


 


An excess of vitamin A taken during pregnancy can cause birth defects in the fetus. Because all prenatal vitamins contain some vitamin A, taking any more during pregnancy can pose potential danger to the fetus.

Too much vitamin A is toxic to the body and can cause liver failure, even death. Some of the symptoms of vitamin A toxicity are lasting headache, fatigue, muscle and joint pain, dry skin and lips, dry or irritated eyes, nausea or diarrhea, and hair loss. While it is unlikely that one could get toxic amounts of vitamin A from food sources alone, it is quite possible to do so with supplements. Consuming more than 25,000 IU of vitamin A per day (adults) and 10,000 IU per day (children) from either food or supplements or both is known to be toxic. For those 19 and older, the tolerable upper limit for vitamin A consumption has been set at 10,000 IU per day. Clearly, it is important to take vitamin A supplements only under the careful supervision of a knowledgeable healthcare provider.

While low levels of vitamin A may contribute to the development of bone loss or osteoporosis, doses exceeding 1,500 mcg or 5,000 IU per day may lead to bone loss. Therefore, for prevention or treatment of osteoporosis, it is best to obtain vitamin A from food sources and not to eat more than the recommended dietary allowance (RDA).

Both vitamin A and beta-carotene may increase triglycerides (fatty deposits in the body that rise after eating) and even increase risk of death from heart disease, particularly in smokers.

Vitamin A is found in many different types of vitamin formulas. For example, supplements that say "wellness formula," "immune system formula," "cold formula," "eye health formula," "healthy skin formula," or "acne formula," all tend to contain vitamin A. Those who take a variety of different formulas could therefore put themselves at risk for vitamin A toxicity.

Vitamin A supplements should not be taken while using any vitamin A - derived drugs, such as isotretinoin and tretinoin.

In addition, synthetic vitamin A can cause birth defects. For this reason, this type of vitamin A should not be used by pregnant women or women who are trying to become pregnant.

 


Possible Interactions

If you are currently being treated with any of the following medications, you should not use vitamin A without first talking to your healthcare provider.

Antacids

One study suggests that the combination of vitamin A and antacids may be more effective than antacids alone in healing ulcers.

Birth Control Medications

Birth control medications increase the levels of vitamin A in women. Therefore, it may not be appropriate for women taking birth control medications to take vitamin A supplements. Again, this is something that should be discussed with a knowledgeable healthcare provider.

Blood thinning Medications, Anticoagulants

Long-term use of vitamin A or use of high doses may lead to an increased risk of bleeding for those taking blood-thinning medications, particularly warfarin. People taking this medication should notify a doctor before taking vitamin A supplements.

Cholesterol-lowering Medications

The cholesterol-lowering medications cholestyramine and colestipol (both known as bile acid sequestrants), may reduce the body's ability to absorb vitamin A.

Another class of cholesterol-lowering medications called HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors or statins (including atorvastatin, fluvastatin, and lovastatin, among others) may actually increase vitamin A levels in the blood.

Doxorubicin

Test tube studies suggest that vitamin A may enhance the action of doxorubicin, a medication used for cancer. Much more research is needed, however, to know whether this has any practical application for people.


 


Neomycin

This antibiotic may reduce vitamin A absorption, especially when delivered in large doses.

Omeprazole

Omeprazole (used for gastroesophageal reflux disease or "heart burn") may influence the absorption and effectiveness of beta-carotene supplements. It is not known whether this medication affects the absorption of beta-carotene from foods.

Weight Loss Products

Orlistat, a medication used for weight loss and olestra, a substance added to certain food products, are both intended to bind to fat and prevent the absorption of fat and the associated calories. Because of their effects on fat, orlistat and olestra may also prevent the absorption of fat-soluble vitamins such as vitamin A. Given this concern and possibility, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) now requires that vitamin A and other fat soluble vitamins (namely, D, E, and K) be added to food products containing olestra. How well vitamin A from such food products is absorbed and used by the body is not clear. In addition, physicians who prescribe orlistat add a multivitamin with fat soluble vitamins to the regimen.

Alcohol

Alcohol can enhance the toxic effects of vitamin A, presumably through its adverse effects on the liver. It is unwise to take vitamin A if you drink regularly.


 

Supporting Research

Albanes D, Heinonen OP, Taylor PR. Alpha-Tocopherol and beta-carotene supplements and lung cancer incidence in the alpha-tocopherol, beta-carotene cancer prevention study: effects of base-line characteristics and study compliance. J Natl Cancer Inst. 1996;88(21):1560-1570

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APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, November 30). Vitamin A, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/alternative-mental-health/supplements-vitamins/vitamin-a

Last Updated: May 8, 2019

What I Believe

Step Two is about coming to believe in a power greater than ourselves. Here is an inventory of the beliefs I have come to hold regarding the Higher Power of my recovery, whom I choose to call God.

God is actively working in my life, for the benefit of myself and others with whom I interact.

God has a purpose and design for my life.

God is moving and shaping all events in my life toward that design and purpose.

God actively communicates with me through the people and circumstances in my life.

God wills for good stuff to come to me through other people.

God wills for good stuff to come to other people through me.

God provides exactly what I need at exactly the moment I need it.

God provides exactly what I want at exactly the moment it will best benefit me or someone in my life.

God provides grace for my imperfections, mistakes, and poor choices.

God instructs me by, and wants me to learn from my imperfections, mistakes, and poor choices.

God is ever present in my heart, but I must consciously seek to commune with God.

God works in my life in many mysterious, miraculous ways that I, as yet, cannot comprehend.


continue story below

next: A Power Greater

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, November 29). What I Believe, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/relationships/serendipity/what-i-believe

Last Updated: August 7, 2014

Antidepressants May Cause Premature Delivery

Pregnant women who take antidepressants known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may be at higher risk of premature delivery, a new study says.

SSRIs include the popular antidepressants fluoxetine (brand name Prozac), paroxetine (Paxil) and .

However, the news is by no means all bad. On the plus side, researchers found no link between SSRIs and birth defects or developmental delays.

"Our results offer some reassurance and some cause for concern," says Dr. Greg Simon, lead author of the study and an associate investigator and psychiatrist at Group Health Cooperative's Center for Health Studies in Seattle. "The reassurance is SSRIs are not associated with any risk of birth defects or malformations. The concern is that SSRIs appear to be associated with an increased risk of premature delivery."

The study appears in the December issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.

Researchers examined the medical records of 185 women and their babies who took antidepressants during pregnancy and 185 women and their babies who were treated for depression during pregnancy but did not take any drugs for the condition.

Women taking antidepressants were twice as likely to give birth prematurely. About 10 percent of women who took SSRIs at any time during their pregnancy gave birth before 36 weeks, the standard definition of premature labor, compared to only 5 percent of women who didn't take SSRIs.

The women on SSRIs gave birth, on average, a week earlier than those not exposed to these drugs.

"While this risk of premature delivery is low, the findings affect a large population of women," Simon says.

So what's a woman to do?

Pregnant women who take antidepressants known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may be at higher risk of premature delivery."Each woman has to consider her own situation and decide what to do," Simon says. "A woman who has severe depression while not using this drug would probably continue to take it. But a woman who has relatively mild depression might choose to stop using it during pregnancy."

Women are more than twice as likely to suffer depression as men, according to the American Psychological Association. And women are most likely to be depressed during their childbearing years, from about ages 20 to 50.

Dr. Milton Anderson, a psychiatrist at the Oschner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans, says the danger of depression to a mother and child should not be underestimated.

Depressed women often don't sleep well, eat well or get the medical care they need. Pregnant women who try to commit suicide can severely damage their baby, Anderson adds.

"Severe depression is toxic to mothers and babies," Anderson says.

While premature delivery is of concern, he believes the more crucial finding is that SSRIs are otherwise safe.

"The bigger importance of the study is the reassurance that there wasn't an increased rate of fetal abnormalities of birth defects," Anderson says. "We worry about that with any drug during pregnancy."

Given the new research, Anderson says he would recommend that women who have serious depression -- a lifelong history, recurrent suicide attempts -- remain on the medicine. Women who have milder depression -- perhaps a single bout and who've been in remission for six months or more -- should slowly come off antidepressants.

Either way, he'd make the decision with the woman and her obstetrician.

"We would like to have pregnant women off any and all medicine during the pregnancy," he says. "But in those moms who have severe depression or who are at risk of severe depression, this looks like a relatively manageable risk of early delivery."

The study found the older generation of medicines called tricyclic antidepressants, which include imipramine and amitriptyline, had no effect on the risk of premature delivery.

Researchers did not look at some of the newest antidepressants on the market, including Wellbutrin, Effexor and Remeron.

HealthScout News - Dec. 10, 2002

next: Mood Disorders and the Reproductive Cycle
~ depression library articles
~ all articles on depression

APA Reference
Gluck, S. (2008, November 29). Antidepressants May Cause Premature Delivery, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/depression/articles/antidepressants-may-cause-premature-delivery

Last Updated: June 23, 2016

Side Effects of ADD - ADHD Medication

Dr. Frank Lawlis, author of The ADD Answer, says there are better, healthier options for treating your child's ADD than ADHD medications.

The following is an excerpt from chapter five of The ADD Answer: How to Help Your Child Now by Dr. Frank Lawlis anDr. Frank Lawlis, author of The ADD Answer, says their are better options for treating your child's ADD than ADHD medicationsd published by Viking.

Medical students are often warned that "sometimes the treatment can be worse than the disease." I sincerely believe that is often the case when children with ADD are given medication to control their ADHD symptoms.

ADD - ADHD medications are most often prescribed by family physicians — not by a pediatric psychiatrist — which makes me very suspicious. How much understanding do such physicians have of these very potent drugs? My personal and professional opinion is that they should be used very cautiously and only on a short-term basis with specific goals in mind. Most experienced school counselors concede that such medication loses most of its effectiveness by the teenage years anyway, so medications are not a long-term solution for ADD.

Healthier Options To ADHD Medications

There are better and healthier options for treating your child's ADD, beginning with a strong family environment and a focus on healthy behaviors and goals, as we have discussed already, and including a range of approaches to stimulate the brain and focus the child's attention naturally, which will be discussed in subsequent chapters. I base my understanding of medication on years of experience in working with children and on years of working and researching ADD. Although I have had training in psychopharmacology, I always seek recommendations from referring physicians in matters related to medication. I also want to be very clear that I do not have any direct responsibilities for issuing prescriptions or for making the necessary laboratory assessments critical to any drug protocol, especially with children. However, I consult with a group of medical experts when devising medication strategies.

Let us be fair with doctors. There is an old saying credited to Abraham Maslow, a famous psychologist: "If the only tool that you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail." Physicians nowadays are asked to evaluate and treat hundreds of childhood problems, and most feel that the only tools they have are drugs. Doctors also rarely observe the daily behavior of the child who is being treated. They usually have to rely on the observations and opinions of parents and teachers — not only as a basis for diagnosis but also for evaluating the results. Too often the only feedback the doctor receives on medication is that the parent no longer brings the child in to see him. If the physician doesn't hear anything more, he assumes the medication worked properly. But in truth, it could be that the parents simply looked elsewhere for help, or gave up.

The Circular Firing Squad

Too often when a child has ADD, everyone responsible for helping him is shooting in the dark. Doctors often don't get good follow-up information. Parents get frustrated and make decisions without adequate professional input. Instead of circling the wagons against ADD, we form a circular firing squad and shoot at one another.

Typically, parents, physicians, and teachers find themselves at odds over a child's treatment. Parents are often bewildered about what to do to help and protect their child. School administrators, understandably, are most concerned about the learning environment for all of their students. Too often, busy physicians treat the symptoms, not the child.

That is madness. But it is understandable madness and it is prevalent. We are a pill-popping, quick-fix society. School administrators are under pressure themselves to get classrooms under control. Few physicians are trained adequately to deal with ADD children. I have attended medical conferences on ADD in which the doctors on the dais obviously had no clue about the long-term adverse effects of medicating children. It is a very serious business, especially when dealing with any drugs that affect a child's neurological system.

Until recently, no studies systemically examined the long-term effects of ADHD drugs on children, such as Ritalin and amphetamines (Dexedrine and Adderall). Some of the side effects of these drugs can be profound. They can be a greater threat to a child's health than most, if not all, ADD symptoms. Certainly they can cause psychosis, including manic and schizophrenic episodes ...

Unfortunately some physicians typically do not stop medicating when psychotic symptoms appear. Instead, they may slap on another diagnosis, of depression or antisocial personality, and then treat this diagnosis by adding antidepressants, mood stabilizers, or neuroleptics (commonly used for epilepsy) to the treatment mix. It is not unusual for children to be taking as many as five different medications, all based on adult prescriptions. Meds upon meds is madness upon madness ...

The side effects are not restricted to psychiatric problems. Stimulants excite the whole body, not only the brain. Stimulating medications also affect the cardiovascular system. One of the side effects of Ritalin is that it boosts the activity of the heart and the cardiovascular systems so that they develop beyond what is considered normal. There is also some danger of liver damage from medications used to treat ADD and side effects. Sleep and appetite problems resulting from medication are also of concern ...




Parents need to understand the potential dangers of medications used to treat ADD. Although only 50 percent of children with ADD can be helped through drug therapy, the ones who respond to drug treatment face the following side effects:

  • nervousness
  • insomnia
  • confusion
  • depression
  • agitation
  • irritability
  • stunted growth and development

Other side effects, in a lower rate of incidence, include:

  • exacerbation of behavior symptoms (hyperactivity)
  • hypersensitivity reactions (allergy-type reactions to environmental agents)
  • anorexia (eating disorder)
  • nausea
  • dizziness
  • heart palpitations (heart rate fluctuations)
  • headaches
  • dyskinesia (movement-of-the-body problems)
  • drowsiness
  • hypertension (high blood pressure)
  • tachycardia (rapid, racing heartbeat)
  • angina (heart pain)
  • arrhythmia (heart rate changes)
  • abdominal pain
  • lowered threshold for seizures

Source: Excerpt from chapter five of The ADD Answer: How to Help Your Child Now. August 2005. For more, go to http://www.franklawlis.com/



next: Switching to Strattera from Another ADHD Medication
~ adhd library articles
~ all add/adhd articles

APA Reference
Tracy, N. (2008, November 29). Side Effects of ADD - ADHD Medication, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/adhd/articles/side-effects-of-add-adhd-medication

Last Updated: February 14, 2016

Treating Depressed Children

Treatment of Depression in Children

There is no cookbook technique. Treatment must be tailored to the needs and schedule of the child and his family. Generally, with mild to moderate depression, one first tries psychotherapy and then adds an antidepressant if the therapy has not produced enough improvement. If it is a severe depression, or there is serious acting out, one may start medication at the beginning of the treatment.

It is important that parents find a child psychiatrist to evaluate and treat their depressed child. A child psychiatrist is a medical doctor who has received special training in diagnosing and treating psychiatric disorders in children. Other doctors, including family doctors and pediatricians may have taken a course in child psychiatry, but a great majority are not experts in the field.

Psychotherapy

A variety of psychotherapeutic techniques have been shown to be effective. There is some suggestion that cognitive-behavioral therapy may work faster. Cognitive therapy helps the individual examine and correct negative thought patterns and erroneous negative assumptions about himself. Behaviorally, it encourages the individual to use positive coping behaviors instead of giving up or avoiding situations. After therapy is over, children may benefit from scheduled or "as-needed" booster sessions.

Many feel that family therapy can speed recovery and help prevent relapse. There are different styles of family therapy.

Antidepressant Medication

Treating depressed children - psychotherapy for mild to moderate depression, antidepressant medication for severe depression, serious acting out.SSRIs (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors -- Prozac, , Lexapro, etc.) have brightened the outlook for the medication treatment of child and teenage depression. The side effects are not as annoying as those of the older medications. These medications are somewhat less toxic in overdosage. Some studies have shown that the SSRIs are better than placebo for depression. As compared to adults, adolescents are a bit more likely to become agitated or to develop a mania while they are taking an SSRI. These medications can decrease libido in both adolescents and adults. The doctor should warn parents about the symptoms of mania, especially if there is a family history of Bipolar Disorder. If the child has had a manic episode in the past, some doctors suggest adding a mood stabilizer such as Lithium or Depakote. In addition, parents should know about the potential for an increase in suicidal thoughts and behaviors.

Most studies suggest that the older, tricyclic antidepressant medications (Amitriptyline, Imipramine Desipramine) are no better than placebo in the treatment of depression. Still, some doctors have seen individual children and adolescents who have responded well. Tricyclic antidepressants can be an effective treatment for ADHD. Since there is a small risk of heart rhythm changes in children on these medications, doctors usually follow EKGs. The usefulness of blood tricyclic levels is being debated.

Important Note: Bipolar disorder must be ruled out before a child is prescribed antidepressants for depression or stimulants, as these can trigger mania.

Stopping Antidepressant Medications

The decision about when to stop antidepressant medication can be complex. If the depressive episodes are recurrent or severe, one may consider longer term maintenance pharmacotherapy. If the depression was milder, the family wishes the child to be off medications, or there are side effects, one may consider stopping the medication several months or a year after the symptoms are gone. If there have been several recurrences, one might then talk to the patient and family about longer term maintenance. Exercise, a balanced diet (at least three meals per day) and a regular sleep schedule are desirable. If there is a seasonal component, a light box or light visor may be helpful.

Other Considerations

Some individuals have only one episode of depression, but often depression becomes a recurrent condition. Thus, the child and family should become educated about the early warning symptoms of depression so that they can get right back in to the doctor. It is also useful to discuss the child's particular "early warning signs" with the primary care doctor. Sometimes the psychiatrist or therapist will schedule booster sessions in advance and other times, leave the door open for the child or family to schedule one or two sessions.

If there are residual social skills problems, a social skills group through the school or other agency can help. Scouts and church youth groups can be enormously helpful. If parents and child consent, the doctor will sometimes involve a scout leader or clergy.

It's also important to treat comorbid psychiatric disorders such as anxiety and ADHD. Since a young person who has had a depression is more vulnerable to drug abuse, one should start out early with preventative measures. The primary care doctor can be a partner in monitoring for relapse, substance abuse and social skills problems during and after the psychiatric treatment.

next: Advice: 'It's Hard For Parents To Understand'
~ depression library articles
~ all articles on depression

APA Reference
Gluck, S. (2008, November 29). Treating Depressed Children, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/depression/articles/treating-depressed-children

Last Updated: June 23, 2016

Happiness Is Everyone's Ultimate Goal

Every human that has ever existed has had happiness as their ultimate goal in life. Pretty bold and presumptuous statement, huh? When you put the emphasis on "ultimate", I think you'll find the statement is true.

It's the odd ways in which we pursue happiness that makes us question the validity of this idea. What about the guy that works at a job he hates for his family? Is his goal to be happy? Again, I think the answer is "yes."

"What is the purpose or meaning of your life? Is your life for you to be happy, or would you prefer your life be for something else? Would that make you happy? Whatsoever you seek, you seek the cessation of unhappiness and the satisfaction of happiness.

Even those people who would be willing to die to save another do it for happiness. The idea of seeing themselves as loving another so much that they'd sacrifice themselves, makes them happy.

You do all that you do for happiness."

- Bruce Di Marsico

Your core motivation to be happy is surrounded by layers of other desires. Like an onion, you must first peel away the layers to reach the core. Let's look at an example.

I want a car.
Why do you want that?
So I can get to work.
Why do you want that?
So I can earn enough money for a house.
Why do you want that?
So I can have a place I call my own.
Why do you want that?
So I can feel free to do with it what I will.
Why do you want that?
Because when I feel free, I feel happy.

"Many men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are after."

Henry David Thoreau

Happiness does not always appear to be an obvious goal because of the intermediate goals we believe are necessary to achieve happiness. But in the end, we do what we do to feel good.


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Some say the "will to survive" is the strongest desire of all men, but even this I question. What about suicide? What about people with a fatal disease who are in a lot of pain and want to die? These people want to end their lives. If the will to survive was our highest motivation above all else, it would seem people would want to live, no matter what.

So what DO these people want? To end their pain. From this one can only conclude that the desire to feel good is even stronger than the desire to stay alive.


And he said unto them...

"If a man told God that he wanted most of all to help the
suffering world, no matter the price to himself, and God
answered and told him what he must do, should the man
do as he is told?"

"Of course, Master!" cried the many.
"It should be pleasure for him to suffer the tortures of
hell itself, should God ask it!"

"No matter what those tortures, nor how difficult the task?"

"Honor to be hanged, glory to be nailed to a tree and burned,
if so be that God has asked," said they.

"And what would you do," the Master said unto the
multitude, "if God spoke directly to your face and said...

'I command that you be happy in the world, as long
as you live.' What would you do then?"

And the multitude was silent, not a voice, not a sound
was heard upon the hillsides, across the valleys
where they stood.

-Illusions by Richard Bach

next: Society and Happiness

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, November 29). Happiness Is Everyone's Ultimate Goal, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/relationships/creating-relationships/happiness-is-everyones-ultimate-goal

Last Updated: August 6, 2014

Early Warning Signs of a Bipolar Relapse or Oncoming Episode

Bipolar relapse explained plus signs and symptoms of a bipolar relapse for those diagnosed with bipolar disorder and their families and friends.

A relapse is said to occur when the symptoms of bipolar disorder worsen or when previous bipolar symptoms return. Many people have experienced one or more relapses of their illness. After a relapse, you may still experience persistent symptoms-which is different from worsening symptoms.

Before a relapse happens, people often experience changes in their symptoms or in some aspect of their behavior, thoughts or feelings. These changes are called warning signs and they are indications that a bipolar relapse may be imminent.

Signs of a Bipolar Episode

  • Feeling more tense or nervous**
  • Feeling that people are talking about me**
  • Having more trouble sleeping**
  • Change in level of activity**
  • Having more trouble concentrating**
  • Losing interest in things I usually like doing
  • Seeing friends less
  • Enjoying things less
  • Feeling more depressed (or suddenly grandiose)
  • Eating less
  • Having more religious ideas
  • Preoccupied with one or two ideas
  • Having trouble making sense when talking
  • Feeling like I was forgetting things more
  • Feeling worthless
  • Feeling like I was going crazy
  • Hearing voices or seeing things
  • Feeling that someone else was controlling me
  • Feeling badly for no apparent reason
  • Stopped caring how I looked
  • Having more nightmares or bad dreams
  • Feeling more angry over little things
  • Thinking about hurting myself
  • Feeling more aggressive or pushy
  • Feeling too excited or overactive
  • Having trouble relating to family
  • Having frequent aches and pains
  • Drinking more alcohol
  • Using more drugs (uppers, downers, LSD, marijuana)
  • Thinking about hurting someone else

** Universal Warning Signs

These signs are different for everyone. It is important to work out which signs may be relevant to you and have a plan of what to do should any of these signs of a bipolar relapse appear.

Sources:

  • McFarlane, W., Terkelson, K., "New Approaches to Families Living with Schizophrenia." Institute, 62nd Annual Ortho-Psychiatric Meeting, N.Y., 1985.
  • Inner North Brisbane Mental Health Service, Warning Signs of A Possible Relapse

next: Bipolar Disorder FAQs
~ bipolar disorder library
~ all bipolar disorder articles

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, November 29). Early Warning Signs of a Bipolar Relapse or Oncoming Episode, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/bipolar-disorder/articles/early-warning-signs-of-bipolar-relapse

Last Updated: April 7, 2021

Interview On Acceptance

Q: What do you mean when you say "accept yourself"?

A: I'm saying that it's very beneficial when you love yourself. Accepting something is kind a like awareness with love. Accepting yourself is giving your consent. It's an openness to receive. It's a very different feeling than resignation.

Q:How is acceptance different than resignation?

A: When I think of the times I've been resigned to something, it had a feeling of hopelessness and despair attached to it. Like I was powerless in my life to create what I wanted. Acceptance has a very different feeling. It's powerful and self affirming.

I'm not talking about giving lip service to the word "accept", but to really truly believe that the thing you're accepting is okay. That's different than resignation which is thinking something is bad, being unhappy about it, yet accepting it as reality you are powerless to change.

Q:Are you saying I should accept even the parts of me I KNOW are wrong?

A: I'm not saying you SHOULD do anything. I'm saying if you'd like to be happier, self acceptance is a step in that direction. "Accept" means to receive with consent. I don't see how it's possible for someone to be happy while loathing aspects of themselves. It's difficult to experience happiness and hatred at the same time. In the very same moment of time.

And just because there are things about yourself you'd like to change, doesn't necessarily mean that aspect of you is "wrong". It's just not what you want to be. There's a difference.

Q:What's the difference between saying "this is wrong" and "this is not what I want"?

A: The difference is in the intention. One is judgmental, the other is not. Saying "this is wrong" implies there is a "right" way to be before you can truly love yourself. If you judge something about yourself as wrong, you're implying whether consciously or not, that you have to be a certain way before you can be loved. I don't know of any "right" way to be. There is only you being you and what you want.


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Q:Well society thinks there's a right way to be.

A: I think you'll find once you get clear about who you are, what your personal principles are, and truly accept ALL of yourself, that society isn't all that interested in how you behave as you might think. Society has laws to curb behavior we've decided we don't want, and you may have some implied social norms, but you'll be surprised how little it cares about how you live your life.

Besides, society isn't living your life, you are. In the end, your becoming more accepting of yourself will immediately cause you to be more accepting of others, which only enriches a community of individuals. When you focus on accepting, loving and being happy with yourself, that state of mind spreads to all those around you.

"Everybody says it is good to meditate,
and so you feel bad if you don't do so.
The challenge of loving the self is to step aside
from every thing you are told, and ask,
"Does this fit me? Does this bring me joy?
Do I feel good when I do it?"
It is ultimately your own experience that counts."

- Orin

Q:Okay, well how do I go about accepting myself more?

A: I think it's useful to know why you don't accept yourself in the first place. Knowing your motivations can give you insight and sometimes eliminate any ill feelings you have towards those parts of yourself.

Q:What do you mean by motivation? Like why I want to accept myself?

A: No, I'm referring to why you DON'T accept yourself. There's a reason, always a reason, for the things we do and feel. Each person will have a different reason for why they don't accept themselves. I've found that most of the time though, it has to do with believing that if they were happy with themselves, they wouldn't change, grow, or do anything.

Many people use unhappiness as a motivator to "get" themselves to do something. They believe it's natural, or instinctive somehow. Which is not true. Most times all it does is make us feel uncomfortable, unloving, and unaccepting.

We use a myriad of uncomfortable emotions to motivate ourselves. Anger, frustration, guilt, depression, anxiety, all with the hope that it will motivate us to change.


Q:Well, isn't that true though? Why would I change
something if I was happy or accepted that part of myself?

A: Just because you are loving, accepting and happy with that part of yourself, does not mean you stop WANTING. Wanting is a much more powerful tool to use than say, using guilt to get yourself to change. You can be perfectly happy with yourself, I mean really feeling great about who you are, and still want things, experiences, qualities, etc.

Q:Yeah but if I want to be different, I'm not going to be happy until I change.

A: Again, I think that's simply using unhappiness as a motivation and it's not necessary. We use our unhappiness combined with our wanting, believing it will make our wanting more powerful or stronger. It actually weakens our ability to achieve. We don't have to make ourselves miserable until we get what we want. We CAN be happy in the pursuit of what we want, and it doesn't lessen our motivation one bit. I know this because I've done both, and being happy while pursuing what you want is sooooo much more powerful, you just wouldn't believe it! When you feel good you have lots of energy. Feeling bad depletes and saps your energy.

I've found that if our desires are coming from inside ourselves, and not from exterior elements (parents, friends, spouses, etc.), that you don't need unhappiness to make your desire bigger or more important. Its simply a natural process of moving towards what you want. You don't have to "get" yourself to watch TV, or enjoy close friends, or play. You naturally move towards those things. Its only those things we think we "should want" that we use unhappiness to get. The wants that come from happiness are easy to pursue.

Q:What do you mean by inside me or from exterior elements?

A: There are times we want to do certain things because we believe they will please someone else, or we'll be more accepted if we do them, or we've been told we "should" want this, or that it's the "right" thing to do. If you take on those outside influences, you're wanting is not coming from inside you. Outside circumstances and or people are influencing what you say you want.

One way to find out what you really want verses the "shoulds" is to have an Option Method dialogue on it. I know I have been truly amazed by what I have come to learn about myself, my motivations, and my desires.


continue story below

next: Recreate Yourself and Your Life

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, November 29). Interview On Acceptance, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/relationships/creating-relationships/interview-on-acceptance

Last Updated: August 6, 2014

Meditation for Treating Psychological Disorders

Learn about meditation for treating anxiety, stress, depression, emotional disorders, mood changes and other mental health conditions.

Learn about meditation for treating anxiety, stress, depression, emotional disorders, mood changes and other mental health conditions.

Before engaging in any complementary medical technique, you should be aware that many of these techniques have not been evaluated in scientific studies. Often, only limited information is available about their safety and effectiveness. Each state and each discipline has its own rules about whether practitioners are required to be professionally licensed. If you plan to visit a practitioner, it is recommended that you choose one who is licensed by a recognized national organization and who abides by the organization's standards. It is always best to speak with your primary health care provider before starting any new therapeutic technique.

Background

Different types of meditation have been practiced for thousands of years across the world. Many types have roots in Eastern religions.

Meditation can generally be defined as the self-regulation of attention to suspend the normal stream of consciousness. A common goal of meditation is to reach a state of "thoughtless awareness," during which a person is passively aware of sensations at the present moment. It is this goal that distinguishes meditation from relaxation. Various types of meditation may use different techniques. Techniques that include constant repetition of sounds or images without striving for a state of thoughtless awareness are sometimes called "quasi-meditative."

  • Mindfulness — This involves focusing on a physical sensation. When thoughts intrude, the meditating individual returns to the focus.

  • Breath mediation — This involves focusing on the process of breathing. Breathing exercises taught in childbirth classes are based on this technique.

  • Visualization — This involves focusing on specific places or situations.




  • Analytical meditation — This involves an attempt to comprehend the deeper meaning of an object of focus.

  • Walking meditation — This Zen Buddhist form of meditation called kinhin involves focusing on the sensation of the feet against the ground.

  • Transcendental meditation — This involves focusing on a mantra (a sound, word or phrase that is repeated over and over, either aloud, as a chant or silently). Maharishi Mahesh Yogi introduced transcendental medication to the West in the late 1950s, and this practice was well publicized because of its famous followers such as the Beatles. A goal of transcendental meditation is to reach a state of relaxed awareness. Intruding thoughts may be noticed passively before returning to the mantra. The claimed health benefits are controversial, such as improved IQ and reduced violent tendencies. It has been debated as to whether transcendental meditation should be classified as a religion, because some people assert that transcendental meditation constitutes a cult or a religious sect.

Meditation is usually practiced in a quiet environment and in a comfortable position. Sessions vary in length and frequency. It is often recommended that meditation be practiced at the same time each day.

There is no broadly recognized certification or licensure for meditation instructors, although some organized religions and professional organizations have specific requirements for formal training and credentialing of new teachers.

Theory

There are a number of theories about how meditation works and its potential health benefits. One hypothesis is that it reduces activity of the sympathetic nervous system (responsible for the fight-or-flight response), leading to a slower heart rate, lower blood pressure, slower breathing and muscle relaxation.

Several preliminary studies of transcendental meditation have noted these types of effects, although the research techniques were of poor quality, and the results cannot be considered conclusive. Changes in hormone levels, lactic acid levels, blood flow to the brain and brain wave patterns have been reported in some studies that were of poor quality. Better research is necessary to make a firm conclusion.


Evidence

Scientists have studied meditation for the following health problems:

Anxiety, stress
There are several studies of the effects of mindfulness, transcendental meditation or "meditation-based stress reduction programs" on anxiety (including in patients with chronic or fatal illnesses, such as cancer). This research is not well designed, and although some benefits are reported, the results cannot be considered conclusive.

Asthma
Because of weaknesses in research design, it remains unclear if any form of meditation is beneficial in people with asthma.

Fibromyalgia
Because of weaknesses in research design, it remains unclear if any form of meditation is beneficial in people with fibromyalgia.

High blood pressure
There are reports that transcendental meditation may lower blood pressure over short periods of time and that its long-term effects may improve mortality. However, because of weaknesses in research design, a firm conclusion cannot be reached.

Atherosclerosis (clogged arteries)
Transcendental meditation, along with other therapies, has been reported to help attenuate atherosclerosis in older people, particularly in those with apparent cardiovascular heart disease. Further research is needed to confirm any potential benefits from meditation alone.

Asthma
Sahaja yoga, which incorporates meditation techniques, may have some benefit in the management of moderate to severe asthma. Further studies are needed before a firm conclusion can be drawn.

Quality of life in breast cancer
Preliminary research suggests no added benefits of transcendental meditation techniques over support groups alone to improve quality of life in women with breast cancer. Additional research would be necessary to form a more firm conclusion in this area.

Immune function
Preliminary research reports increased antibody response after meditation. Further study is needed to confirm these findings.

 


 



Unproven Uses

Meditation has been suggested for many other uses, based on tradition or on scientific theories. However, these uses have not been thoroughly studied in humans, and there is limited scientific evidence about safety or effectiveness. Some of these suggested uses are for conditions that are potentially life-threatening. Consult with a health care provider before using meditation for any use.

Addiction
AIDS
Allergies
Angina (chest pain)
Breast milk abnormalities
Bulimia nervosa
Cancer (including prevention)
Cardiac syndrome X
Cardiovascular rehabilitation
Chronic pain
Cognitive function
Coping with chronic illness
Coping with pain
Coronary artery disease (including prevention)
Depression
Diarrhea
Drug abuse
Emotional disorders
Emphysema
Enhanced concentration
Enhanced memory
Epilepsy
Fatigue in cancer patients
Fear of open spaces
Gag reflex abnormalities
Gastrointestinal disorders
Generalized anxiety disorder
Habitual responding
Headache (including that related to smoking cessation)
Heart attack prevention
Heart rate reduction
Heart rhythm abnormalities
High blood pressure
High cholesterol
Immune system stimulation
Improved mental clarity
Infertility
Insomnia
Irritability caused by smoking cessation
Irritable bowel syndrome
Longevity
Low blood cortisol levels
Menopausal symptoms
Mental illness
Migraine
Mood changes
Mood disturbances
Multiple sclerosis
Muscle tension
Panic attacks
Panic disorder
Parkinson's disease
Peripheral vascular disease
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Pregnancy
Premenstrual syndrome
Psoriasis
Psychosis
Psychosomatic disorders
Quality of life
Raynaud's disease
Reduced oxygen consumption
Relaxation
Sleep disorders
Smoking cessation
Stress-related disorders
Stroke prevention
Substance abuse
Tension headache
Upset stomach

 


Potential Dangers

Most types of meditation are believed to be safe in healthy individuals. However, the safety of meditation is not well studied.

People with underlying psychiatric disorders should speak with a mental health provider before beginning meditation because there have been rare reports of mania or worsening of other symptoms. Some publications warn that intensive meditation can cause anxiety, depression or confusion, although this is not well studied.

The use of meditation should not delay the time it takes to see a health care provider for diagnosis or treatment with more proven techniques or therapies. And meditation should not be used as the sole approach to illness.

Summary

Meditation is an ancient technique with many modern variations. Meditation has been suggested as a way to improve many health conditions. However, well-designed research is lacking, and the scientific evidence remains inconclusive. People with psychiatric disorders should speak with a mental health provider before beginning meditation. Meditation should not be used as the sole approach to illness.

The information in this monograph was prepared by the professional staff at Natural Standard, based on thorough systematic review of scientific evidence. The material was reviewed by the Faculty of the Harvard Medical School with final editing approved by Natural Standard.

 

back to: Alternative Medicine Home ~ Alternative Medicine Treatments


Resources

  1. Natural Standardd: An organization that produces scientifically based reviews of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) topics
  2. National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM): A division of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services dedicated to research

Selected Scientific Studies: Meditation

Natural Standard reviewed more than 750 articles to prepare the professional monograph from which this version was created.

Some of the more recent studies are listed below:

    1. Barnes VA, Treiber FA, Davis H. Impact of transcendental meditation on cardiovascular function at rest and during acute stress in adolescents with high normal blood pressure. J Psychosom Res 2001;51(4):597-605.
    2. Barnes VA, Treiber FA, Turner JR, et al. Acute effects of transcendental meditation on hemodynamic functioning in middle-aged adults. Psychosom Med 1999;61(4):525-531.
    3. Blamey P, Hardiker J. US prisons use meditation technique with success. Nursing Standard 2001;15(46):31.
    4. Carlson LE, Ursuliak Z, Goodey E, et al. The effects of a mindfulness meditation-based stress reduction program on mood and symptoms of stress in cancer outpatients: 6-month follow-up. Support Care Cancer 2001;9(2):112-123.
    5. Davidson RJ, Kabat-Zinn J, Schumacher J, et al. Alterations in brain and immune function produced by mindfulness meditation. Psychosom Med 2003;65(4):564-570.

 


  1. Fields JZ, Walton KG, Schneider RH, et al. Effect of a multimodality natural medicine program on carotid atherosclerosis in older subjects: a pilot trial of Maharishi Vedic Medicine. Am J Cardiol 2002;Apr 15, 89(8):952-958.
  2. Gaffney L, Smith CA. Use of complementary therapies in pregnancy: the perceptions of obstetricians and midwives in South Australia. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol 2003;44(1):24-29.
  3. Keefer L, Blanchard EB. A one-year follow-up of relaxation response meditation as a treatment for irritable bowel syndrome. Behav Res Ther 2002;40(5):541-546.
  4. King MS, Carr T, D'Cruz C. Transcendental meditation, hypertension and heart disease. Aust Fam Physician 2002;31(2):164-168.
  5. Larkin M. Meditation may reduce heart attack and stroke risk. Lancet 2000;355(9206):812.
  6. Manocha R, Marks GB, Kenchington P, et al. Sahaja yoga in the management of moderate to severe asthma: a randomized controlled trial. Thorax 2002;Feb, 57(2):110-115. Comment in: Thorax 2003;Sep, 58(9):825-826.
  7. Mason O, Hargreaves I. A qualitative study of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for depression. Br J Med Psychol 2001;74(Pt 2):197-212.
  8. Mills N, Allen J. Mindfulness of movement as a coping strategy in multiple sclerosis: a pilot study. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 2000;22(6):425-431.
  9. Schneider RH, Alexander CN, Staggers F, et al. Long-term effects of stress reduction on mortality in persons > or = 55 years of age with systemic hypertension. Am J Cardiol 2005;95(9):1060-1064.
  10. Schneider RH, Alexander CN, Rainforth M, et al. Randomized controlled trials of effects of the transcendental meditation program on cancer, cardiovascular, and all-cause mortality: a meta-analysis. Ann Behav Med 1999;21(Suppl):S012.
  11. Speca M, Carlson LE, Goodey E, et al. A randomized, wait-list controlled clinical trial: the effect of a mindfulness meditation-based stress reduction program on mood and symptoms of stress in cancer outpatients. Psychosom Med 2000;62(5):613-622.
  12. Tacon AM, McComb J, Caldera Y, Randolph P. Mindfulness meditation, anxiety reduction, and heart disease: a pilot study. Fam Community Health 2003;Jan-Mar, 26(1):25-33.
  13. Targ EF, Levine EG. The efficacy of a mind-body-spirit group for women with breast cancer: a randomized controlled trial. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 2002;Jul-Aug, 24(4):238-248.
  14. Wenk-Sormaz H. Meditation can reduce habitual responding. Altern Ther Health Med 2005;11(2):42-58.
  15. Williams KA, Kolar MM, Reger BE, et al. Evaluation of a wellness-based mindfulness stress reduction intervention: a controlled trial. Am J Health Promot 2001;15(6):422-432.
  16. Winzelberg AJ, Luskin FM. The effect of a meditation training in stress levels in secondary school teachers. Stress Medicine 1999;15(2):69-77.
  17. Yorston GA. Mania precipitated by meditation: a case report and literature review. Mental Health Relig Culture 2001;4(2):209-213.

back to: Alternative Medicine Home ~ Alternative Medicine Treatments

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, November 29). Meditation for Treating Psychological Disorders, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, October 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/alternative-mental-health/treatments/meditation-for-treating-psychological-disorders

Last Updated: July 10, 2016