True… but it’s not really intentional or desired for some of us. Like, I WANT to put on weight (especially fat), but unless I set timers or am incredibly conscious that I need to eat, time just zips by, and I end up eating as described in the post. When I super focus on it (meal prep, shakes, etc), it starts to become a major point of anxiety in my life, and my relationship with food starts to get kind of toxic. I’m alive, healthy, and all that, but this kind of thing is very different than intentional fasting or dieting.
You’re entirely wrong about that, and I think that’s the entire point of this post. Eating does not repulse or disgust me. I have zero anxiety that xyz food is going to make me gain/lose weight. The idea here is that our brains absolutely do not easily create a routine around food. Let’s say it’s 10am and I’m starting to get hungry- I’ll tell myself “okay, lunch in the next hour or two!” I briefly go back to whatever I was doing, look at the clock again, and it’s 6pm.
Can we please stop pathologizing every little quirk? There is no one way to eat. Just because you’re accustomed to the idea of 3 square meals in a day doesn’t mean that deviation from that pattern is wrong. Different cultures approach meals, meal sizes, and meal times in different ways. How is that any different than an individual eating by their own schedule?
But when you get down to it, this isn’t even about food. If there’s any pathological component to this scenario, it would be the inability to keep track of time and/or sensory differences that don’t trigger sensations (such as hunger) in the same way as neurotypicals. Which we’re already well aware of. Having an unusual eating schedule is just one way that these differences manifest.
That’s not what was described in the post. What was described in the post is deliberate, and is indeed an eating disorder. I’ll happily be corrected by a professional who knows better than I. I won’t take your word for it that it’s actually healthy mmkay.
OMAD is a common fasting method by more than just ADHD people.
True… but it’s not really intentional or desired for some of us. Like, I WANT to put on weight (especially fat), but unless I set timers or am incredibly conscious that I need to eat, time just zips by, and I end up eating as described in the post. When I super focus on it (meal prep, shakes, etc), it starts to become a major point of anxiety in my life, and my relationship with food starts to get kind of toxic. I’m alive, healthy, and all that, but this kind of thing is very different than intentional fasting or dieting.
Food feels great when shared communally. Pretty sure it’s hard for a lot of people to eat because we’ve sort of lost that as a society.
Right you have an eating disorder
Is fine
Many do
You’re entirely wrong about that, and I think that’s the entire point of this post. Eating does not repulse or disgust me. I have zero anxiety that xyz food is going to make me gain/lose weight. The idea here is that our brains absolutely do not easily create a routine around food. Let’s say it’s 10am and I’m starting to get hungry- I’ll tell myself “okay, lunch in the next hour or two!” I briefly go back to whatever I was doing, look at the clock again, and it’s 6pm.
Your 2nd sentence implies you have no clue at all what an eating disorder is.
Yeah more eating disorder than adhd
Can we please stop pathologizing every little quirk? There is no one way to eat. Just because you’re accustomed to the idea of 3 square meals in a day doesn’t mean that deviation from that pattern is wrong. Different cultures approach meals, meal sizes, and meal times in different ways. How is that any different than an individual eating by their own schedule?
But when you get down to it, this isn’t even about food. If there’s any pathological component to this scenario, it would be the inability to keep track of time and/or sensory differences that don’t trigger sensations (such as hunger) in the same way as neurotypicals. Which we’re already well aware of. Having an unusual eating schedule is just one way that these differences manifest.
That’s not what was described in the post. What was described in the post is deliberate, and is indeed an eating disorder. I’ll happily be corrected by a professional who knows better than I. I won’t take your word for it that it’s actually healthy mmkay.
No no. I it must be autism
I honestly have no idea what this is in response to. It doesn’t make sense to me in the context of this thread.