Breaking Chains & Building Bridges:
From Healing My Anorexia to Empowering Mental Health
This blog is authored by our CEO and Founder Pernille Bülow, PhD, and was originally published on Life Stories Diary.
In this article, Pernille shares the personal experiences that led her to found Mind Blossom.
Life Stories Diary is founded and led by Dr. June Alexander, PhD. Read more about Dr. Alexander at the end of the page.
At the age of 11, the earliest traces of my eating disorder (ED), specifically anorexia, started to emerge. A significant factor behind this struggle was my family environment. For most of my life, I grew up with a half-sister, 8 years younger than myself, and a single mother who was psychologically abusive, a behavior I now attribute to her own mental illnesses. According to my mother, she had never seen anyone look more evil than me. She told me regularly that I was ungrateful and asked for too much. She told me I was so selfish that I should never have children. She repeatedly accused me of not loving my sister, and as a consequence she would periodically force me to spend time with my sister “until I loved her”. She accused me of stealing her money and her food. She told me my experiences were not real, and that I lied when I referred to previous things she had said and done to me. She told me that she was the only one who really cared about me, the only one I could rely on.
When she was particularly upset her anger manifested in periods of silent treatment and object-flinging outbursts. When she napped, I was not allowed to do anything but stay in my room, using the bathroom would be too loud. Nighttime brought stricter rules: I was not allowed to make any noise after 8 pm, even when she watched TV till late into the night. All of the food belonged to her, and she decided what I could and could not touch. For example, the diet coke was hers alone, and I was not allowed to eat more than an apple a day. Her control extended beyond the kitchen, I was even instructed on how much toilet paper I could use.
Yearning for alternate life
At 11, I was crying myself to sleep most nights, often unable to sleep. I yearned for an alternate life, an alternate family. I’d imagine scenarios: a happier mother, living with another family member, or foster care. Once, I carelessly mentioned my excitement about living with my aunt if my mother passed away. I did not intend to upset her, it was simply a slip of the tongue revealing my ceaseless escape plans. Unsurprisingly, my mother was deeply unhappy with this announcement, telling me that I was never allowed to say such a thing again. She stopped talking to me.
Those nights plunged me into hopelessness, a state that sapped my appetite for both food and life. This marked the inception of my self-imposed starvation, though full-fledged anorexia did not grip me until I turned 16. My ED was an attempt at control, at attaining some consistency, something perfect. If I could not have love, I would have educational success and physical beauty. I did not care about being a good person, I cared about surviving. I was so angry and so sad, constantly looking for ways to escape but unable to until I turned 18, when I finally broke free from my mother’s grasp. Sadly, I would remain under the control of my ED for another 8 years.
My recovery is a story of its own, spanning several years, punctuated by countless relapses, and woven together with the support of numerous individuals whose names are too many to recount.
In hindsight, two things emerged as pivotal in helping me: my graduate education in neuroscience, and learning how to build and nurture authentic and healthy relationships.
Discovering the value of wholesome connections
I am embarrassed to tell you that for most of my life, I failed to grasp the significance of community support for my own (and others’) wellbeing. Although I had always longed for connection, I often resisted it for many years fearing vulnerability and pain. Through lived experiences, I have learned the value of wholesome connections with friends and family. Concurrently, I delved into scientific literature demonstrating the significance of community support as one of the most effective, yet highly underutilized methods, for preventing mental illness.
As I continued diving into the research of effective and accessible methods of preventing mental illness, I came across a completely new concept: mental health literacy, also called psychoeducation.
Psychoeducation involves learning about the roots of mental disorders and the science behind the possible treatments – a treasure trove that my neuroscience background held. Moreover, it validated my frustrations when healthcare providers and loved ones mistakenly asserted that my recovery was impossible or that my struggles were self-inflicted choices. Psychoeducation is scientifically proven to both prevent and treat mental illness, yet it is rarely provided to the people that need it the most and it is hardly ever given at the right time: way before a mental illness sets in.
Illness experience provides profound insight
I sometimes wish I could erase the chapters of my life marked by an eating disorder and other mental illnesses. Yet, as always, every dark cloud has a silver lining: Living with an ED gave me, as a scientist, a unique insight into the deeply personal ways in which a mental illness can control your life. More importantly, recovering from ED – an accomplishment achieved by less than half who grapple with it – granted me a profound insight into the possibilities that are yet untapped within mental healthcare. My ED could have been prevented, and it could have been treated much earlier.
Mind Blossom – Intervening before struggles turns to enduring mental illness
While I cannot rewrite my past, I am determined to help reshape the future. Using what I have learned, I established Mind Blossom, a non-profit endeavor that implements psychoeducation programs into schools and other organizations around the globe. Our programs are targeted to students, teachers and parents in an effort to empower them with the knowledge to understand why mental illness surfaces and afflicts either themselves or their loved ones. Importantly, we also teach them where and how they can receive evidence-based help that is accessible. By breaking internalized stigma surrounding mental illness across generations we are enabling conversations that can help us build stronger and healthier communities. Organizations like Mind Blossom will foster environments where we’re unafraid to voice our struggles and seek assistance before it turns into enduring mental illness.
Learn about Dr. June Alexander and the Life Stories Diary
June Alexander, PhD
Author, speaker and writer
I have written and co-authored nine books about eating disorders to date. Book-writing, which includes my memoir, A Girl Called Tim, followed a long career in print journalism. My many years of story-telling reveal that stories, when shared in a supportive environment, can be healing for both the storyteller and the audience.
I combine my writing expertise with the life experience of recovering from long-term anorexia nervosa, trauma and other comorbidities to advocate for a greater understanding of mental health challenges. My contribution to the eating disorder field was recognised at the 2016 Academy for Eating Disorders International Conference in San Francisco, where I received the Meehan/Hartley Public Service and Advocacy Award.
In 2017 I graduated with a Doctor of Philosophy (Creative Writing). My research focused on using extracts from unsolicited diaries to create a book about the usefulness of journaling in recovering from an eating disorder. For more than a decade I have served on the National Eating Disorder Collaboration (NEDC) in Australia which advocates for improved access to evidence-based health care for people with eating disorders.
I am passionate about helping people to self-heal and find life’s purpose through storytelling. I live with an English Staffy, Maisie, and two cats, by the sea near Geelong, Australia. My greatest inspirations are my four children and five grandchildren. My greatest hope is to see universal prompt, effective diagnosis and treatment for eating disorders.
Contact June by e-mail at june@junealexander.com or through her website: www.lifestoriesdiary.com
Your present circumstances don’t determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start