Cover image for Riptide : Struggling with and Resurfacing from a Daughter's Eating Disorder.
Riptide : Struggling with and Resurfacing from a Daughter's Eating Disorder.
Title:
Riptide : Struggling with and Resurfacing from a Daughter's Eating Disorder.
Author:
Hale-Seubert, Barbara.
ISBN:
9781554909063
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (229 pages)
Contents:
Front Cover -- Advance Praise -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- The Mother Knot -- Happy Days -- Falling Down the Rabbit Hole -- Till Love Do Us Part -- Mother Load -- Motherless -- Four Winds -- Pasta Patrol -- In Food We Trust -- Belmont -- Therapy and Me -- Good Grief -- Locks and Lies -- Snapshot -- Pathfinders -- Photo Section -- The Picture of a Thousand Words -- Jail -- Madonna or Martyr -- Cactus Flower -- Faith and Family -- Roller Coaster -- Love and Resignation -- False Alarm -- Sam -- Rock-a-Bye Baby -- Riptide -- Pietà -- Acknowledgments -- Back Cover.
Abstract:
?Riptide is the raw and revealing account of the author’s journey during the ten years her oldest daughter struggled with anorexia and bulimia, a battle that ended with her death at age 23 in February 2000. Motherhood is about nurturing and protecting your child, yet with eating disorders, as with any addiction complicated by mental illness, parents can feel frustrated with powerlessness and filled with guilt and fear as they watch their beloved child consumed by a condition that has life-threatening power. Eating disorders are rampant, with emaciated stars on the covers of tabloids and the modeling industry being challenged about unhealthy, unrealistic images of what is desirable. In the face of these ubiquitous images, obesity is at an all-time high among children and teens, driving more and younger children to “experiment” with anorectic and bulimic behaviors. That means more parents and caregivers need to understand how to cope and not only try to help these children, but also take care of themselves. Using her unique perspective as a mother and psychotherapist, Barbara Hale-Seubert vividly chronicles her rollercoaster of grief, fear, and powerlessness. Here, Hale-Seubert holds onto the hope that her daughter could salvage some form of a life not fully eclipsed by the disorder, while at the same time learning to surrender what was out of her control and embracing, once again, the grace and value in her own life. Riptide offers other parents the redemptive solace that comes with knowing that they aren’t alone in their struggles.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
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