Adult Eating Disorder getting triggered more in Lockdown?

Hi everyone, I have been wanting to post something for a while about this and unsure how to say it or whether I would just end up demoralised if no one answers.

Anyway, I give it a try.

I've got an autism related eating disorder around obsession with strict food regime, calories and weight. I was diagnosed with eating disorder as a child but as many ASD people have experienced, autism was completely overlooked until adulthood.
Food and nutrition has also been a special interest of mine for some years. It's both a friend and an enemy.
I have a bad relationship with food when anxiety is triggered. I use it to self-harm and I associate food with reward and punishment.
I get some momentary relief and escapism from it.

Obviously it's not good for my health and I have had it under control most of my adult life by having a good diet and exercise regime and allowing myself unlimited amounts of tea, salad and fruit if I need it.
I also go for long walks (not so easy under lockdown) which is good for suppressing urges.

During the lockdown I find I am getting triggered to relapse more and more. It's a feeling that I am not in control: the corona and the government are controlling what we can do.
I'm not alone in the house so have to suppress the urge. The feeling that I can't escape or be alone, as my partner is also in lockdown, is making it worse and worse.
It's making me very irritable and I can feel it's building up in a bad way.

Does anyone else experience eating disorders with their autistic traits, how are you coping in lockdown?

Parents
  • It’s not quite the same but in essence I eat too much often when low, and it seems to be the professionals belief that my low mood links in to the autistic traits (can’t say I fully understand their logic) but as I’ve been feeling really low in lockdown I’ve been overeating a lot. I know it’s a bit different but indirectly I kind of get where you are at.

Reply
  • It’s not quite the same but in essence I eat too much often when low, and it seems to be the professionals belief that my low mood links in to the autistic traits (can’t say I fully understand their logic) but as I’ve been feeling really low in lockdown I’ve been overeating a lot. I know it’s a bit different but indirectly I kind of get where you are at.

Children
  • hi, thanks for your comment Anthony.  I think that eating / not eating / weird or disordered eating brings a form of escape from real life or a way of avoiding emotions, and in autism we have problems with emotions anyway. There are other complexities of course but I think it's nearly always caused by something that would normally provoke an emotion in a NT person but instead triggers me.   There's also something about having control and being demand avoidant that makes me want to control food in an extreme way. 

    Maybe there's also some basic sensory comfort in stuffing our mouths. I have always eaten meals way too quickly, sometimes without chewing properly.

    I wish I could find a substitute for the urge to carry out the eating disorder.