Bulimia and other eating disorders can be life threatening and an important first step is understanding some of the causes of bulimia, and how they impact treatment issues.
1. The Cause of Bulimia Nervosa
Bulimia is one of the most rapidly increasing psychological problems around nowadays.
But what causes bulimia? Is it an extreme response to Western society pressure on young
girls and women to be slim?
Or are there other factors contributing to the problem?
Can we influence these factors and change their effects on people?
Genetic, environmental, biological are all common factors that have to be looked at when
we talk about the causes of any diseases or disorders.
Let's look at these things in the case of Bulimia.
Scientific research recently has shown that people are born with an inherited
predisposition towards developing bulimia, particularly where susceptibility to addiction
is in the genes.
It reveals that bulimics inherit a gene responsible for the addiction from their ancestors.
This addiction can appear in different forms: alcohol addiction, drug addiction, food
addiction, nicotine and the like. That's why many bulimics also suffer from addictions to
other substances also, making recovery difficult.
So a genetic predisposition to bulimia may be there but it is not a single bulimia gene
itself that is the culprit but a general addiction gene. And in many bulimic families we
can trace backwards to past members of the family who suffered from other kinds of
addiction in their lives.
But on the other hand not all people who get an addiction gene suffer from bulimia or
other addictions. So we have to look at other things like environmental factors.
Environmental factors can contribute to triggering the onset of bulimia. These include
peer pressures, family attitudes, the influence of the media creating a need for thinness,
poor self-esteem and a lack of acceptance of self and body shape.
Bulimia often begins with a dissatisfaction of the person's body. The individual may
actually be underweight, but when that person looks in a mirror they see a distorted
image and feel heavier than they really are.
At first, this distorted body image leads to dieting. As the body image in the mirror
continues to be seen as larger than it actually is, the dieting escalates and leads to bulimia.
The bottom line however, is that bulimia is the misuse of food to try to resolve emotional
problems.
2. When a person is unable to face their feelings, define problems, and resolves them
effectively, that person is more prone to become susceptible to the onset of bulimia.
A significant correlation between the development of clinical bulimia nervosa and sexual
abuse has also been proven. Other forms of abuse (physical, emotional or combination of
both of them) also link to developing of dissatisfaction with the person's body that can
lead to bulimia any time in the future.
Strict and cold parental attitude and luck of showing love to children from parents can
become a trigger for developing a wrong body image in children that can turn into
bulimia in susceptible people.
That is why you should never tease your child if they are a little bit over weight as this
could just be a normal growing process for that child body shape. But a wrong word from
a parent or family member may inadvertently send that person down the track to bulimia.
The next factor which can cause bulimia is biological or biochemical factor. This happens
when one or a few biological processes in the human body have gone off track. Some
research has shown that an insufficiency of a special hormone in the brain called
serotonin can cause depression and bulimia at the same time. This is probably why many
bulimics also suffer from depression.
Some antidepressants that work on restoring the level of serotonin in the brain can help
some sufferers stop their binges while taking them. This could also mean that many
sufferers, who manage to stop their bulimia for a short while, go back to binging again
when they stop the antidepressants.
Anyone who has been on antidepressants and has stopped should look for other
supplements where they can substitute the loss of serotonin; I believe you can get
serotonin in the health food stores in capsules form. Although taking serotonin on its own
will not automatically stop your bulimia, as it is a much deeper psychological problem
that a single chemical imbalance: but it would not hurt either.
As you can see, many factors can contribute to the development of bulimia. For some
sufferers it is the environmental factors that come into play, like desire to be thin, peer
pressure to be thin or influence from the media to be thin. Some people may have a
strong genetic influence that can be traced to past relatives who may have suffered from
bulimia or other addictions.
Depressed sufferers will blame their low serotonin level in the brain for their bulimia. But
the majority of people probably have a combination of factors that has caused their
bulimia.
In conclusion, the causes of bulimia could be many: genetic, biological and
environmental. So far we can not change the genes we are born with but we can manage
to control certain behaviors brought on by defective genes, with the correct methods.