Eating Disorder
Eating Disorder Assessment IIApril 02, 2016 Lori Cheeseman  National University  Professor RogersEating Disorder   By using feminist therapy, the therapist can help the female âBulimia Nervosaâ (Morrison, 2006, p. 391) client understand the cultural etiology of her disorder (Carolan, Bak, Hoppe-Rooney, & Burns-Jager, 2010). In other words, it would be therapeutic for the female client to understand and relate her Bulimia Nervosa to societyâs oppressive, macro structural constraints (Griswold, 2008). By combining feminist therapy with narrative therapy, the therapist can aid the female client in âexternalizingâ (Ramey, Tarulli, Frijters, & Fisher, 2009, p. 263) the etiology of her âdisorderâ (Basow, Foran, & Bookwala, 2007, p. 398).   Externalizing the etiology of the eating disorder is imperative for healing. According to feminists Chernin and Orbach (as cited in Basow, 2008), the etiology of Bulimia Nervosa is not from individual pathology (p. 290). Culture is the etiology of Bulimia Nervosa (Basow, 2008, p. 290). The cultural idea is that â. . . being thin âenoughâ will enhance oneâs life and make one happyâ (Basow, 2008, p. 290).   Part of learning to externalize involves âconsciousness-raisingâ about âsystemic oppressionsâ (Burstow, 1992, p. xvi). According to Wycoff (as cited in Burstow, 1992), Bulimia Nervosa is a â. . . problem in living [that is] rooted in systemic oppressionsâclassism, sexism, and racismâ and âconsciousness-raising leads to actionâ (p. xvi). According to Katzman and Lee (as cited in Russell-Mayhew et al., 2008), âFocusing on weight preoccupation as a etiologic variable risks being overly ethnocentric and misses the universal power of food refusal as an attempt to free oneself from the control of othersâ (p. 132).   Consciousness-raising is achieved through language. Humans construct reality through language â. . . relationships, and culture. . .â (Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2008, p. 342). According to Watzlawick (as cited in Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2008), â[b]ecause each of us invents our own reality, we also have the option of creating it differentlyâ (p. 346). Through language the human female internalizes socialized ways of being (Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2008). âLanguage is the vehicle for forming new [realities]â (Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2008, p. 347).    Language is the core of narrative therapy and is rooted in âpoststructuralism and deconstructionismâ (Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2008 p. 367). Deconstructionism is a â. . . disassembling and examining taken-for-granted assumptions. . .â (Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2008, p. 368). Narrative therapists use the idea of deconstructionism to enlighten the female â. . . that the dominance of one meaning or one set of assumptions is an illusion, and that it is possible to apply a multitude of meanings or assumptions in understanding the same event or experienceâ (Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2008, p. 368). Narrative therapists help the female client to â. . . âexternalizeâ a restraining problemâin effect, by deconstructing the problem as an internal deficiency or pathological condition in the individual and redefining it an objectified external and unwelcome narrative with a will of its own to dominate [her life]â (Goldenberg & Goldenberg, 2008, p. 372).
Essay About Cultural Etiology Of Her Disorder And Feminist Therapy
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