Eating Disorder Therapy in Ann Arbor, MI

Tired of dieting and hating your body?

  • Feeling shame, guilt, and even self hatred

  • Distorted body image perceptions or dissatisfaction with your appearance

  • Feeling embarrassed or ashamed of eating habits that lead you to avoid social gatherings or situations involving food

  • Living in a diet obsessed anti-fat culture

  • Navigating the world in a fat body

“Making peace with your body is your mighty act of revolution. It is your contribution to a changed planet where we might all live unapologetically in the bodies we have.” - Sonya Renee Taylor

How I can help

I practice from a harm reduction, anti-diet, Health At Every Size (HAES), and fat liberation lens. Years of dieting forces us to ignore the cues our body is trying to give us. You’re not hungry, eat a handful of almonds kinda bullshit. Utilizing the principles of intuitive eating I can help you learn to honor your hunger, make peace with food, and cope with your emotions with kindness. Tending to the parts of you that want a smaller body or restrict or binge. As a fat therapist I bring in a sense of deep compassion and empathy for my clients who have been at war with their bodies for far too long.

Therapy for Eating Disorders can help you…

  • Learn self-compassion

  • Let go of harmful beliefs about food and bodies

  • Move your body for joy, not punishment

  • Build self-trust

  • Make food choices that honor your body AND taste buds

Radical self-love is about embracing every part of yourself with compassion and acceptance, transforming the way you see yourself and the world.

FAQs Eating Disorder Therapy

  • I will never tell you what to do with you body.

    We will get really curious about why losing weight is the goal. Does the number on the scale mean something? Are you holding onto Eurocentric ideas of health and beauty? What do you believe will change if you lost weight?

  • YEP!

    Food is a great way our system learns to cope with many uncomfortable feelings. Most folks living with eating disorders have other concerns like trauma, anxiety, or substance use. Often it is all interconnected.

    We can work on identifying triggers, improve emotional awareness, and look at underlying issues such as trauma.

  • It can be hard to tell. Many disordered eating behaviors are rooted in diet culture and they have been normalized. Some things to consider…

    • skipping meals (intermittent fasting)

    • constantly thinking about food, calories, or dieting

    • eating past fullness

    • hiding food or eating alone to avoid embarrassment of food choices or amount

    • feeling shame or guilt about eating habits

    • sense of lack of control over food

    • avoiding certain foods or food groups (keto diet, paleo diet.. etc)

  • Click here to learn how you could potentially change your relationship with food and your body in one intensive.

  • Contact me here to schedule a free 15 minute consult.