Irish Daily Mirror

Don’t be so quick to23 celebrate weight loss

Irish writer opens up on eating disorder battle

- BY AILBHE DALY news@irishmirro­r.ie

AUTHOR Louise O’neill has opened up on her battle with anorexia and called for people to not be so quick to applaud weight loss.

The best-selling writer, who penned Asking For It and After The Silence, recently marked four years in recovery from eating disorders and has appealed for others to be more mindful of the condition.

Louise said: “I was 14 when a family member died, my uncle who was 30 at the time.

“It was very traumatic for my entire family and just in the grieving process, I lost quite a lot of weight. I often say that if no one had commented on it, I wouldn’t have even noticed.

“I was only 14, I wasn’t a teenager who weighed myself. There wasn’t conversati­on in my house around weight.

“People were saying, ‘Oh, you lost weight’ and there were friends of my parents, adult women, who were telling me I looked great.

“I think it put this thought in my head that, ‘Oh, I musn’t have looked great before’.

“I started firstly with obsessive exercising and then it became restrictin­g my food and then purging my food in order to maintain a weight so low it would have been difficult for me to maintain.

“I would be reluctant to comment on anyone else’s weight loss or gain because particular­ly with weight loss, which is so celebrated in our society, you don’t know what you’re congratula­ting someone on.

“You could be congratula­ting them on grief, illness, trauma or on an eating disorder.

“I wish as a culture that we were less [eager] to pass remarks on people’s weight.”

In her chat with Miriam O’callaghan on RTE Radio One yesterday, the writer also called for parents to seek specialise­d care for kids who are struggling with eating disorders.

Louise said: “I think appropriat­e care is so important. Eating disorders need specialise­d care and I can’t emphasise that enough.

“I want anyone listening to know that full recovery is possible and I am living proof for that.”

I wish we were less [eager] to pass remarks LOUISE O’NEILL RTE RADIO ONE YESTERDAY

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 ??  ?? APPEAL Louise O’neill
APPEAL Louise O’neill

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