February 15

February 15, 2019 – The Texas Medical Board issues a telemedicine license to Jennifer Gaudiani.

February 15, 2022 — The Journal of Eating Disorders publishes Jennifer Gaudiani’s article, “Terminal anorexia nervosa: three cases and proposed clinical characteristics.” (“hereinafter referred to as Terminal Anorexia”)

February 15, 2023 – The first of what may be many medical board complaints will be filed in the State of Texas against Jennifer Gaudiani.

So, how did we get here? And why?

Gaudiani’s article, “Terminal Anorexia” may very well have started a Mental Health Armageddon.

Had Terminal Anorexia simply proposed untested criteria based upon exhaustive study and research and welcomed collaborative input from the mental health community, it perhaps would have been worthy of intellectual debate. But, Gaudiani was not content with that.

When a person is complicit in assisting another human being taking their own life to “prove the viability of an untested protocol” a very clear and unambiguous line is crossed. Especially when that conduct arguably violates criminal laws in 16 Interstate Medical Compact states in which you hold a medical or tele-medicine license.

Doubly so when a good faith argument can be made that you did not even follow your own protocol.

Terminal Anorexia

Gaudiani’s article proposed the following criteria for “terminal anorexia”:

  1. A diagnosis of anorexia nervosa;
  2. Being age 30 or above;
  3. Prior persistent engagement in high-quality, multidisciplinary eating disorder care, and;
  4. Consistent, clear expression by the individual (who possesses decision-making capacity) indicating an understanding that further treatment is futile, a choice to stop prolonging life, and an acceptance that death will be the natural outcome of the individual’s anorexia nervosa.

The response from the eating disorder professional community was universal in its condemnation of Gaudiani’s article. This condemnation primarily focused on Gaudiani’s protocols being problematic scientifically and medically.

Gaudiani replied to this condemnation by authoring a second article published in September 2022. In this article, she also attempted to clarify the fourth protocol.

To this end, Gaudiani stated: “Careful determination of decisional capacity is required in each case.” [emphasis added]

Gaudiani also stated, An individual who wavers in their conviction or expresses different goals to different people is not yet ready to receive the appellation of terminal AN.” [emphasis added]

And now, medical boards in various states will be called upon to determine if Gaudiani violated this fourth criterion, and if so, what the consequences and ramifications should be.

Consistent, clear expression with no wavering

It may be difficult to determine if a patient possesses “consistent, clear expression by the individual (who possesses decision-making capacity) indicating an understanding that further treatment is futile.”

However, what is not difficult is determining when a patient does not have this understanding. And therein lies one of Gaudiani’s major issues which she will need to justify before state medical boards.

Patient No. 2 (Jessica)

In Terminal Anorexia, Gaudiani’s Patient Number 2 (Jessica) is a textbook example of not having this firm conviction and wavering in her decision.

Gaudiani stated in “Terminal Anorexia”:

“Jessica waited several weeks to fill the MAID prescription.” [Red Flag Number 1]

“She then set multiple dates to use it over a couple of months and changed her mind as that date got closer.” [Red Flag Number 2]

Delaying several weeks before filling the MAID prescriptions?

Changing her mind several times before ingesting Gaudiani’s MAID medication?

Doesn’t this conduct define the very essence of wavering in her conviction?

Doesn’t this conduct define the very essence of not having an understanding that further treatment is futile?

Utilizing Gaudiani’s own statements, the only logical conclusion which can be reached is that she prescribed MAID medication to a patient who was not ready to receive the diagnosis of terminal AN. And yet, Gaudiani did nothing to reverse her conduct.

And as a result, a suffering, precious human life was extinguished.

There are other very troubling issues regarding Patient No. 3 (Alyssa) which will not be addressed in this article. Instead, let us look at the harm caused to the living by Terminal Anorexia.

Seeds of doubt, fear and Jane’s Story

Terminal Anorexia’s negative impact on the eating disorder patient population, those who suffered from eating disorders, and those who still suffer was predictable if not inevitable.

An article written by three (3) respected eating disorder professionals states:

“Since … [Gaudiani’s] article was published, we have already had patients approach us to ask if we feel their case is “terminal.

If providers do not hold the hope for these patients when they can’t do so for themselves, use evidence to guide our recommendations, and acknowledge our own limits in knowing what the future holds for them, what will become of these vulnerable individuals?”

I have become acquainted with Jane Doe. Jane is in her early 50s and has suffered from eating disorders for in excess of thirty (30) years. She has been in a number of treatment centers throughout the United States and has seen various treatment providers consistently during the thirty (30) plus year time period. She is currently undergoing treatment with two, reputable medical doctors specializing in treating eating disorders.

Jane was apprised by third parties about Terminal Anorexia.

This is Jane’s Story in her own words:

“When I first heard of Dr. Gaudiani, her book “Sick Enough” had just come out and my dietitian suggested I read it. She wanted me to understand the medical repercussions of my anorexia and this book was specifically geared towards the medical aspects of eating disorders. I read it and was impressed by the insight she had into anorexia and other eating disorders.

I’m anorexic and have struggled with this disorder for the past 35 years. I have been in and out of treatment centers and inevitably relapsed when I was discharged. It was chronic for me and while there were times when I was able to maintain my weight, I inevitably returned to anorexia when things got rough.

The last four years have been the worst. I almost died twice, once in 2019 and once in 2021.

I had just been discharged from my last treatment stay, when I read the paper Dr. Gaudiani wrote on physician assisted suicide and the steps she had taken to help three eating disorder patients die. I was shocked and at first thought it must be a mistake. I did some research and realized it indeed was accurate.

I find her actions reprehensible. I don’t care how intelligent and put together you may sound, when you are in the depths of your eating disorder, your brain is starved out and not functioning normally. I strongly disagree with her stance that those patients were all in their right mind and capable of making such a serious decision.

My last treatment stay, I was told point blank that I was dying. My response was I didn’t care, I was fine with death and I couldn’t keep living with anorexia dictating my every move. I was ready to die.

The director of the treatment facility I was in went to extreme measures to make sure that didn’t happen. I was too far gone to make the choice to live or die for myself.

All I could think of was here I was, this chronic anorexic, in and out of treatment, feeling hopeless and ready to die. I felt I had nothing left. It scares me to think that had I been Dr. Gaudiani’s patient, I might very well not be here today.

I fit the profile and I’m sure I could have convinced her of my sanity as well. People with severe eating disorders can be very convincing.

Basically, she took away any chance they might have had at turning things around. She didn’t take extreme measures to help them. Her oath as a doctor was first do no harm and she seems to have forgotten that.

Patients who see her in practice need to realize that her take on late stage care may very well end in them no longer being there.

I’m grateful I had people in my corner who were willing to fight for me when I was unable to. Those patients who died with assistance by Gaudiani never had that option. And I find that truly sad.”

Again, eating disorder professionals asked the question, “If providers do not hold the hope for these patients when they can’t do so for themselves, use evidence to guide our recommendations, and acknowledge our own limits in knowing what the future holds for them, what will become of these vulnerable individuals?”

What will become of them? Gaudiani apparently has the answer. And that is, hope will be extinguished. Their lives will be extinguished.

Now it will be up to medical boards in numerous states to determine whether Gaudiani’s answer is acceptable and if not, what ramifications and consequences will be imposed?

Social Media, AAP Guidelines and Ozempic … Good Lord

For the eating disorder community, January 2023 came in like a lion. It also left like a lion.

On December 11, 2022, “60 Minutes” aired a segment on the manner in which social media, particularly Instagram, exposes our children to harmful content. Content which includes body shaming, stigma and pro-anorexia content. Content which includes instructions on to commit suicide. Content revealing that the biggest social media platforms do not implement nor enforce age restrictions for access to controversial and harmful websites.

60 Minutes’ investigation further revealed that Facebook had actual knowledge that the Instagram’s app was being utilized to expose our children to this harmful and deadly content.  

It should come as no surprise that one entity, Meta Platforms, Inc. [an entity started by Mark Zuckerberg] owns Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and other social media platforms. 

This 60 Minute segment is embedded here: 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/facebook-instagram-dangerous-content-60-minutes-2022-12-11/

To state that we should be alarmed would be charitable. In fact, we should be mortified. 

As you watch this segment, look closely at the father’s pain, a father whose beautiful daughter took her own life… only after she learned how to hang herself through information available on social media. 

Social media is not going away. But it can be investigated and the entities owning social media platforms can be made to answer for criminal conduct. The Meta companies owned by Zuckerberg are multi-billion dollar entities with influence and power. And we must surely find a way to effectively counter that influence and power. 

When these types of tragedies are brought to the attention of the general public, more often than not society gnashes its teeth, waives its angry fists at the sky, demands that changes be made until … society is distracted by the next “click bait” story which grabs the attention of the “Tik-Tok — Instant Gratification, Internet Generation.” 

As expected, society got distracted by the next click bait story.

AAP Guidelines

On January 9, 2023, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued its comprehensive, “Clinical Practice Guideline for the Evaluation and Treatment of Children and Adolescents with Obesity” (“AAP Guidelines”).

To say the AAP Guidelines are problematic again, would be charitable. The AAP Guidelines were co-written by 21 doctors, health researchers and “obesity experts.”

Amongst other questionable findings, the AAP Guidelines advise that health care providers may refer children as young as 2 years old to “intensive health behavior and lifestyle treatment” programs if they have a body mass index in the overweight or obese range. For children ages 12 and up with an obese BMI, doctors are encouraged to prescribe weight-loss medications and to offer adolescents aged 13 and older with “severe obesity,” a referral to a bariatric surgery center.

The authors insist that the AAP Guidelines are a brave leap forward in the fight against childhood obesity, which they frame as a “complex and often persistent disease” requiring early and aggressive treatment.

But then, the AAP Guidelines also acknowledge that experiences of “weight stigma, victimization, teasing and bullying” are major challenges faced by kids in larger bodies that contribute to disordered eating and worse mental health outcomes. They note that some health care providers are biased against fat patients in ways that compromise the quality of care and contribute to more severe illness and even death.

Well, duh! I am confident that we have a firm grasp of the painfully obvious. The AAP may wish to start to limit its platitudes to the merely obvious.

As a result, a number of eating disorder organizations and advocates issued harshly worded criticisms of the AAP Guidelines. As well they should have. But some obvious questions must also be asked.

The first question which has not being asked is …

Why are there no eating disorder experts listed as co-authors of these guidelines?

Did the AAP reach out to any eating disorder organizations? If so, did the AAP receive a response?

Why did the AAP issue these guidelines with complete ignorance of the horrible ramifications of eating disorders on our children and loved ones?

Besides issuing harshly worded criticism, who in the eating disorder community has the ability, knowledge, wisdom and contacts to meet with the leadership at AAP, to intelligently collaborate and devise a concrete plan to bring to the attention of AAP the justifiable concerns of the eating disorder community? And to have the AAP amend its guidelines to take into account the concerns of the community.

This type of action is incredibly important before another event occurs which will distract the “Tik Tok” generation of leaders to focus on the next drama.

And then, Oops … too late.

Ozempic has arrived.

What may you ask is Ozempic?

The FDA approved Ozempic for people with type 2 diabetes in 2017. But there is another developing off-label usage.

Ozempic is not approved for weight loss. But, doctors have begun to prescribe it off-label for that purpose. It is specifically directed for weight loss in adults with obesity or those who are overweight and have least one weight-related health condition, such as high blood pressure or cholesterol.

So, how does Ozempic work? Ozempic is a semaglutide designed to mimic a hormone that signals to the brain when a person is full and promotes the release of insulin, a hormone that stops blood sugar from getting too high. In turn, the medications can lower blood sugar levels and suppress appetites.

Prescriptions for Ozempic tripled from 2021 to 2022, according to data from the prescription drug discount company SingleCare, which has more than 5 million members. In fact, in August 2022, the FDA reported a shortage of Ozempic.

But complications raise great concerns. Medical experts said they consider Ozempic to be a lifelong medication. This is because like many drugs, the effects of semaglutide stop when patients stop taking it.  So some people regain weight.  

Novo Nordisk, the pharmaceutical company distributing Ozempic issued a statement to NBC News:

“This supports the belief that obesity is a chronic disease that requires long-term management, much like high blood pressure or high cholesterol, for which most patients remain on therapy long term,” the company added.

Ania Jastreboff, an associate professor of medicine at the Yale School of Medicine said, “Obesity is a neurometabolic disease. It is a chronic, treatable disease. We really need to treat obesity as we treat any other chronic disease, with effective and safe approaches that target underlying disease mechanisms.”

Coincidentally, Jastreboff serves on the scientific advisory board of Novo Nordisk, Ozempic’s manufacturer.

As for one of its side effects, (as if a life-long addiction to the drug was not enough), there is the issue of “Ozempic Face.” “Ozempic face is a bizarre side effect reported by Ozempic patients who claim the drug is making them look older. An overuse of the drug could result in a person losing weight too quickly. The buccal mucosa – the fat – leaves your face, and you become gaunt looking.

In addition to concerns over “Ozempic face” and the older appearance it allegedly causes, experts have warned that the drugs can cause other more serious side effects, including increased risk for rare forms of thyroid tumors, vision changes, kidney problems and gallbladder issues.

During the last week of January 2023, foxnews.com ran a story on Ozempic.

In the most recent episode of Bill Maher’s HBO show, “Real Time” he remarked, “There is this new drug Ozempic. It makes you lose weight. It works … but it makes your face fall off. It makes the face look very old.”

He then stated, “They are prescribing it for kids under 12.”

My God.

Social media is knowingly and intentionally directing our children to harmful sites in which they can learn about pro-anorexia and suicide.

The American Association of Pediatrics has issued guidelines which will increase eating disorders in our children.

Pharmaceutical companies are distributing a drug, and medical professionals are prescribing this drug to our children, which they must take for the remainder of their life in order for them to lose weight no matter its many side effects.

Meanwhile, our so-called leaders sit on the sidelines. Clutching their pearls. Chewing their fingernails. Playing checkers while the rest of the world plays 3-D chess. Back-stabbing anyone whose ideas or views differ from theirs.

And all the while, our families, our children pay the price for this incompetence. This neglect.

When is enough, truly enough? When will accountability be demanded? When will we become tired of the ever-worsening statistics in eating disorders? Statistics which are measured in the taking of human lives.

Our leaders’ failure, our community’s failure, is measured by that ever increasing number of lives being taken. And the community’s inaction. When is enough… enough?

Christmas, Children and Love

Once more, Christmas is upon us. A time for family and friends. A time for laughter and love. A time for life. Memories (or the anticipation) of young children yelling and laughing as they run to the Christmas tree to see what Santa brought them. A child’s sweet, innocent laughter, those angelic faces reflecting boundless excitement fills our hearts with incredible joy.

And yet, for parents like me, parents who have had a child taken, it is also a time reminding us of our loved ones who are so missed. We grieve.

At this time of the year, we are so loath to let others see that grief within us After all, it is a universal time of joy. Conflicting feelings abound. One of our most fervent Christmas wishes is that others simply embrace more fully their families, their beloved children, their loved ones. And we search for words to convey that hope. Words that sometimes best come from others.

I wonder whether gifted authors understand that their words can resonate for generations? Do they understand that they are mere conduits for a message so much greater than themselves?  Do they understand that sometimes the written word touches us in a way that does not diminish over the years?

In 1993, Richard Paul Evans self-published a short book entitled, “The Christmas Box.” It was intended to be a story of love directed to his daughters.

The book centers around a young man, Richard, his wife and their young daughter, Jenna. Like so many young men, Richard places great emphasis on his career to the exclusion of his family, particularly Jenna.

In order to save money, Richard and his family move into a grand, Victorian home owned by an elderly woman, Mary. This arrangement includes the family caring for some of Mary’s needs. Then, Mary sees that Richard is trading diamonds for coal. And as such, she tries to inspire him to find that which is important.

While in the house, Richard finds a box, a Christmas box.  The Christmas box, originally intended to hold a Bible, has within it letters that Mary has written to a deceased loved one. Through the discovery of this box and the letters within, Richard discovers the true meaning of Christmas … the true meaning of love.

I cannot improve upon the author’s words. I can only quote his incredible message to us all:

“I sat down in the rocker in front of the illuminated Christmas tree and lay my head in my hands. Somewhere between the angel and Mary’s house I had figured it out. The first gift of Christmas. It just came. It came to my heart. The first gift of Christmas was love. A parent’s love. Pure as the first snows of Christmas. For God so loved His children that He sent His son, that we might someday return to Him.

“I understand what Mary had been trying to teach me. I stood up and walked up the stairs where my little girl lay sleeping. I picked up her warm little body and, cradling her tightly in my arms, brought her back down to the den. My tears fell on her hair. My little girl. My precious little girl. How foolish I’d been to let her childhood, her fleeting, precious childhood slip away. Forever. In my young mind everything was so permanent and lasting. My little girl would be my little girl forever. But time would prove me wrong. Someday she’d grow up. Someday she’d be gone and I would be left with the memory of giggles and secrets I might have known.

“Jenna took a deep breath and snuggled close for warmth. I held her little body tightly against mine. This was what it meant to be a father, to know that one day I would turn around and my little girl would be gone. To look upon the sleeping little girl and to die a little inside. For one precious, fleeting moment, to hold the child in my arms, and would that time stood still.

“But none of that mattered now. Not now. Not tonight. Tonight Jenna was mine and no one could take this Christmas Eve away from me but me. How wise Mary had been. Mary, who knew the pain of a father sending His son away on that first Christmas morn, knowing full well the path that lay ahead. Mary understood Christmas. The tears in the Bible showed that. Mary loved with the pure, sweet love of a mother, a love so deep that it becomes the allegory for all other love. She knew that in my quest for success in this world I had been trading diamonds for stones. She knew, and she loved me enough to help me see. Mary had given me the greatest gift of Christmas. My daughter’s childhood.”

The cold winds of anguish and grief are strong enough to put a frost on the heart of many people. But not me. I have a little warrior who helped so many before she was taken. A little warrior who, until my last day, will continue to inspire me. A little warrior who taught me the true meaning of love.

And so, during the Christmas Season, and for the rest of the year, embrace your beloved children. Laugh with them. Tell them you love them. As only a parent can. I love you Morgan. I love you Hanford (my beloved son). Each day, you teach me new lessons in how to be a better daddy, a better man.

And I certainly cherish that as my Christmas present.

October 30, 2016

Yesterday, Sunday, October 30, 2022, marked the sixth year commemoration of when my beloved daughter Morgan, drew her last breath. I was holding her hand that dark night. Her brother, my son, was in the room. At 11:31 p.m., the physician’s assistant gently whispered, “She’s gone.”

For the first time, I am forced to revisit that dark night once again on Sunday, the day of the week that my life as I knew it, ended. And yet yesterday in Dallas, the day was a “Chamber of Commerce” day. A brilliant robin’s egg blue sky having been washed clean by days of rain. A glorious temperature. The night brought a picturesque crescent moon illuminating the night sky.

Nonetheless, until the end of my days, that dark, horrible Sunday night will remain a personal tragedy. Morgan’s friends have moved on as surely they must. They have started their own families. To those who were in treatment with Morgan, those wonderful souls have likewise moved on with their lives. As for the eating disorder community, Morgan is merely a statistic and a forgotten statistic at that. However to her daddy, Morgan will always be the catalyst for my soul connecting with me.

When a child is claimed by this illness, a parent is filled with unspeakable pain. Depression. Remorse. Anguish. Nothing can change that reality. No insightful words designed to inspire others. We not only feel the loss, we live the loss.

And to the eating disorder community, we are a living reminder of its failure. They shake their angry fists and yell loudly to whomever will listen, “Once every 52 minutes, a person dies from an eating disorder.” But that is merely a statistic. That is merely a number. That statistic does not have a face. That statistic is not a person. That person does not have a life. That person’s humanity is stripped away. It is far easier to classify those who have been taken as a mere statistic.

The parents who have been left behind make people uncomfortable. Our faces of grief are the living reminders of the community’s failure. It would be so much easier if we would simply go away. And sadly, most do go away. To mourn in isolation. To let their grief, individualistic as it is, consume them alone.

When an annual death day arrives, a parent rises knowing that that day will certainly bring sadness as memories come flooding back. You wonder “what if?” What children would they have brought into the world? What joy and happiness would they have experienced? What greatness would have been within their grasp?

That day a parent walks a razor’s edge of emotion … the slightest nudge can send one falling into a chasm of despair. And yet, life, the endless possibilities that life seems to offer, keep finding ways to intervene, to keep one walking on that razor’s edge.

October 30 will continue each and every year. And in our grief and pain, we must surely embrace the reality that life belongs to the living. Life is about laughter and love. It is about experiencing life to the fullest. Recognizing the simple things which exist. The smile on a baby’s face. Stolen kisses between lovers. A gentle breeze on your face. Our senses bringing wonderful, yet subtle aspects of life and the living to us.

11:31 p.m. beckons.

I am sitting on the patio in front of the house. The inflatable dragon standing tall. The red Christmas lights in the Yaupon tree ablaze. (I know. I know. The company which installed them last year was in the neighborhood this past week, reached out and I caved.)

I settle in with a Cuban cigar (thank you to Dra. Eva Trujillo for holding a conference in person in Mexico which I attended and of course resulted in me bringing those little gifts back to the Republic of Texas), a glass of bourbon neat, music playing on my iPhone. The moon is beautiful. The gentlest of wind. The aria, “O Mio Babbino Caro” is found on my playlist.

And tears come so very easily. Memories of a life taken far too soon. But pain simply will not exist by itself no matter how hard I focus on that. Other thoughts, feelings, and emotions come. I have been surrounded by love. By laughter. By sweet, innocent children. By people who care. By people who love. So much has strengthened and bolstered me all day. And I know that I am not alone. I embrace the two handwritten notes of love written by two young angels who live down the street. I understand that even in my solitude, I am not alone. And never will be.

Then it dawns on me. I am not alone because I am so well-loved. After all, I can be a cantankerous, pot stirring curmudgeon. That person responsible for a number of “Steven Dunn Voodoo Dolls” being sold on the dark web!

I am not alone, and never will be alone, because of how well-loved my Morgan is. The strength and hope she inspired in others. The lives that she helped save when she was here. Her memory still inspiring others to recover. Even in her physical absence.

How wrong that physician’s assistant was six years ago. Her words, “She’s gone” could not be more incorrect. Morgan is not gone.

And the biggest drawback is that I can no longer just cling to her memory by myself. A part of her belongs to each person she inspired, and still inspires to recover. To once again, find laughter, love, life and hope.

To be well-loved. In the darkness of that night, the full realization hits. Morgan’s face is not representative of failure. No. She is the purest representation of life itself.

And for a daddy who so misses her, that is an incredible gift to cherish.

A Message to Lift a Heart

Sometimes a message of grace, of love, of joy is sent to you. It often comes from an unexpected place and an unexpected time. But, from wherever it comes, it lifts your head, your heart, your soul. When you despair, when you start to feel yourself lost, it lights that one candle in your darkness. It illuminates and keeps shadows of despair safely away.

October 20 was the anniversary of my latest rotation around the sun. When asked my age, my response is usually something like, “Well, chronologically I am XXX years old. Mentally, I am about 35 years old. Emotionally, I am about 12 years old. So, it evens out to about 36 years.”

But this year is different. The reality of the end of life hangs heavily over me. Monday, October 24 will mark the 3rd commemoration of my dad transitioning. November 13 will be the second commemoration of my older brother being taken. My brother who was the picture of health. Suddenly, gone.

Sunday, October 30 will mark the 6th commemoration of my beloved daughter, Morgan being taken. For the first time, this date falls on the same day of the week on which Morgan was taken. A Sunday night. Memories of that horrible, dark Sunday night. And the burden seems beyond measure.

Then, as you feel your despair, you receive a message. A message from an unexpected source. A message of hope. A message of joy. A message from an angel freed from her pain, from the heartache of this illness. A family at long last freed.

In this instance, about 18 months ago, a mother reached out to me. We talked. We talked of her daughter down here in Dallas. In the grip of her eating disorder. The pain was so incredibly hard. This mother and her spouse met with Patti and me at a restaurant here in the Dallas area. We talked. We shared. We bonded.

Fast forward a few weeks and her daughter needed a ride to the DFW Airport. Her mom actually thought it may have been an imposition. To the contrary.

Of course you will do this. Gladly! You only hoped, you wished you could do more. On the drive to the airport, I felt the fear within this young soul. The pain. The uncertainty. You try to find the “right words.” You talk of everything except eating disorders. And then finally, you connect over something so unexpected. The joy of a Christmas tree and Christmas tree farms. The shared memories from different states, from different generations. And you jointly embrace that.

You help get her on the plane for her trip home. You immediately text her mom and tell her that her angel is on the way. Afterwards, you have communication with her mom for a while. And as life marches inexorably on, you lose touch as others come into your life needing help or maybe, just someone to listen to.

And then in my current despair, in my dread of the commemoration of the upcoming remembrances of death, I received a message. A message of life. A message of hope. A message of a future which is now being embraced. This incredible mom gave me permission to share the loving message she sent to me. She texted me the following:

“Hello Steven…I wanted to put a smile on your face. Last we spoke, things went from bad to worse. My daughter started on hospice last November after 7 long and painful years. But then…things started to change. Fast forward to today, she is in complete recovery from her ED and depression. Weight restored and then some for over 6 months now. Zero behaviors or urges. Working full time, new healthy friends…thriving. And all out of treatment. It’s amazing and wonderful. I’m one happy mama and just enjoying each and every day with her healthy. Just wanted you to know and to thank you once again for all you did to help us along the way. Best to you always!”

And then another message:

“Another recent picture…of her Instagram post, reflecting. Brings me so much joy. After all you do, year after year, to help families like mine, I imagine you don’t see enough healthy outcomes. I know this horrible evil disease can resurface at any time but for now, each day is a blessing. And for the record, you did much more than encourage me. Resources, networking, support, encouragement…and that ride to the airport. You made a difference in our lives. Grateful. And blessed. 😊”

Tears were in my eyes as my heart was lifted. I hope one day this brave mom will know that I am the one who is blessed. Blessed by her. Blessed by her regaining laughter, joy, love and life!

My heart felt emboldened. And once again, I was filled with the beauty, grace and love of a recovered angel. And a mom and dad who believed in her.

What a gift. What a precious, precious gift.

Politics and Mental Health Sliding Together

The mid-term elections are fast approaching. Within a matter of weeks, our airwaves will be inundated with 30 second spots extolling the virtues of a particular candidate.

Soft, soothing music, or rousing patriotic anthems playing in the background as the special interest groups funding that candidate tells us that its candidate is a combination of Mother Theresa, Nelson Mandela, George Washington and Martin Luther King, Jr.

Or more likely, that 30 second spot, with background music of a dramatic, alarming dark theme will warn us that a certain candidate is first cousin to the Anti-Christ and seeks to watch the world burn if he/she can be “King of the Ashes.”

And as our two major political parties, Tweedledum and Tweedledee continue to propagate their political agenda, that is, “The Needs of the Party are Greater than the Needs of the Republic,” the victims of this mindless, ever increasing power grab are you and me, the public residing in what was once, this great Nation.

National networks which once were looked upon as revered, responsible outlets for reporting news with integrity and honesty have become nothing more than public relation shills for Tweedledum and Tweedledee.  

The growing, detrimental impact of this unethical gamesmanship is not just increasing but is becoming devastatingly harsh and cruel. And our mental health is being impacted.

In 2017 and again, in 2020, studies were conducted on the impact of politics on the mental, physical and social health of US citizens. The results were alarming.

Some of the findings of these studies were as follows:

“Based on the 2019–20 Census Bureau population estimates, the resident population of the United States included approximately 255 million adults at the time of the 2020 survey. Based on that number, the findings from the pre-election survey suggest that somewhere between a fifth and a third of adults—roughly 50 to 85 million people—blame politics for causing fatigue, lost sleep, feelings of anger, loss of temper, as well as triggering compulsive behaviors (e.g. difficulty in stopping thinking about politics and consuming political information), and difficulties in impulse control (e.g. posting social media comments they later regretted; these estimates calculated using the percent agreeing or strongly agreeing with relevant survey items). A quarter of Americans reported seriously considering moving because of politics, and an estimated 40 percent—more than 100 million—consistently identify politics as a significant source of stress in their lives. Astonishingly, all three surveys consistently indicate that around five percent of adults report having suicidal thoughts because of politics—that’s an estimated 12 million people. [emphasis added]

“The results here indicate that Americans see politics as significantly degrading their physical, psychological and social health and that, if anything, the most recent presidential election worsened these effects.”

“Deterioration in measures of physical health became detectably worse in the wake of the 2020 election. Those who were young, politically interested, politically engaged, or on the political left were more likely to report negative effects…”

“Part of the answer may be found in the consistent findings of who is most likely to report that politics has a negative impact on their health—the young, left-leaning (Democratic identifiers), [i.e., every counselor, therapist, university professor and organization in the eating disorder community] politically interested, and politically engaged—as well as the consistently prophylactic effect of a variable that can be manipulated, i.e., political knowledge.” 

“Indeed, polls suggest that during his [President Trump] term partisan discord escalated to the point where opposing political camps disagreed not just on policy and governing preferences but even on “basic facts”. Those deepening divisions almost certainly exacerbated a pre-existing tendency for politics to take a toll on the physical, psychological and social health of Americans. Between Trump’s 2016 election victory and his 2020 re-election campaign psychotherapists reported a significant jump in patients reporting politics negatively affecting their mental health.” 

“The American Psychological Association identified politics as a major source of stress for American adults and there were sizeable increases in rates of depression, anxiety, loss of sleep, and emotional reactivity among groups with high levels of opposition to President Trump such as Democrats, racial minorities and students.”

This research article can be found here:

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0262022

As we race to become the mythical government portrayed in the cult film classic, “Idiocracy,” the ramifications of the mental health deterioration of the Republic caused by politics are readily apparent. Friendships being torn asunder by differing views on a candidate. The person with whom we hope to date must pass a “Who did you vote for test.” People saying that they will move to Canada or Mexico if a certain candidate wins. Individuals losing their own sense of identity as they embrace every issue espoused by the Tweedle Party of their choice.

As individuals, we recognize, acknowledge and understand that being fallible is part of the human condition. None of us is perfect. However, when you take fallible human beings, and put them together under the flag of one of the Tweedle Parties, they become the Wizard of Oz … all knowing, all seeing, incredibly wise, incapable of error.

The Tweedle Parties are the kids fighting in the sand box. They are also grabbing the wrists of the public and are forcibly dragging us into that sand box. To make matters worse, they are not telling us that the sand is in fact, quicksand. And if we do not resist and are pulled into the sandbox, we will surely be inundated and slowly drown in the quicksand.

So, what can we as citizens of the Republic do to get out of the sandbox? Perhaps to start with, stop exclusively surrounding yourself with sycophants who espouse the same ideas, the same theories and the same beliefs you have. When everyone is preaching the same chapter and verse, new lessons are not learned. The mind is not stimulated to grow and evolve but instead, is cemented in isolation. A number of people are credited with saying words to the effect of, “Surround yourself with people who challenge how you think, not people who nod their head and act like they agree. Those people who challenge you may scare you, but in the end, they will be the ones there for you when you need them.”

Politics do not define you. Positions on individual issues do not define you. Having an “R” or a “D” after your name does not define you. The Tweedle Parties do not have a place in elevating or demeaning your value, your self-worth. Neither Tweedle Party has unique, all-knowing insight and knowledge about the goodness of your heart, the strength in your soul or your loving and caring nature.

It is long past time that we stop focusing on our differences, differences which are played up by the media and instead start focusing on how we are so incredibly similar. How we want to live in peace, with love, in harmony. How we want to all rise as one, with grace, with honor and in doing so, we allow others to grasp our hand and to also rise.

In doing so, we will start to address those mental health issues caused by the Tweedle Parties. And hands that have been used to strike our neighbors, our brothers and our sisters with fear and malice can be turned into helping hands of cooperation and love.

Birthdays

Today, August 10, 2022 is my daughter’s 29th birthday. Over the past few years on this day, I have written various messages about her, or fathers in general or eating disorders. Not this year.

This year, just photos … and her own words.

The bond, the love, between a daddy and his daughter.

The bond, the love between a daughter … and her daddy.

If you have children, give them a call, give them a hug … and tell them you love them.

BEACONS OF HOPE FOR THE FUTURE

A number of my past articles have largely leaned toward illustrating some of the more unsavory or questionable issues in the eating disorder community. And yet, there are certainly positive things occurring. People who inspire us through their humility, vision and selfless work. So, let’s highlight some of those good things, people, organizations and events.

Equip

Let’s start with Equip. Equip was started by Kristina Saffran, the co-founder of Project HEAL and Erin Parks, PhD. Recognizing a need for greater access to care and treatment of eating disorders, Saffran and Parks started Equip, an online platform in which a treatment team works with people suffering from eating disorders and their families. All sessions are done online. Equip assigns a five-person treatment team, a physician, therapist, peer mentor, family mentor and dietitian to the family.

Equip uses family-based therapy (FBT) as its methodology. In 2014, the Royal Australian & New Zealand College of Psychiatrists released a comprehensive report stating in part that FBT showed the most promise and highest efficacy rate for adolescents suffering from anorexia nervosa.

By the end of 2022, Equip anticipates being able to operate in all 46 states and the 4 commonwealths in the US and currently is accepted by at least 10 insurance companies.

Investors certainly believe in Equip. Equip has been able to raise $75 million in capital.

Equip issued initial findings regarding its programming. According to at least one article, Equip reported that 71% of its patients reported a reduction in eating disorder symptoms and 96% of parents reported feeling more confident about caring for a child with an eating disorder.

Can Equip provide a more effective long-term solution in the care and treatment of eating disorders? It is far too early to tell. Is this type of treatment, virtual-online, as effective as face-to-face therapy? [I believe that certain important aspects of therapy can only be provided face to face.] Again, time will tell.

What we do know is that Equip is opening new doors and exploring alternative access to care. It is backed with significant funding. Its leaders are respected and driven. We all hope that Equip has a substantive and positive impact on the industry and community and we will be hoping for great, future success.

EDCoalition and the REDC

Kudos must go out to the EDCoalition, the REDC Consortium, its president Jillian Lampert, Center Road Solutions and Katrina Velazquez.  On June 23, 2022, the House of Representatives passed The Anna Westin Legacy Act as part of H.R. 7666, the Restoring Hope for Mental Health and Well-Being Act of 2022.

This bill reauthorizes and expands the National Center of Excellence for Eating Disorders, which provides critical training, screening information, and best practices to primary care providers. The bill authorizes $5 million for each fiscal year from 2023 to 2027 to fund NCEED. The previously adopted act authorized $3.75 million.

These funds are dedicated to adapting screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment models for pediatric patients, expanding in-person and online training modules on eating disorders for physicians, consult with the Department of Defense and the Department of Veteran Affairs on treatment of eating disorders for veterans and military service members and integrate screening, intervention and referral to treatment models into electronic health record systems.

Nicely done.  Progress for one is progress for all.

NEDA

Liz Thompson, the CEO of NEDA and Geoffrey Craddock, the Chairman of the Board of NEDA, are doing an admirable job and have begun to put back together NEDA. When one peruses NEDA’s social media pages, we find a wide diversity of topics. Information about the different types of eating disorders, body diversity, information about important bills being considered in Congress, the importance of research and stigma.

My past interaction with NEDA may lead one to question why I would be including them in “an uncharacteristic, positive article.” Ultimately, when good work is being accomplished, when an organization can in some ways, seemingly reinvent itself, when an organization becomes focused and directed, we should certainly embrace and encourage good works. Ms. Thompson has a proven, past record of success in prior organizations.

A strong focused NEDA can help so many families. And that ultimately should be everyone’s goal … to help families.

Linda and Jack Mazur

The work being done by Linda and Jack Mazur should inspire us all. In 2016 their beloved daughter Emilee was taken after fighting eating disorders for ten years. The revolving door of treatment imposed by insurance companies and the lack of knowledge about eating disorder of medical providers in the late aughts contributed to Emilee’s condition.

Now, Linda and Jack Mazur are fighting back … with humility, knowledge and grace.  Their new podcast series, “Once Shattered, Picking Up the Pieces” is a compelling listen. Their book, “Emilee – The Story of a Girl and Her Family Hijacked by Anorexia” is a must read. In the last month, Jack and Linda also received approval for their 501(c)(3) foundation, “The Emilee Connection.”

Grief certainly impacts each person in different and unique ways. In the case of Linda and Jack, the daily heartache they feel has manifested itself in a manner which provides our shared humanity the opportunity to become bigger, better, more transparent and more soulful.

Families and Patients

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the stories of recovery, of resiliency, of overcoming life-threatening obstacles which are placed before our daughters and sons before they have the chance to find their place in life can’t help but fill us with hope for a greater tomorrow.

When we see the evolution of the heart and embracing of life shown by the many who first suffered from, and then who have overcome this insidious illness, how can that not let your spirit soar? When I see the young people who I have helped get into treatment start to fully live their lives … when I see marriages, and graduations, and laughter and love, when I am called a “second dad,” how can that not be a helping hand extended to lift me up and keep me from drowning in a pool of despair?

The times a parent has told me, “Thank you, you helped save my child’s life,” they can’t possibly know that to me it is, “No … it is you and your beautiful child who are saving mine. For it is you who are keeping my daughter alive in your head and your heart. And the only thing I ask of you for this precious gift is … to pass it on to others. Through your own work, your own passion, your own love.”

That love, that strength, that resiliency, that burning light of hope, is the greatest gift our community has.  The families are the sole reason for this community’s existence.

Our families deserve the absolute best from our community. Because our families are the greatest gift to our community.

The eating disorder community experienced perhaps more than its usual share of oddities, dysfunctionalities, egos out of control and lack of progress in the first half of 2022. And yet, one person managed to elevate herself to the very bottom of the bottom of the barrel.

A New Dr. Death

Jack “Dr.  Death” Kevorkian was a pathologist and euthanasia proponent. In 1997, Dr. Kevorkian was put on trial for his direct role in a case of voluntary euthanasia involving Thomas Youk. Youk suffered from Lou Gehrig’s disease, a/k/a ALS. Kevorkian was convicted of second-degree murder and served 8 years of a 10-to-25-year prison sentence.

In mid-March 2022, for reasons known only to God and broccoli, the Journal of Eating Disorders published an article entitled, “Terminal Anorexia Nervosa: Three Cases and Proposed Clinical Characteristics.”  Its lead author was the new “Dr. Death,” Jennifer L. Gaudiani.

Gaudiani’s article:

(1).     Postulated that severe and enduring anorexia nervosa is a terminal illness;

(2).     Attempted to establish clinical characteristics for those patients whom Gaudiani considers to have Terminal Severe and Enduring Anorexia Nervosa (“TSEAN”);

(3).     Attempted to establish objective, clinical guidelines for TSEAN.

The private response was immediate.

Gaudiani should be commended for accomplishing a herculean task that most considered virtually impossible. And that is … she was able to bring together, to unify as one, all persons, doctors, research professionals, organizations and all other aspects of the eating disorder community and industry in one great, collaborative. To a person, every entity looked upon Gaudiani’s viewpoints with horror and derision. Clinical doctors, research professionals and advocates used the following words to describe Gaudiani’s article, “reprehensible, appalling, irresponsible and horrifying.” Naturally, public admonition came only from those outside of the eating disorder realm since “sacred cows” in the eating disorder community are deemed untouchable. Apparently, no matter what.

Not only was Gaudiani the author of this article, but she was the internist for the three guinea pigs … err, patients who were the subjects of the article. Three souls for whom Gaudiani was complicit in, if not the catalyst for, removing the very last vestige of one of the most important aspects of recovery. That is … hope.

To say there is a legion of troubling issues with Gaudiani’s article and thinking, or lack thereof, would be charitable. Nonetheless, let’s address just a few of the more obvious issues.

First, the article did not mention, let alone explain that severe anorexia can decrease brain volume. Studies indicate that individuals with prolonged anorexia have the most significant reductions in brain volume among all study participants.

Shrinkage of the brain and brain atrophy can affect cognitive functioning. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke states that brain atrophy can result in several health conditions, including:

  • Dementia: Creates problems with memory, abstract thinking, learning, organizing, and planning
  • Aphasias: Involves problems speaking and understanding language
  • Seizures: Characterized by convulsions and sometimes a loss of consciousness

Second, did Gaudiani take into account oxytocin levels in the brain? Research evidence shows that varying levels of oxytocin, a brain chemical, have an impact on anorexia. Now, three new studies of the hormone—best known for its role in bonding lovers to each other and parents to their children—suggest that addressing oxytocin levels may be a viable treatment for anorexia, which as we know, currently has no effective pharmacological medication and relies for the most part on therapy.

Third, Gaudiani’s “treatment” of her patients violate the AMA Code of Ethics Opinion 5.7 which states in material part: Instead of engaging in assisted suicide, physicians must aggressively respond to the needs of patients at the end of life. Physicians:

  1. Should not abandon a patient once it is determined that cure is impossible.
  2. Must respect patient autonomy.
  3. Must provide good communication and emotional support.
  4. Must provide appropriate comfort care and adequate pain control.

Fourth, professional groups, such as the World Medical Association, the British Medical Association, the American Medical Association,and the American Psychiatric Associationhave all expressed unwavering opposition to MAiD.

Forty (40) states in the United States ban assisted suicide.

In an article published in July of 2021 by the Canadian Medical Association Journal entitled, “Deromanticizing medical assistance in dying,” the authors stated in material part as follows:

“Dr. Ashe speaks of providing MAiD as an “intimate and sacred moment.” We trust that he meant the interaction with the suffering patient and family before administration of the medications to end a life. Rocuronium, which paralyzes the neuromuscular junction and terminates life, does not allow for any expression of what the patient is feeling. We do not believe it is in the best interest of others to portray MAiD as something people should seek instead of natural death…”

“… writing about MAiD in a romanticized way may influence vulnerable people to seek MAiD through social learning, whereby they identify with the person portrayed and seek to copy their behaviour. This has been previously reported in 2003 in Switzerland.”

“We would not have the medical advances and healthier, longer lives we have today if previous clinicians all considered an easier death to be the solution to the burden of disease. We need to continue to research and seek ways of preventing and relieving suffering.”

Then there is the ethical aspect, or lack thereof, of Gaudiani’s article. Some ethics experts define Gaudiani’s conduct as abandonment. Bioethics writer Wesley J. Smith, writing in the National Review about abandonment stated, “Then why not allow an intentional, lethal opioid overdose as a “treatment” for opioid use disorder? Once you open the door for one by redefining it as “terminal,” you won’t be able to keep others out. When psychiatrists give up on their mentally ill patients — and indeed, are allowed to help them commit suicide — who will defend the value andcontinued importance of their lives? How will these very unhappy people be kept among us during their darkest days?”

When interviewed, Gaudiani insisted that physician assisted suicide is not suicide: “MAid (Medical Assistance in dying) is offered to individuals whose death is inevitable within six months from an underlying disease process; it provides patients a choice in how they die, not whether they die. It is not a means of suicide.” “When death is inevitable?” “… not a means of suicide?” Good Lord.

Gaudiani’s statement is nothing more than pedantic sophistry. Choosing a place, a method, and a time to end one’s own life is suicide. Besides no doctor can predict with certainty how long a patient will live. Treating MAiD as a natural end to life for anorexia sufferers is at best, medical neglect. At worst it is aiding and abetting negligent homicide. Doctors persevere with patients who suffer from cancer or heart disease or diabetes for years. But apparently, Gaudiani has become “Karnak the Magnificent,” who can accurately divine a date of death and assist in administering the final coup de gras. 

As recently as last month, The Denver Post published an op-ed article eviscerating Gaudiani.

I have spoken with at least two parents whose daughters are suffering from anorexia. Each parent was disheartened by Gaudiani’s article. Each had previously respected and looked up to Gaudiani. But that was before. That was before Gaudiani became the perverse proponent of removing that final, tenuous grasp of life to which so many people cling … and that is hope.

Desmond Tutu is credited with saying, “Hope is being able to see there is light despite all of the darkness.” Without question, hope is that one last flickering candle in a room of darkness and despair.

Gaudiani seeks to extinguish that candle.

Imagine being in that dark room of despair, afraid and in pain. One lone candle sitting on a table. Its light, flickering, the wick slowly burning down, the one last vestige of light barely hanging on. You then discern a spectral figure in the room. And suddenly, dark eyes appear, staring at you. You then hear a haunting voice barely above a whisper murmur, “All … hope … is … gone.” You sense, you feel a puff of breath. And then, that last light, all hope, your very life, is extinguished.

Plunging you into permanent darkness.

Pronouns, “Mispronouning” and its Consequences

So, your child’s eating disorder has progressed to a level requiring residential treatment. Her physical health is impacted. His mental and emotional well-being is impaired. The biological aspects of this illness have compromised their ability to think, to reason and at times, to save their own lives. You live in a grey twilight every day fearing that today will be the day you receive that horrific call that any parent dreads.

Now, envision as you are talking with your beloved child on the telephone she tells you, “Daddy, while we were discussing my pronouns in group therapy today …”

Discussion of Pronouns?

In group therapy?

For (hopefully) lifesaving, eating disorder treatment

Pronouns?

Lest you think that is Twilight Zone thinking and would never happen … It has and is continuing to happen. And it has caused harm.

On at least two occasions, I have been approached by mothers whose daughters were in treatment. On both occasions, each daughter stated how uncomfortable it was for her to be subjected to the “pronoun merry-go-round.” [my term]

And so once again, we find the mental health treatment arena being hijacked by social justice warrior, left-wing radical political activists. Activists whose goal is not to lead the way to a greater understanding of the biological, genetic and physiological aspects of eating disorders. Instead, their goal is to dictate the ideological and linguistic territory leading to authoritarian control over the manner in which our loved ones receive care and treatment for mental health issues.

We are living in a “microaggression culture” where young persons have been raised to believe themselves and their experiences to be universally unique and therefore demanding of heightened levels of sensitivity and respect. Just as no two actual snowflakes are exactly alike (mostly because their composition is affected by their journey to the ground) the metaphorical versions are known for fragile hypersensitivity born of narcissism. This is the generation which was gifted participation trophies and where mommy and daddy swooped in to their rescue at the slightest hint of adversity.

So, in order to not cause undue stress upon the Snowflake Generation, and to ensure that they are receiving the absolute best eating disorder/mental health care possible, let’s review the latest university-based studies on how best to incorporate the proper use of pronouns into eating disorder group therapy sessions.

Uh … ok.

Let’s lower the bar a bit. How about ANY independent, reputable third-party research study on how best to incorporate the proper use of pronouns into eating disorders group therapy sessions?

And yet …

Forcing patients receiving eating disorder treatment in residential programs to discuss pronouns is happening every weekday. Even though there is no basis in research. No connection between pronouns and recovery from the various eating disorders. No reputable reasoning supporting incorporating pronouns into the therapy arena. And taking valuable time away from actual evidence-based therapies.

So, questions must be asked … why are some treatment centers and so-called professionals doing that? Why are unsanctioned, unresearched talking points being incorporated into eating disorders group therapy? Particularly a topic grounded in social justice activism such as pronouns.

Ok, let’s discuss pronouns. First, let’s review the number of pronouns. After conducting some research, I found a website containing this list of pronouns:

  • all
  • another
  • any
  • anybody
  • anyone
  • anything
  • as
  • aught
  • both
  • each
  • each other
  • either
  • enough
  • everybody
  • everyone
  • everything
  • few
  • he
  • her
  • hers
  • herself
  • him
  • himself
  • his
  • I
  • idem
  • it
  • its
  • itself
  • many
  • me
  • mine
  • most
  • my
  • myself
  • naught
  • neither
  • no one
  • nobody
  • none
  • nothing
  • nought
  • one
  • one another
  • other
  • others
  • ought
  • our
  • ours
  • ourself
  • ourselves
  • several
  • she
  • some
  • somebody
  • someone
  • something
  • somewhat
  • such
  • suchlike
  • that
  • thee
  • their
  • theirs
  • theirself
  • theirselves
  • them
  • themself
  • themselves
  • there
  • these
  • they
  • thine
  • this
  • those
  • thou
  • thy
  • thyself
  • us
  • we
  • what
  • whatever
  • whatnot
  • whatsoever
  • whence
  • where
  • whereby
  • wherefrom
  • wherein
  • whereinto
  • whereof
  • whereon
  • wherever
  • wheresoever
  • whereto
  • whereunto
  • wherewith
  • wherewithal
  • whether
  • which
  • whichever
  • whichsoever
  • who
  • whoever
  • whom
  • whomever
  • whomso
  • whomsoever
  • whose
  • whosever
  • whosesoever
  • whoso
  • whosoever
  • ye
  • yon
  • yonder
  • you
  • your
  • yours
  • yourself
  • yourselves

Then of course, there are the “gender neutral, gender inclusive pronouns”:

HE/SHEHIM/HERHIS/HERHIS/HERSHIMSELF/HERSELF
ziezimzirziszieself
siesiehirhirshirself
eyemeireirseirself
vevervisversverself
teytertemtersterself
eemeireirsemself

If you are going to enforce pronouns on people suffering from eating disorders, you need a complete list.

Since some are attempting to impose their “Pronouns With No Research Basis” agenda in the care and treatment of eating disorders without consequences or push back, one is justified in wondering how much further things will devolve. Will gender identities and gender expression become part of the eating disorder treatment lexicon?

If the social justice warrior, left-wing radical political activist in the guise of a therapist seeks to “educate and inform” eating disorder patients about “their gender identity’ and “gender expression” isn’t that a clear example of radical social constructionists bullying opponents into submission?

Certainly, bullying tactics are not an uncommon weapon utilized by the radical political activist. For example, a school district in Wisconsin recently opened a Title IX sexual harassment investigation. This investigation is not being conducted against teachers, nor administrators nor teacher volunteers nor any district employees. No.

This investigation is being conducted against three, 8th grade boys. So what was their heinous crime?

They are accused of using the “wrong pronouns” by not using a student’s preferred “they/them” pronouns. 

The “thought police” at the Kiel Area School District apparently believe that any so-called “mispronouning” is punishable speech under Title IX. Imagine a finding of sexual harassment perpetrated by your child becoming part of your child’s education file. That allegation could haunt those three, 8th grade boys for decades. Certainly, impacting college admissions and beyond. All for the horrific crime of mispronouning.

The Kiel Area School District appears to believe that any “mispronouning” is punishable speech under Title IX. During the investigation of these claims, attorneys for the families discovered information revealing that a young female student was given in-school suspension for “sexual harassment” based on a single statement using an allegedly “wrong” pronoun—and the statement was said to a third party, not even to the allegedly “misgendered” student.

To compound an already ridiculous situation, on Thursday, May 26, 2022, the District announced it had closed the Title IX investigation. However after receiving public backlash against their actions (allegedly also including bomb threats), the District and its community announced it had cancelled its annual Memorial Day Parade and the remainder of the school year would be conducted virtually.

Community events. In person education. All cancelled. A community infighting. Anger. Hatred. Division. Because of mispronouning.

Make no mistake. If a treatment professional wishes to parade their virtue signaling by utilizing pronouns, that is certainly their right and … privilege. They are ostensibly adults not receiving eating disorder treatment. In addition, if a patient in treatment during individual therapy wishes to address his/her pronouns and the manner in which it is impacting them, by all means address it. After obtaining that patient’s consent, utilize that as part of the overall manner in which bullying and trauma can exacerbate eating disorders. Take intelligent action and responsible conduct. A person’s heart is more accurately shown through their actions and conduct and not just their words or how they “label” themselves.

However, with regard to mandatory inclusion of discussing pronouns in treatment centers which drag that societal affectation into the eating disorder group therapy rooms, I am going to do something I have never done before …

MOMS, DADS … IF YOUR CHILD IS IN A TREATMENT CENTER OR PROGRAM IN WHICH “PRONOUNS” ARE A MANDATORY, REGULAR ASPECT OF GROUP COUNSELING, GET YOUR CHILD OUT OF THAT PROGRAM IMMEDIATELY. YOU MAY ALSO WISH TO CONTACT YOUR INSURANCE BENEFITS PROVIDER AND ADVISE IT THAT THAT PARTICULAR ACTIVITY IS GOING ON IN THAT TREATMENT CENTER.

Moms … dads … your child is the most precious thing in your heart. Don’t have your loved one’s care and treatment be sabotaged by those who place political correctness and social engineering over the welfare of your beloved child.