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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To have asked friend to curb this destructive cycle when she is staying at my house (sensitive topic, potential triggers)

30 replies

HourOrTwo · 16/04/2015 15:57

One of my close friends has suffered on-and-off from bulimia for 18 years. She had treatment as a teenager but refuses more treatment as she doesn't want it to go on medical records because of career. She also says it helps her control her weight (she's underweight) and says she doesn't want to stop yet. In past I've done everything I can think of to help her but i've accepted she has to want to get better first.

Anyway when she stayed with me recently, she binged on junk-food every night then went to toilet after every binge to vomit it all up. She openly admitted doing this. It annoyed me because I felt whole visit was centred around her binge-vomit cycle. Eg as DH and DD were away we'd planned a cosy night in, chatting by fireside, but she made the whole evening about food. We cooked a meal but then she wanted to cook bacon and sausages as well, then heat up soup, then desserts from freezer, crisps, chocolate etc and went to make herself sick every 30 mins or so. She was still cooking food at midnight. She was distant and preoccupied. When she did same the following 2 nights I felt really pissed off as it was like she'd only come to eat my food (and waste it) and wasn't even trying to curb the urge to do so. I appreciate she felt she was on holiday and was comfortable enough with me not to care I knew what she was doing, but for me it ruined the visit. Also the bathroom reeked of vomit. I tried to talk to her about it but she didn't want to discuss it.

She recently did same thing at a friend's wedding (binging on the wedding buffet then being sick in toilets every half an hour). A mutual friend heard her being sick and asked me if she was ok, I had to cover for her and say she'd had a bad reaction to something. It was really obvious that she was eating way more than anyone else, e.g. loading her plate with 6 different desserts.

So this time when she came to stay with me, I took her aside on arrival and very gently explained i don't want her to binge-vomit in my house, particularly as DH and DD are here this time. I told her how it makes me feel, and said i'll do anything to help, but said I can't stand by while she actively chooses to do this.
I also mentioned the wedding and how it was inappropriate to binge since she was part of bridal party and it wasn't her food to waste.
WIBU?

She got upset and cried, we talked, and she agreed not to do it this time.
To her credit, she did not binge. However, she also hardly ate anything, would only eat very low-calorie foods like vegetables and salad, and asked if she could take some of the other food home. I said yes, not realising she would fill her suitcase with food from my kitchen, and package up as much food from our fridge as she could (e.g. cake, desserts, cheese and other things she had declined to eat at the time, not just taking a couple of slices but cutting off huge chunks e.g. she cut an apple pie in half and wrapped it in clingfilm, did the same with cake, leftover pizza etc). DD asked me why she was doing this, I didn't know what to say.

I didn't say anything to friend this time, but now she wants to plan next visit and I don't know what (if anything) I should say to her about the food issues.
I know she needs help and support but she won't accept professional help.

OP posts:
Crocodopolis · 16/04/2015 18:34

OP, you sound very supportive.

If I were in your situation I would tell my friend that I was sorry but did not feel that I could have her stay with me.

kathryng90 · 16/04/2015 18:53

My sister in law is bulimic and I feel for you. She stays at our house every Christmas and binges here. Year before last she ate a pan of (raw) sprouts, all the cooked pigs in blankets and the Christmas pud all on Christmas Eve so we couldn't replace it for Christmas dinner. She drinks pure orange juice as this makes it easier for her to vomit and I found myself arguing with my partner last Christmas cos I wanted to buy value orange juice and she wanted branded! But when it's just wasted.. However I know it's an illness and she really has little control over it. She's in her 40s now and been doing it for decades. Had counselling and broken relationships from it and it prevents her having children. I feel so desperately sorry for her (when I am not cursing the food wastage) and at a loss of how to help.

alwaysstaytoolong · 16/04/2015 19:05

My professional work with ED in the past makes me agree that it is unusual that she is not engaging in this behaviour secretly.

I also feel that continuing to have her visit and behave like this is enabling her. You are kind and understanding but you are also being complicit in her illness - saying I know you do this and it's ok to do it here.

As previous posters have said, you probably wouldn't do it if she was abusing alcohol and I'm 99% sure (because I don't know you obviously) that you wouldn't allow her to use illicit substances in your house or self- harm. But that is essentially what she is doing, harming herself and feeding an 'addiction'.

You can be her friend, care and understand but you need to stop letting her harm herself in your house and tell her that.

I also don't think you are being judgemental at all!.

Georgethesecond · 16/04/2015 19:11

No way would I have her stay again. If you still want to be her friend, what are the logistics, what other options are practical? I would keep her well away from my kids tbh, while her mental health is this bad.

Lucyloves101 · 17/04/2015 08:42

I wonder if she is very envious of your life, there seems to be something quite significant in her desire to binge on your food, your post reads like there is something pretty deep and destructive going on in addition to the bulimia. How do you feel when she leaves? She is obviously very ill and I think you are being a very good friend, but bulimia is a hungry disease that will ravage family and friend supplies for the victim too.

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