Anorexia: words are adjectives, labels, and some are lifestyles. From a medical point of view, people who are anorexia nervosa, a fatal and sorrowful disease, are such people. This term can be paraphrased as "nervous anorexia", but I know that anyone working on this disease is ongoing. In fact, the appetite of eating disorder patients has not decreased; there are more. Many people think that eating disorders are slimming, diet therapy or a choice of attention; they do not see the inner spirit.
Waste: memoir of Maria Hornbach's anorexia and bulimia. Vivid, honest, emotionally painful, wasted is that Marya Hornbacher willingly accept memoirs such as starvation, drugs, sex, and death. Everyone has something for Robin Roberts. With elegance, heart and humor, Roberts wrote an article about overcoming breast cancer, but only five years later, she learned that bone marrow transplantation is necessary to fight rare blood disorders It was. Great pain to support and love her family and friends and see her through difficult times
Waste: Memoirs of anorexia and bulimia are autobiographies written by Marya Hornbacher and detailed on the 14-year struggle with eating disorders. Wasted, announced by Langdon Building in 1998, has had significant commercial success. The youth of the author (a book she wrote at the age of 21) surprised many readers, and this memoir was praised for its maturity and frankness. In the commentary of the New York Times, Caroline Nap added the book as "an unwavering and unwavering view of eating disorders" and added, "When you are discussing the details of eating disorders and their origins in detail." These phenomena are not new to literature on eating disorders, but Hornbach explained these phenomena with a clear and straightforward approach, both of which caught the pain. I also caught a potential purpose. "