Young Carers
Being
a Young Carer
For someone with an Eating Disorder
What is a young carer?
A young carer helps or supports someone in their family or where they
live who is unwell. You may feel different to other people and not able
to talk about it.
“My brother was a young carer to me when I was at University the
same university as him, though I was living in a land of denial and
maybe he was blinkered to the pressure I must have put on him, he was
a young carer.
I was anorexic, and then bulimic, I hurt myself in many ways infact
I do not know how he managed to cope or not seem to notice the
chaos and madness around him. Perhaps he found ways to cope by working
long hours
I stole his food, I ate form the bin, I stored rotten vegetables
under the stairs, I vomited lots and he remained calm and unconditional.
I do not know if he spoke to others about how it was but we lived
with a silence about this and talked if we met about other surface
things.
He helped me with work, he lent me his car but we both colluded to
the unpleasant silence and paralysis of the voice that my eating disorder
brought to out house through my thinness and my fatness he was just
how he always was.
I cannot imagine how he managed to be successfully and share his
house with a sister who was clearly unwell and in complete denial of
her illness.”
Young carers have problems and worries like other growing and developing
young people.
You may need to find someone at home or at University who you
can talk to about how you feel and your own personal things as well
as caring things like being away from home while they are so unwell
at home.
You may want to check that they are offering you a confidential space
and not gong to go behind your back to do or say anything
It is nice when someone asks how you are for a change not just
about the person with an eating difficulty or your parents.
Why won’t my mum eat? Why do I take her breakfast every morning and
she says thank you in such a cross way that I think she is angry with
me and doesn’t love me, I worry about her I don't think she eats and
then when she is out I go in her room and find the toast I made for
her lying under her bed. Why?
What will happen when I leave home or go out?
As a young carer with a parent who has an eating disorder may find
yourself
- Cooking and trying to feed them
- Ringing home to check they are ok
- Going home when you don’t have lectures to check up on them
- Trying to make them happy
- Worrying about being away from home and wondering how they are all
day,
- Wondering if they will be home or in hospital when you get back from
school work , college or University,
- You may not go out with friends because you worry and feel guilty
that they are not ok and phone them lots every day
- You may feel ashamed and me embarrassed to tell anyone how it is
at home or to let any friends come home incase they see how things
really are
- You may be picked on and teased
- You may find yourself coming home to empty cupboards
- You may never have your tea made for you
- At home you may have to eat the same thing everyday
- You may not understand why they never eat or ate with you or disappear
/ed after meals
- You may begin to adapt their pattern and relationship towards food
and yourself.
- You may look towards some other way of coping with the feelings you
bury
- You may wish to live with someone else and to be looked after but
you continue to look after feed and care for your relative.
"My parents are worried about my sister she has lost lots of
weight. I feel ashamed I wonder what I have done wrong. They notice
her I don’t think they care about me. I have said to her to go to the
doctor she says it is ok, I watched her at school, I tried to make
her eat, I stayed with her at break times, I didn't have my own friends
well maybe my friend and what keeps us together is her anorexia. I
am worried how she will survive now I am off to University. What will
happen?"
As a young carer with a sibling with an eating disorder you may
find yourself
- Not getting as much time or attention at home
- You may feel jealous of the time they get
- You may feel guilty for not having and eating disorder
- You may feel very conscious about what you eat and how you look or
you may not care at all
- You may look for other ways top cope with you sad, angry along and
other feelings
- You may worry about them dying or going to hospital
- You may wish for you parents to love you as much as they seem to
love your sibling
- You may wish to leave home and be afraid to incase anything goes
wrong and feel continually anxious
- You may find yourself watching your sibling to see if they
eat
- You may protect them from exposure to others and keep them under
your wing
- You may get teased and bullied
- You may not understand why they can’t just eat and be “normal
- You may wish you had someone to talk to about how it is for you.
- You may find your studies suffer because you think about them and
wonder if they are ok.
- You may choose to stay away from home as much as possible
- You may feel responsible for them and helpless to do anything about
their situation.
"Look
out for your mate they may have an eating disorder”
How may I know if my mate has an Eating disorder?
You may notice several of the following indicators that your mate
is struggling with food problems:
- Do they not eat with you?
- Do they seem not to eat?
- Do they buy lots of food and it all disappears quickly?
- Do they become anxious and agitated around meal times?
- Do they spend a lot of time alone?
- Do they seem to push you away?
- Do they seem happier with people who they see outside home?
- Do you feel like whatever you do is wrong?
- Do they weigh themselves lots?
- Do they have fixed patterns and routines?
- Do they seem obsessed with their body?
- Do they spend hours on trainingfor fitness?
- Do they study for hours and is nothing ever good enough?
- Do you feel like you do not know them anymore?
- Do they rush to the toilet after eating?
- Do they seem very cold and tired?
- Do they not sleep?
- Have they lost weight?
- Are they always on a Diet?
These are all possible indicators of an eating disorder
Visit www.swedauk.org for more factual information.
Supporting someone else
It can be very difficult and exhausting for both you and your mate when
one of you has an eating disorder. It is important to look after yourself.
Being at University is hard, you are away from home and studying in
a new environment.
A house mate’s eating disorder can have a huge impact on your life style.
It is important that you are able to feel comfortable and at home in
your home. It is important that you can put in clear boundaries about
what is ok for you.
This may be hard especially knowing your mate is having a tough time
in the next room. If you don’t put in clear limits you may find that
you get angry and resent your mate and that will make it difficult for
both of you as the eating disorder will encroach on both of your lives.
Being a good Friend.
Their eating difficulties are not yours, you are not there to fix them
if you think you can do this you will definitely feel inadequate. No
one can make someone better from an Eating Disorder, you can support
your mate on their journey, you can listen and be there and support them
to get to the med. centre, G.P. , Nurse, S.U. Welfare officer or Uni.
Counsellor or to contact 18-25‘s to find what other help
is about.
When I feel rejected?
Sometimes people have tried to be very kind. They have asked their mate,
how did you sleep, how was your day? How are you feeling ? All in an
attempt to let their friend know that they are there to offer support
and that they care.
For someone with an Eating Disorder this may seem like you are intruding
in their life, and they may become angry and shut you out more. Yet if
you ask no questions it may seem like you don’t care?
So how do I support them?
- If you are able to be there when it’s ok for you that will be a
great help.
- If you can sit and watch the TV together without having to talk or
ask questions that too can help.
- Offering to go together out to town/ shopping, and accept if they
say no being quiet with someone can be the best gift and the hardest
to offer.
If you find it hard then you can book to see the counsellor or email
the 18-25 Project.
Get support for yourself.
Remember in life it is often the people we trust the most who
we hurt the most.
This does not make it ok to be hurt though You have the right
to say NO email us for support at
support@swedauk.org
Why won’t they just eat?
It is important to know that eating disorders are not just about food.
They are a psychological condition that affects the whole inside person.
What you see is their way with food and their bodies, this is an indicator
of something being difficult inside, things that may have no words.
They look better so why aren’t they?
Someone may have put on weight and this can often leave the person in
a more difficult place. They are trying to manage their difficult inside
feelings and to study and try life without reverting back to their old
food ways. In a place of finding their life solutions your mate may need
and be able to accept more support.
Remember having an eating disorder is not like having a small cut
that heals outside and is gone.
The outside person may seem healed and the inside person may still
hurt but there is no plaster to say I am hurting inside. The pain may
be invisible to us on the outside .
Support at University
It may seem like there is no point in going to speak to someone about
all this because nothing changes. You may be fed up with all the support
you are giving or you may find that you want to understand more or to
help your friend and other people at Uni.
Perhaps you would be interested in starting up an eating disorders Training
with NSLP ( National Student Learning Programme) or in training to be
a volunteer at Uni.
You may want to set up a support group for friends who help mates with
an eating disorder or indeed for people who have eating disorders.
We are happy to help train you and set up support groups at your University.
In order to do this we often meet with interested students, the student
Union President, Student welfare staff, University Counsellors, Tutors
and people who are interested to see what is the best way forward at
your University.
So do contact the 18-25 Team -
admin@swedauk.org
Caring—The unpaid job
Caring is a tough relentless job. It takes enormous strength and
dedication to be a carer and even more to create your own life.
It is tough being a Young Carer. It is a difficult and unpaid job, often
with people with eating disorders you will see little changes and feel
that it is all too much to manage.
It is important to look after yourself, build up a life for yourself,
find out how to help and who else can help you are not responsible for
the person who has an eating disorder you are responsible for looking
after you. You cannot make them well , you can support them by helping
yourself Sometimes it is really important to have a counsellor of friends
you can talk to and talk about how you feel and things that are happening
in your own life.
It may feel as if you lose out big time on things that other young people
have and do like friends, parties, social occasions, youth clubs, school
trips and residentials which makes doing these things when you are away
at University or college very hard to do and scary.
As a young Carer
You have the rights to
A good education
Love from your family
Your own time and space
Your own friends and life
Your own independence
Help and someone to talk to about how you feel
Protection from their emotional pain and distress.
You may want to check the NICE guidelines at www.nice.org to
see if your relative is getting the support from the NHS they need and
if you could get some support and family therapy to help you. Also look
in your area for voluntary and self help groups.
The national EDA has a contact
list.
Think about the caring you do
If you were going to write and tell someone about the real life of a
young carer what would they need to know?
- Imagine your friend or someone you knew and you did a house swap
write about
- What would their daily routine be?
- What would their worries and fears be?
- What is the worst thing about being a young carer?
- What is the best thing about being a young carer?
- What is the best thing about being you?
- How do you feel about you?
- What things do your friends do that you would like to be able to
do?
- What do you wish you could say to the person you are caring for?
- What breaks do you get?
- What help would you like?
- Write a job description for all you do.
- Draw a cartoon story that shows how you live your days , what you
do in the holidays.
- What are the situations you dread?
- How would you advice this friend to deal with them?
- Draw a picture of you and how it feels to be you
Talk to a tutor, teacher or counsellor, doctor or social worker
about how you feel
Possible Strategies for you
If you are at school, perhaps you can ask to have a mobile to phone
home at lunchtime and speak to your parent or sibling.
Before you leave home you may want to talk to your family GP about your
worries and let him/her be responsible to make sure your parent/ sibling
is well. You don’t have to hold secrets that people may ask you to do,
suggest they go with you to the doctor and talk about things if they
wont tell them you are worried and it is too painful for you to watch
and you are going to the doctor for advice of what to do for yourself.
Maybe you can find a quiet space to eat lunch with your sibling.
You may speak to student welfare to help you adjust to college and uni
life.
Maybe you and your sibling can be on different sittings at lunch and
be in different tutor groups or courses. If your parent ask you to go
to the same Uni to look after you sibling you can say NO.
Maybe the teachers and lectures can understand the pressures you
are under if you tell them and help you with homework deadlines and with
exam situations
Perhaps you can speak to your tutor , doctor or a counsellor each week
or if you are very worried or anxious
Perhaps there is a quiet room where you can go on campus if it gets
too much.
Create a list of places you can get help , so that could be your emergency
numbers, and contacts as well as places for you to go and be safe and
understood. It is better to know these things and have prepared strategies
to manage situations.
Where can you be heard and get support
National carers association, 20/25 Glasshouse Yard, London
EC1A 4JS Telephone 01714908818 or Carers Line 01714908898
National carers line 0345 537369
Samaritans 0345 90 90 90 or Sane line 0345 678000
Anti bullying campaign 01713781446
SWEDA helpline 01458 448611
Co-dependents Anonymous may have groups in your area too |