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The Difference Between Diet and Disorder
How to know when something healthy has turned into something not.
by Amia Ross
at Harvard University
What 3 Professional Ballerinas Eat in a Day
Spoiler alert: it's not what you're thinking.
by Ella Rubin
at High School
This Woman Is Making a Difference in the Food World By Spreading Self-Love and Body Positivity
Society is a mess and I would be lying if it wasn't one of the leading causes that influenced the development of my eating disorder. If it wasn't for Daphne Fischer, I wouldn't be where I am today.
by Madison Parmiter
at James Madison University
Orthorexia: When Healthy Eating Becomes Detrimental
How my obsession with "clean eating" gave way to an eating disorder.
by Maddie Ross
at University of Michigan
What It’s Like Living With Anorexia
My Eating Disorder Changed My Life. I have had Anorexia for two years now and have been on the road to recovery for about a year at this point and it turns your life upside down.
by Madison Parmiter
at James Madison University
How to Survive the Holidays With an Eating Disorder
Take it from someone who knows.
by Evan Vehslage
at New York University
Rougamo: The Chinese Burger That Trumps A Hamburger Any Day
Explore the legendary Chinese Sandwich, while discovering the roots of pasta.
by Tommy Xiao
at Boston University
What Is Intuitive Eating? What Is it Not?
If you're counting calories or tracking macros, you're doing it wrong.
by Gabriela Cantero
at American University
How to Begin Recovering from an Eating Disorder in College
I advocate for food freedom and positive body image! Let's DITCH diet culture and ENJOY eating.
by Spoon University
at Spoon HQ
Benefits to Tracking Macros vs. Counting Calories
Good weight, muscles, healthiness, and happiness? That's really all possible to have at once?
by Lynne Sustersic
at Ohio University
How to avoid being TOO healthy
You'd be surprised how common this is.
by Megan Waldron
at Bucknell University
To My Former Eating Disorder
I hate you, but thank you.
by Danielle Clark
at CU Boulder