Project HEAL - Louisiana Chapter

Project HEAL - Louisiana Chapter Looking for volunteers in the Louisiana area! Hey this is Eleanor and Ashley, the two Co-founders of Project HEAL's Louisiana Chapter.

We created this chapter with one goal in mind: to make a difference in the lives of those in need. Yes, we’re just two goofy teenagers that are still trying to conquer the beast known as high school. However, we are also two young women driven by both a desire to help and our own personal battles with body image and eating disorders to make some positive change in the world. With that said, again

welcome. Eleanor and I will be posting often, providing you all with updates on the program, upcoming events, inspirational messages and pictures, personal stories, and even some silly stuff so you can get to know us better ;). We thank you and hope that you’re inspired to find out more about Project Heal. Bear Hugs,

Ashley and Eleanor :)

Help co-founder Kristina Saffran and her research team at Stanford to further research on social media, eating disorder ...
04/07/2015

Help co-founder Kristina Saffran and her research team at Stanford to further research on social media, eating disorder treatment, and recovery by completing a short survey to explore the Facebook usage of individuals who have received treatment for an eating disorder in a group setting. This survey is completely anonymous and only takes 15-20 minutes to complete. Please help us to advance knowledge on the eating disorder recovery process by using the following link:
https://qtrial2015ut1.ut1.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_0lDbMKHkRfEq5BH
Please only fill out this survey if you have been treated for an eating disorder (either currently or in the past) in a group setting. This may include inpatient, residential, partial hospitalization, and/or intensive outpatient treatment (that included a group component) or participating in an outpatient therapy group. This does not include individual outpatient treatment – that is, if you have only ever received treatment for an eating disorder in individual outpatient therapy (and have never received treatment for an eating disorder in a group setting), you are not eligible for this study at this time.

Qualtrics sophisticated online survey software solutions make creating online surveys easy. Learn more about Research Suite and get a free account today.

02/26/2014

What do we know about the brain and eating disorders? How can we learn more? Listen in as Drs. B. Timothy Walsh and Joanna Steinglass discuss a range of areas under investigation. [ 33 more words. ]

Get involved!
02/23/2014

Get involved!

Tomorrow is the start of NEDA week!!
02/23/2014

Tomorrow is the start of NEDA week!!

At 15 years old, McCall Dempsey developed an eating disorder. She restricted her calories, binged, purged and used diet pills and laxatives regularly for the next 15 years.

02/09/2014

We are rebuilding the chapter one step at a time. In the future we will probably see the Louisiana chapter become the Tulane chapter or the New Orleans chapter. I want to thank everyone for their help, and if anyone is interested in helping set up the tulane chapter please email us at [email protected]

01/03/2014

It doesn't matter how slowly you go, as long as you don't stop.

Food for thought
12/28/2013

Food for thought

How much stress are you carrying around? Do you feel burdened by life’s circumstances and emotional issues? Becoming more grounded and happy starts with letting go of worry and stress. I learned this

12/25/2013

Happy holidays everyone!!

12/05/2013

It's all in the photos

11/20/2013

Project HEAL and Christina Grasso of Project HEAL New York City Chapter respond to Tuthmosis's recent post titled, “5 Reasons to Date a Girl with an Eating Disorder.”

Dear Tuthmosis,
On behalf of Project HEAL, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that raises funds to provide treatment scholarships to those suffering from eating disorders who are unable to afford treatment, I would like to respond to your recent post titled, “5 Reasons to Date a Girl with an Eating Disorder.”

It seems you spent quite a while concocting this piece of literature, and it is fairly obvious to us that you did so to elicit a reaction. It is against our very nature to respond to these types of cowardly outcries, as we are extremely tolerant of general ignorance and contrasting beliefs, and really hate to feed into your desperate plea for 5 minutes of internet notoriety. However, your exercising our freedom of speech has inspired us to do just the same.

That being said, however, we also have the right to remain silent. I had become quite adept at practicing this amendment over the course of my illness; perhaps I could give you a few pointers, hmm? After all, practice makes perfect. Eating disorders, however, do not make perfect. I know all too well. After all, I am recovering from one that spanned over half of my life. Silence nearly killed me, and it was due to fear of judgment as appalling as your own. In the past few years, I have encountered so many positive, good-hearted people that I thought maybe our society was on the upswing. Maybe eating disorders had, unfortunately, become so prevalent that, finally, people started to recognize these illnesses for what they truly are: deadly biological diseases to which no race, s*x, religion, or class, has immunity. To our dismay, and after reading your garbage, it seems we have a long way to go still if this disease, which claims the lives of up to 1 in 5 who suffer, is still misunderstood as a cute, trendy habit that a young woman parades around like the “it” bag of the season, only to toss in a pile a few months later never to be seen again.

No. Just no. Since you have your heart set on finding a girlfriend who has a “good old-fashioned eating disorder,” perhaps you should stake out one of our nation’s many treatment centers specializing in treating this disease to court a patient who is just your type. Now, we don’t want to ruin the surprise for you, but consider yourself warned: eating disorders are not s*xy. And instead of the moderately weight-obsessed, self-disciplined, wealthy, good-in-bed, American dream, this is what you are more likely to find:

A woman (or man), whose preoccupation with his or her body is so extreme that even if he or she has a body you deem attractive, you might never have the privilege of being seen hand-in-hand in public, because isolation is one of the hallmark traits of an eating disorder. This person may or may not join you for dinner, and if he or she is willing to leave his or her house and join you for a food-related activity (unlikely), he or she will probably not be the cheap date for which you are hoping. As someone who has suffered, I can tell you that we are particularly good at hiding things, which means if your significant other is prone to restricting, he or she may very well order a pricey, elaborate feast only to push around the plate and keep your suspicions at bay. And if you’re thinking he or she will pick up the tab using Daddy Warbuck’s plastic, bear in mind that Project HEAL would not exist if all people suffering from eating disorders were incredibly well-to-do. Treatment is exorbitantly expensive, and rarely covered by insurance. So even if your love comes from money, his or her parents may still be strapped for cash trying to foot the bill which means, possibly having to take out a second mortgage, dipping into retirement savings, and no treating you to dinner. Sorry. And I really hope you don’t enjoy your bedroom life too much, because for many eating disorder sufferers, all “pent up insecurity” is expended through starving, or bingeing, or purging, or all three, demolishing any trace of libido and leaving little left over for your s*x life.

As satisfying as it might feel, we are not going to sit here and belittle you as you have done to the approximate 25 million men and women across the United States who suffer from an eating disorder, and the thousands of others who have tragically perished. Instead, we want to let you know that we truly feel sad for you that you have no empathy for those who struggle, and that you harbor the negative energy to compose such a malicious attack against such a large, diverse part of society. You seem creative and driven; it’s disheartening to see those qualities go to waste on somebody who uses them improperly to hurt others.

As much as we wish we had never read any of this to begin with, I am somewhat disappointed the article has been removed. You deserve for this to be written in stone because if this is truly, truly how sick your perspective is, it would be extremely toxic for you to have future girlfriends, a wife, or a daughter, and they deserve to know how you really feel. And even if it was published solely to drive traffic to what appears to be a pathetic excuse for a blog, you deserve every bit of negative backlash that comes your way.

We hope you learn from this how much anguish you have caused your readers. Most of all, we hope you find an outlet to effectively deal with your own issues, of which there seem to be many, so that you no longer have to take a hit at a population of sick, vulnerable individuals to deal with your own inadequacy. We are much stronger than you think, and the only way we would ever date you is if you were auctioned off to us for charity, with the profits to benefit our treatment scholarship fund.

Sincerely,
Christina
Project HEAL Public Relations

11/12/2013

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New Orleans, LA

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