Annoymous poster - I value your feedback and opinion. I disagree with your interpretation of my feedback to moonbeam.
what makes you think she is not at the point of dying
At no point did I state she is or is not at "at the point of dying."
If moonbeam is "at the point of dying," then the therapist would be committing serious negligence by ONLY setting an appointment with the nutritionist. The GP would be negligent as well. It is uncommon for multiple professionals to be that negligent. It does happen from time to time. Perhaps moonbeam is "at the point of dying" and multiple professionals are putting their licences on the line and allowing someone to die without taking steps to hospitalize her. That is when they would have a duty to act irregardless of moonbeams desires.
It seems more likely they are worried about her wellbeing, appropriately taking this problem seriously, and trying to make sure she doesn't end up "at the point of dying" and setting up appointments for her to get more help and support around this.
Self starvation is a very serious issue, to be sure. There are degrees of struggles with self starvation. There are degrees of appropriate intervention. It is not as black and white as either no problem or the person is about to die. It is possible to struggle with self starvation and need only some additional outpatient providers to work through it in order to avoid becoming "at the point of death." I am one such person who only needed a couple of visits with a good nutritionist to re-develop healthy eating patterns again. Other people need more help. It varies person to person.
It sounds like you had a much more severe battle with disordered eating. I have a dear friend who had to do inpatient treatment for a PTSD related eating disorder. She never developed any body image issues, but she did get to the point of death and waited so long to get help that she eventually was at the point of death and had to be hospitalized. It's a tough road.
It's scary for most people to watch someone begin to go down that road and even have a small problem with self starvation, because it can quickly become a very hard to break habit and it can lead to death. I believe that is what is worrying this therapist and compelled her to act. She doesn't want moonbeam to slide further and be at the point of death.
I also think that her therapist is trying to make sure moonbeam has all the support she needs so that therapy about other issues can be as effective as possible. It sucks to even have a mild problem with self starvation, and it can severely impede treatment for other PTSD symptoms.
Therapy is hard work. It;s important to make sure people going through therapy are eating and sleeping well, because if they are not, it biochemically screws up the body and brains ability
to heal and learn new behaviors and change.
what makes you think she is not at the point of dying and/or needing help?
I never stated she did not need help. Quite the opposite. I think moonbeam could benefit from more support and help and I hope she goes to see the nutritionist.
Even if her therapist claimed a duty to act when she really didn't need to jump in and rescue moonbeam, it is important to remember that moonbeam still has choice, control -
and responsibility - for her own treatment and recovery. I hope she remembers she has a choice. This is her recovery. She can say no. It is her choice.
Trauma takes away all our control and choice. Part of healing from trauma is regaining our choices.
Recovering from trauma also means taking responsibility for our own recovery and well being.
Ideally, Moonbeam should be the one
taking the action to schedule her own appointments with her own nutritionist. Not letting it get to the point where her therapist feels like she needs to step in and rescue and schedule the appointments for her.
It's very clear that the support Moonbeam has now around starving herself isn't working well enough. It is clear that she needs more support. She has a choice to go out utilize that support or not, and I think recognizing that choice and responsibility is part of healing from trauma, where all choices were taken.
She can also choose to just keep doing what she is doing - and will likely keep getting the same results - but it is her choice.
Just because someone is in need of help doesn't mean they are ready for that help. No matter how much help is provided to someone, people don't get better until they are ready to engage and utilize it.
Just because someone is in need of help, and someone schedules appointment for them, doesn't mean they loose their option to choose - u
nless they are on the verge of death, at which point they only loose some of their choice.
Moonbeam can be dying and her therapist can schedule appointments all she wants with a nutritionist, and heck, let's go to the extreme for a moment here - they can even hospitalize her against her will and tube feed her - but in the end, moonbeam still has a choice. It's still up to her to engage that help or not. Moonbeam can find other options or other treatment providers to get more support around her eating problem.
A therapists duty to act is one thing. I think we shouldn't lose sight of our own duty to act. Even if a therapist is overreacting and taking too much action outside of what we want - we still have a duty to act to find what options will help us mange and heal from an unhealthy coping behavior.