ARFID Documentary: Food Phobias & Eating Disorders | The Truth About Fussy Eaters | Only Human

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  • čas přidán 6. 11. 2022
  • The Truth About Fussy Eaters is an intimate inside look at the daily lives of very selective eaters and ARFID sufferers. It touches on subjects that affect everyone; our perceptions of taste, our parenting skills, and how phobias and dislikes are formed.
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    From: The Truth About Fussy Eaters
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Komentáře • 195

  • @ry.butterfly
    @ry.butterfly Před rokem +144

    This isn't just picky eating. Lots of people have a history of food trauma such as choking/being strangled, or sensory processing disorder, chronic GI issues like chronic nausea/vomiting or abdominal pain, they can have ocd, or anxiety, or even a history of abuse. People need to stop saying "just make them eat it" and figure out WHY this developed in the first place. Therapy is essential.

    • @dizzypancreaspump
      @dizzypancreaspump Před 11 měsíci +7

      This! I have sensory issues, trauma and gi issues

    • @superbloom_3
      @superbloom_3 Před 8 měsíci +4

      thank you for saying this. my arfid started because of severe fear of vomiting and sickness, not because i was a picky eater.

    • @PeppermintPatties
      @PeppermintPatties Před 6 měsíci +7

      ARFID is also common in people on the autism spectrum.

    • @susiewatts1982
      @susiewatts1982 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I Absolutely 💯 % agree with you as I've Suffered with Anorexia with binge purge subtype for the past 34 years now and I'm currently 49 years old and I'm So Lucky that I've managed to have four grown up Sons Xx

  • @thecherryontop3251
    @thecherryontop3251 Před rokem +53

    Wow some people are judgemental and close-minded. I can't say I'm surprised. I'm 28 years old, and was diagnosed with ARFID only four months ago but I have suffered for over two years now. I was not a "picky" eater, I was actually a huge foodie who would try anything. One day I woke up, and I couldn't eat nor drink. My body just couldn't. I want to make this loud and clear for those in the back: THERE IS NO CHOOSING. You do not CHOOSE to have this illness, nor how you will react to a food. Being judgemental, calling names or refusing to believe in someone with this diagnosis will only worsen it.
    I have a very positive attitude and that's the only thing that keeps me going. I keep telling myself that I have beaten so many things, I can find a way around this, too. I will find a way or die trying. But it's extremely difficult. I lost half my body weight, and am now on the path to being underweight. I sit down and I stare at my plate, and I try everything I can think of - sometimes it works, but sometimes it doesn't.
    I am hopeful about research being done about this illness. Like another comment mentioned, it is usually associated with autism - it doesn't mean you are autistic, though. In my case, it comes from another very typical comorbidity which is OCD. There are a lot of similarities, and learning to differentiate is key to your treament. I also have anxiety and depression, but OCD is the worst of them all. Again, this is a brain illness. I never chose this, I want it to go away, and I hate it but I have no option other than accepting it.
    I believe through science and research, we will find more about this. In my case, I can relate ARFID triggering to a series of very traumatic events that happened at once and I couldn't cope with, so I shut down and ignored the feelings until they came out as this ED. Not having energy, social outings, the Holidays - all of these things are a nightmare for someone with ARFID. Imagine having a very strong fear of spiders, a very common phobia. A fear so bad that it can trigger a panic attack.
    I would never downplay any phobia and their struggle, but now imagine the phobia is of food. You can, to a certain extent, avoid spiders and find ways to reduce the chances of ever seeing one. You can't stop eating, or you will die. Someone who has ARFID has to face, every day, a phobia that goes beyond our understanding and that appeared out of nowhere. You have no idea how difficult it is, to wonder if you're on your path to death, to ask yourself why is your brain trying to kill you.
    So I suggest you practice some empathy. ARFID is an ED, and a very difficult illness. It affects every aspect of your life, because food is a basic need and tied to family, friends, activities, etc. For the people struggling with ARFID, do not feel invalidated by any of the people here. Do not stop trying, even on the weeks when it feels like it's impossible. Do not blame yourself. Be kind to yourself because you will need your own help, too, to get through this. I send you love, understanding and a tight hug.
    Cheers.

    • @konchokkadro7436
      @konchokkadro7436 Před 6 měsíci +2

      This happened to many people after Covid. It is known as parosmia or anosmia depending on how severe the damage to olfactory nerve it is. Covid caused ARFID is quite common now.

    • @11lvr11
      @11lvr11 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@konchokkadro7436wow really? I didn't know that

  • @MeowMeowKapow
    @MeowMeowKapow Před rokem +127

    A little over halfway through and I'm frustrated that at no point have they mentioned autism. They've even kind of gone out of their way to avoid it. Those two people helping the children in the room, with their rainbow charts and their bouncy ball to help calm someone with sensory sensitivities from 'being too overwhelmed?' They are saying 'many of the people we help are autistic,' without saying it. (Edit: autism is never mentioned at all.)
    ARFID is a frequent companion to autism, and all of the difficulties the people displaying those traits in this video have, directly line up with sensory needs/avoidances linked to autism. Only being able to tolerate foods at certain temperatures. Having heightened awareness of smells. Prefering standardized, mass-produced food with predictable outcomes, over homemade, variable options. Being adverse to certain textures. Not being able to deal with certain intense tastes, or near-tasteless things (both extremes of the flavor scale.). Please, if you relate to this video... learn about autism. Find a community of autistics to guide you through your journey as you learn how to accommodate yourself, and find ways to live a much fuller and richer life, even if it looks absolutely nothing like the lives of non-autistics. The people with ARFID in this video could have potentially had more success if the specificities of their aversions and preferences were identified, and real thoughtfulness was put into adapting their diets within that framework so that it fit their nutritional needs and did not risk inducing a meltdown.

    • @annalisamelendrez6445
      @annalisamelendrez6445 Před rokem +14

      YES! Thinking the exact same thing especially considering it cooccurs with ASD between 12-33% of the time (Harris et al., 2019).

    • @H4CK41D
      @H4CK41D Před rokem +14

      probably because its well known in autism. arfid for neurotypical people is highly underdiagnosed

    • @Nathan_Bookwurm
      @Nathan_Bookwurm Před rokem +5

      Jup! My daughter has autism, ADHD and ARFID, and the doctor who's helping her says almost all of her clients have autism. I have autism myself and was a very fussy eater myself when I was young. What my daughter has and the fussy eater I was are kinda different though. For me the problem was mostly the way how my parents were giving the food (lots of stuff mashed together, lots of different structures, a lot of flavours I didn't like), while my daughter just cannot bring herself to put anything in her mouth because it's a phobia for her. I'm not at the end of the vid yet though, still hoping they'll mention something about a correlation.

    • @MeowMeowKapow
      @MeowMeowKapow Před rokem +1

      @@H4CK41D But common knowledge about autism is basically nonexistent outside of the autistic community. Sure, we can spot one of our own once we, ourselves, know... but imagine not knowing anything about autism, not knowing YOU are autistic, and coming across this video that just so happens to describe quite a lot of your food struggles. And not once, beyond the comments section on that video on CZcams, is it ever mentioned that ARFID and autism are frequently comorbid. It's worth mentioning, even just quickly in one line, to give the people looking for clues about themselves or someone they know, a little thread to follow.

    • @uatz
      @uatz Před rokem +1

      BRO STOP SCARING ME I HAVE ARFID AND I HAVE SIMILAR SYMPTOMS TO AUTISM BROO

  • @user-sv4xe5yd3l
    @user-sv4xe5yd3l Před rokem +29

    Some people In these comments are obscure. “Starve until they eat” or blaming it on the parents smh. Honestly you can’t possibly understand it unless you have it.

    • @elena_eleen
      @elena_eleen Před 11 měsíci +12

      This. No empathy whatsoever for what others are going through. They don't understand some people's brains work differently 😒

    • @ammamanagucci
      @ammamanagucci Před 6 měsíci +3

      i have arfid and i have starved when there were no safe foods offered or provided.

    • @christinajones6500
      @christinajones6500 Před 13 dny

      I mean we’re trying to help, and not have someone end up like him having strokes and being blind…. But ok

  • @craftgrrl14
    @craftgrrl14 Před dnem

    I've worked with kids with this disorder. The therapists at the mental health facility I worked at had never heard of ARFID. I had to send them articles about it. I was like "Hey, this kid is getting so upset that they are self-harming at the idea of eating anything other than grilled cheese. It's not just picky eating!" I always did my best to advocate for all the kids I worked with and would do my best to try to understand where they were coming from, even when the rest of the staff were complaining about a kid "just being difficult". It broke my heart to see kids who were clearly suffering with something that other people just didn't understand.

  • @montserratmorales1542
    @montserratmorales1542 Před 9 měsíci +13

    i wonder how many children and adults will go undiagnosed because their few safe foods are relatively healthy. seems like it’s easier to notice this variety issue when kids rely on unhealthy sugary foods.

    • @annasaddiction5129
      @annasaddiction5129 Před 9 měsíci +5

      I feel like all the things WE just find names for, Always have been here before,latest since humans learned to Walk but either people got physically punished through IT or died due to the then unaccessible and unknown sideeffects.😢
      If people can care about psyche and mind we live in a rather good time. Sadly those good times seem limited and hardly reach a century so Humanity is Always going on From Level 1.

  • @LAVirgo67
    @LAVirgo67 Před rokem +25

    I know a couple of adults with this disorder. They want to eat food that everyone else enjoy, but they can't. In one case, a friend's daughter would only eat white bread, carrots & fish sticks. Her other kids eat everything. She's expanded her food choices, but they're still very limited. I know that when my son was young, I did not expose him to 'kid food' (after he could eat solids). He ate what we ate. It usually takes kids 7 tries of a food to accept it. I was blessed to have a good eater. He is now an adult & very adventurous eater.

    • @flowerh1026
      @flowerh1026 Před 2 měsíci

      This is what people don’t get. I would LOVE to just eat a chicken breast like a normal person lol. Protein not from a shake? YES PLEASE. But i would literally gag to the point of vomiting. I want to be normal.

  • @MithrilMagic
    @MithrilMagic Před rokem +42

    I have Crohn’s disease. I wasn’t diagnosed until I was around 29. My entire childhood my mom would constantly nag at me when I would try something and then vomit or have horrible stomach pain. She would say I was being “dramatic” or I was “faking it” or “just had a touchy stomach.” My parents are first Gen Italian. Food is a big deal. And ya, some of the foods would taste good but after being forced to eat it once then getting sick, I never wanted it again. I have been both under and overweight at different points in my life. When I was diagnosed with Crohn’s, my mom felt HORRIBLE. I keep a food journal now to track my trigger foods and I am careful. It’s a constant medical and physical battle. But when I finally saw a nutritionist and GI doc and a therapist, I finally realized what was going on and it has helped me so much. Diet is personal and can be so isolating. But there is hope. I never thought I would be able to get past my issues. I’ll always have Crohn’s. But I’ve stopped looking at food as the enemy and that has helped. ❤

  • @kathryn3582
    @kathryn3582 Před rokem +27

    i feel for them because i have autism and i relate alot. luckily i am nowhere near a picky eater as them but i can still be quite picky depending on the foods texture or smell and it can be annoying.

    • @MsPeabody1231
      @MsPeabody1231 Před rokem +8

      You aren't picky. It is a sensory issue. Lots of people have it with certain foods or groups of foods, and they are neurotypical.

    • @lunaraynwolf7036
      @lunaraynwolf7036 Před rokem +3

      Same here!

  • @alexeyrozdyalovsky5317
    @alexeyrozdyalovsky5317 Před rokem +15

    Thanks for this! Before this documentary I thought that that is just my personal problem.
    I live with this for 30 years and keep constantly hearing that I'm just capricious person.
    I eat almost no fruits and vegetables for all my life. Even if somebody mix all the product that I accept there is a 1% probability I'll eat it.
    I even cannot touch most of fruit it just makes me sick.
    Luckily I would name me a pretty healthy guy so far which kind of surprises everyone around me. However of course it brings a lot of discomfort to everyday life especially when I have to eat somewhere outside my home.
    I wish more medical people know about ARFID and how to treat it.
    Thanks again!

    • @baronflutterby
      @baronflutterby Před 6 dny +1

      I learnt about ARFID only a couple of years ago and I actually had it all my life. I am so happy that I am not just a crazy person but that there actually is a diagnose and we are not alone in this. Lets hope awareness will grow in future and with this coming better knowledge in the medical and therapeutical field.

  • @mayramolina3852
    @mayramolina3852 Před rokem +17

    My mom was told to let me eat what I wanted until I got tired or bored so I wouldn’t starve. Now I have gastroparesis and I want to eat all kinds of food, and can’t, so I am stuck with the same kind of food that hasn’t make me sick. But my mom did forced me to eat until the pediatrician told her what I wrote above.

    • @MsPeabody1231
      @MsPeabody1231 Před rokem +1

      I have lactose intolerance. From age 7 I would have issues with my underwear, stomach pains and throwing up after eating certain things. Luckily while I didn't have much choice over my breakfast I mostly ate the dinners I wanted.

    • @craftgrrl14
      @craftgrrl14 Před dnem

      I have gastroparesis too. Before I got diagnosed, I would mostly just eat breakfast cereal and a few other things. Everything else made my stomach hurt so bad. My mom thought I was anorexic. After some treatments and surgeries, I am doing much better now. I can almost eat like normal again. I am able to maintain a healthy weight again.

  • @bryleidaniels8880
    @bryleidaniels8880 Před 10 měsíci +9

    i’m 14 and like 95% sure i have arfid , everytime i tell the doctor they say “you’ll grow out of it” wonder when that’s gonna happen 😂🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @SueP-D
    @SueP-D Před rokem +35

    So many mental illnesses are anxiety based. I wonder if, sometimes, treatment should focus not on the food, but on their anxiety in general…?

    • @LechLecha893
      @LechLecha893 Před rokem +4

      We do focus on the underlying anxiety, control issues, etc. In many cases Refeeding is a part of the solution, not all of the solution.

    • @JosedeJezeus
      @JosedeJezeus Před rokem +3

      Human beings evolved to live in tribes, not marriages. Our incorrectly structured families are the primary cause of our human dysfunction (anxiety).

  • @vickyoli
    @vickyoli Před rokem +13

    My little niece has ARFID since she was born. She only eats white rice or white pasta. Now she is 10 and JUST added chicken nuggets :(
    Her parents give her supplements and sees a doctor always. I wonder how is she gonna grow later in life

    • @tinycha0s
      @tinycha0s Před 11 měsíci +5

      speaking as someone who has been living life “beige”, never eaten meat. I am perfectly healthy, I have made it 29 years. She will be fine.

    • @fkeyzuwu
      @fkeyzuwu Před 6 měsíci

      a lot of kids grow out of it eventually. its most common in younger people

    • @walchil1
      @walchil1 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Receive help. This diet will shorten her life and it will also affect her social life as an adult as a lot of social things always involve food.

    • @ellieskirdneh2524
      @ellieskirdneh2524 Před měsícem +1

      I have ARFID too, as long as she takes the supplements she will be ok. Healthwise, might not be optimal but managable. Just don't make everything about food you wouldn't like it if everything revolved about something that makes you terrified either.

  • @EuRoWeIrD
    @EuRoWeIrD Před 9 měsíci +5

    For me I always think that my food is poisoned and I’m always scared to eat something that is the last of it or I have left it alone. I can’t eat anything that I don’t like or think it looks odd. I usually just tell myself that I have eaten things before and not had this happen. It’s gotten bad. I now have to clean a cup before I use it to make sure it isn’t poisoned. I am always scared that I’ll have an allergic reaction to some foods because I’ll just feel terrible after I eat them.

  • @Kayleigh2002
    @Kayleigh2002 Před rokem +10

    I have autism and due to my autism I have very sensitive taste and I hate certain textures so food is a big issue with me. But I love to try new foods even tho it causes me anxiety I fight through it and try and eat new foods often..

  • @Razzberry_dollz
    @Razzberry_dollz Před 10 měsíci +8

    As someone who is suffering from ARFID they definitely should have gotten a binge eating ARFID suffer as the one girl said you ether binge eating or you don’t eat . For me I binge I ate a lot of my safe foods which is why I’m overweight sense really you lot of the time will be ether end of the spectrum

    • @BriMarie627
      @BriMarie627 Před 7 měsíci +1

      This is me. We actually discovered my ARFID once I was in treatment for my binge eating. I have a lot of self imposed rules over food and always considered myself very picky, but it's so much more than that. I binge my safe foods (carbs that are salty/sweet). We also did the supertaster test (the radio DJ and teen boy did that in the video) and that tiny piece of paper was repulsive when I tried it. Being a supertaster definitely adds an additional layer to my eating problems.

  • @annasaddiction5129
    @annasaddiction5129 Před 9 měsíci +3

    All the best to people who go through this! I Hope you all can the help you need and order in a Restaurant how you please, and fill the plates with everything our bodies need! ❤❤❤

  • @ellenkh4422
    @ellenkh4422 Před 26 dny

    It's acute anxiety. Anxiety manifests in many different ways. Anxiety also creates revenue streams for "therapists".; What kids really need is strong parents that don't cater to nonsense.

  • @christinajones6500
    @christinajones6500 Před 13 dny +1

    All the arfid safe foods seem to be highly processed foods like chicken nuggets and chips. So what would’ve happened if kids were never offered these foods? What if they only knew of whole foods like fruits and veggies and home cooked proteins? Several hundred years ago, processed foods weren’t even invented.

  • @fieldie
    @fieldie Před 6 měsíci +1

    Oh my god! This is me completely, I'm 50yo now, but had this since I was 5yo!

  • @theexeperimentdevelopment721

    My 12yo is ARFID. It’s heartbreaking to watch my child struggle so much. He spent 6weeks in a PHP 18 months ago and we have regressed so much since. Finding support in our area has been an ongoing issue.

  • @michellegrunebergholmes893

    Thank you! I now know what I have suffered from since childhood. I will take this info to my Doctor. Rock on!♡

    • @miamarvel616
      @miamarvel616 Před rokem +1

      Awe wait that's so cool that you found a diagnosis for yourself through youtube!

  • @MayimHastings
    @MayimHastings Před 3 měsíci

    These kids are so brave and intelligent! Rebecca was such a bad@$$ for taking charge of her health and believing in herself. Such an insightful docu!

  • @louib716
    @louib716 Před 5 hodinami

    I was never forced to eat anything i didnt want to, and now i eat just about anything. Olives and goat cheese are the only foods in the normal realm that i do not like.
    Granted, my childhood pickyness was run of the mill. Nothing like this.

  • @bcaye
    @bcaye Před rokem +22

    There should be injectable multivitamins. That would be easier.

    • @mockingbirdnightingale7169
      @mockingbirdnightingale7169 Před rokem +3

      I was given vitamins by IV in a hospital when I had a vitamin deficiency. There's no doubt in my mind that there are various preparations out there. I've seen people talk about vitamin patches even, which, while probably not as good as tablets, are probably better than nothing.

    • @JosedeJezeus
      @JosedeJezeus Před rokem +1

      Yea, duh. Just inject them with the Vitamins.

    • @whatwhat9519
      @whatwhat9519 Před rokem

      Yeah but it would solve the problem but to make sure the don’t go blind just inject them then we can make them eat some carrots regularly so they don’t have to go to the docs once a week to get what would have been an unnecessary injection

  • @barbc7211
    @barbc7211 Před 3 měsíci +1

    So interesting I did not know of Arfid thank you

  • @Inaneassylum
    @Inaneassylum Před 7 měsíci

    Food represents the taking in of the world around us. ARFID is so much more than just aversion to certain foods. It is still often treated on a superficial level.

  • @kaylynvandermerwe
    @kaylynvandermerwe Před 6 měsíci +2

    I recently went to my GP and told him I think I had an eating disorder, he pointed to me (I'm a little overweight) and he said I didn't look like I had an eating disorder.... It made me feel so small and useless and stupid

    • @Lacieluxe
      @Lacieluxe Před 2 měsíci

      Doctors are so stupid
      Please go and ask to speak to a different gp
      There’s so many eating disorders that they forget that just because you appear a certain way doesn’t mean you do not have one
      My eating disorder clinic had to learn about binge eating disorder and osfed because they didn’t understand I needed help because and I quote them on the “ too overweight to be considered anorexic. Or bulimic
      I had osfed do my weight would never drop like it did before with anorexia
      That didn’t mean I wasn’t drowning in a sea of problems I had no coping skills to deal with
      Btw I was 7 stone when they said I was overweight they meant not I was actually overweight but that my bmi wasn’t in the red
      And that’s all they base their original referrals on
      I’m deficient in vitamin d and folic acid because of my food restrictions but because sometime I also throw up or simple binge eat they kept telling me I was fine and it was just a blip
      The whole time I was struggling so much to understand my illness because nobody would help me that I tried to end my like 22 times in one year
      They finally listened
      I’m still in a waiting list
      Had to have trauma therapy first lol

  • @lillianlrogue9480
    @lillianlrogue9480 Před 5 měsíci +1

    My daughter was just like this until thankfully at the age of 14 something clicked and suddenly she wanted to try literally everything! It’s fascinating that the boy in the first part of the video still went through a normal teenage growth spurt and got quite tall even, with normal looking bone development and no apparent rickets or anything. When all of the girls in my daughter’s seventh grade class started getting taller and towering over my daughter who was still under 5’! I was very worried it had something to do with her previous diet. So I’m relieved that likely isn’t the case. She gradually grew a bit more over the next few years and is around 5’1 which is only a couple inches shorter than myself so it’s probably genetics. At least she’d always take the gummy vitamins and I’d resort to mixing meal replacement shake powder with ice cream so she’d have something at least before school or add an extra egg to pancake mix. There’s some tricks parents of kids like this usually figure out. I do know it can be SO extreme and even the slightest change they’ll notice somehow and reject! I wonder if in extreme cases, maybe they should be given injections by a doctor like some people who don’t absorb B12 any other way for example? It’s frustrating when people say “just give them something healthy and when they’re hungry enough they’ll eat it.” No, these extreme kids would rather starve and literally can. You have to find ways to sneak more into whatever they will eat and that can be quite the challenge too. Doctors need to take it more seriously as well! This video makes a great case for this!

  • @the.sun.flower8447
    @the.sun.flower8447 Před rokem +9

    Who else grew up in a household of “ well if you don’t want it, you’re not gonna eat” be thankful for what was made for dinner

    • @caitlxnroberts
      @caitlxnroberts Před 11 měsíci +11

      I did but I never ate ever ! I would sneak food I liked and hide it in my room so I didn't starve and my parents only started to realize what they were doing when I was 17 ! Now I'm adult that suffers major Arfid ,that can't even eat in public , I can't eat lunch at work , I have to be alone to eat or I feel like I'm being judged and I'm still grateful for what I have because I know even I don't eat much , it's more than others could ask for

    • @frizy1104
      @frizy1104 Před 10 měsíci +10

      I rather starve myself for whole day than eating food that i cant handle. That's what the disorder about, you cant even chew your uncomfort food without feeling like you're going to throw up

    • @kilIing
      @kilIing Před 9 měsíci +5

      "be thankful for what was made for dinner" it's difficult when you think it's going to kill you

  • @annoyedaussie3942
    @annoyedaussie3942 Před rokem +6

    Need elimination diet and elimination environment. While I can't identify everything, I am intolerant/allergic to both food items and environment, I have worked out some environment intolerance/allergies but not the exact chemicals, laundry powder and a deodorant and perfume concoction make me sick. Currently living on balcony to reduce exposure to whatever, have good days and bad , working on getting better. The medical establishment here in Queensland Australia doesn't accept that what I have observed about myself is real and I am just insane. They have basically said as much.

    • @JosedeJezeus
      @JosedeJezeus Před rokem

      Good luck to you. Never give up!

    • @4Dwooorld
      @4Dwooorld Před rokem

      Tropical climate and vegetation are not the healthiest environment. Try Tasmania, Victoria or NZ.

  • @tinycha0s
    @tinycha0s Před 11 měsíci +1

    THE NUTELLA THOOOOOOO, i eat so much of it. I can’t even 😂 yessss girl

  • @ambergriffin91
    @ambergriffin91 Před rokem +22

    My picky eater kids’ pediatrician told me to just feed my kids what they DO like just so they’d not starve. Idk if that helps bc it prevented them from trying to eat what they didn’t like or have never tasted.

    • @lovingmayberry307
      @lovingmayberry307 Před rokem +9

      I absolutely disagree with your pediatrician! Kids will NOT allow themselves to starve ffs! But they WILL learn how to manipulate you into giving them only junk food if you follow the idiot doctor's advice!

    • @a697ag
      @a697ag Před rokem +3

      @@lovingmayberry307 my mom used to say 'I am not a restaurant. You eat what I make'. She was right

    • @unicorn-glasses
      @unicorn-glasses Před rokem +12

      @@lovingmayberry307 depending on the illness, some of them will "allow themselves" to starve. That's why it's called an illness.

    • @jacqueline8559
      @jacqueline8559 Před rokem

      @@unicorn-glasses mainly its behavoural , pushing the boundaries, not an illness when kids are very small. Some can develop a fear of food if they've been born prematurely and have had vomiting issues as a baby, some if they've choked ( nurse and Midwife) it's still not the correct thing to let them become restricted and malnourished in their diet, This doctor is a lazy fool. And , if Amber is American, as her spelling of Paediatrician suggests, he's being paid good money to be both and give appalling advice!!!

    • @quicklykay
      @quicklykay Před rokem

      @@lovingmayberry307 Oh, really? Then, why is the mortality rate higher for anorexics than any other mental illness? They starve themselves to the point that their organs fail.

  • @masterwu7784
    @masterwu7784 Před 10 měsíci

    This hurt cuz i know i have Afrid and I'm not close to finishing this video. From the 80s till today smh

  • @christinajones6500
    @christinajones6500 Před 13 dny

    That kid looked like death before, bags under his eyes and gray skin. Now after eating some whole foods, he looks so much better with some color to his skin.

  • @chrissytorres6546
    @chrissytorres6546 Před rokem +2

    This is so sad. 😢

  • @cerveza2297
    @cerveza2297 Před rokem +11

    This isn't new. I'm old and I have had it all my life. I'm healthy too.

    • @Taylor23890
      @Taylor23890 Před rokem

      I’m not healthy . Low iron low vitamin d , crumbling spine . I won’t eat anything green or meat

    • @codysparks1454
      @codysparks1454 Před 11 měsíci +4

      It’s new as an official eating disorder. Sure some people have had it all of their life but it was never actually identified until 2013

  • @annasaddiction5129
    @annasaddiction5129 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Maybe Wilhelm Busch Soup casper wasn't only an early Observation of Eds like Anorexia but also this...just it was written way before the times Professional could Care about the minds shennanigans.😮😢

  • @H4CK41D
    @H4CK41D Před rokem

    thanks for this

  • @Phoebefoster
    @Phoebefoster Před rokem +4

    I used to hate how long it could take to eat certain types of food like boiled chicken or steak. Since then I have become vegetarian (obviously now I am because of moral reasons too) but I feel like that part contributed to me disliking meat. I also hate warm corn, I know it’s weird but it just doesn’t taste right 😂

  • @KC-pd1dh
    @KC-pd1dh Před 26 dny

    This isn't talked about enough. My daughter has had this since a toddler. She is now 17 and I have been fighting for help that whole time. Only to be told not to worry she is just fussy. 😡

    • @therisingsun1081
      @therisingsun1081 Před 9 dny

      I developed this at around 6/7 from what my family says. The doctors told them to feed me anyways because “if I’m hungry, I’ll eat” and that’s how I’d end up doing 3 days without eating. It messed up my hunger cues horribly. I’m 25 now and there is still quite a lot I absolutely will not eat. But I’m so much better after therapy.

  • @gabriellevanbreugel1303
    @gabriellevanbreugel1303 Před rokem +5

    Its good that they put boys in this docu because most of the time its just girls in ed docu's but boys also could have an ed

  • @rand0m.crumbs..307
    @rand0m.crumbs..307 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I just try to swallow my food whole so it doesn’t touch my tongue while looking away from my food

  • @stephjackson9384
    @stephjackson9384 Před 6 měsíci +2

    the amount of mis information and bad contextualisation and harmful rhetoric surrounding not only ARFID but other ED's is appalling in all honesty

  • @grazielladeligi1869
    @grazielladeligi1869 Před měsícem +1

    A child only wants what he or she sees! If you never have chicken nuggets in your house, how are the kids gonna want it?

  • @tiffanyroseangeles34
    @tiffanyroseangeles34 Před 3 měsíci

    Sometimes I think this seems like another fancy way to describe DISORDERED EATING “ or if you’re asleep….ANA!

  • @6rendanetter354
    @6rendanetter354 Před rokem +3

    I have a fear of choking and I constantly feel like I’m choking when eating if anyone could help lmk

    • @tiasara5967
      @tiasara5967 Před rokem +2

      Have a dr do an upper endoscopy (it’s pleasant you sleep through it) so they can check your esophagus for any problem. If not it might honestly be stress/worry/anxiety or fear.

  • @lalathebenificent1335
    @lalathebenificent1335 Před 6 měsíci

    Jase *is* a super-taster. Why didn't they elaborate on that?!?!

  • @Elianafinderfred
    @Elianafinderfred Před 6 měsíci

    Autistic children who have sensory issues and RSD, these techniques aren't suitable, liquid meals from the pharmacy is needed to get the nutrients in and then treatment for the neurodiversitet so they can handle the sensory overload and RSD better. The missed link between eating disorders and neurodiversitet is luckily being more and more obvious, and that is the reason why traditional eating disorder treatment doesn't work, because it doesn't work for neurodivergente people, because the opposite is needed to help the Eating disorders in neurodivergente people.

  • @evelynfidler6285
    @evelynfidler6285 Před rokem +11

    Would this disorder have been a thing 200 or 300 years ago when you eat or starve?

    • @MsPeabody1231
      @MsPeabody1231 Před rokem +17

      Yes.
      They would starve to death but due to the amount of childhood illnesses no one would notice.
      There have been and are a few medical studies of eating disorders in developing countries over the decades. The disorders found in developed countries are there if they are studied.

    • @aethylwulfeiii6502
      @aethylwulfeiii6502 Před 10 měsíci +2

      It likely manifest itself as pica.

    • @pizzatimebby
      @pizzatimebby Před 6 měsíci +1

      I agree with ​@aethylwulfeiii6502 . I have ARFID and ive said more times than i can count that i would literally eat dirt or starve before considering something i dont like. Weekend sleep overs as a child were a rough because id go 2 days without eating anything, or however long i was there.

  • @janklaas6885
    @janklaas6885 Před rokem

    ©️29:23

  • @Fidi987
    @Fidi987 Před měsícem

    He is legally blind, sits in front of this screen and has no glasses?

  • @tatteredquilt
    @tatteredquilt Před 2 měsíci

    ARFID isn't new. Like most mental health issues, nobody cared to give it a name until more recently.

  • @princebuster93
    @princebuster93 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Parents that mollycoddle their children though. You have to be firm when they are young. Children need to understand the importance of food nutrition for maintaining mental and physical health. That boy that was blind could have been avoided if the parents had taught him differently

    • @allen_sgtaw
      @allen_sgtaw Před 7 měsíci +5

      I mean, my father would either force me to eat or just not let me eat at all when I was "picky", and the only thing that did for me was make me go dangerously underweight and make my ED worse. i still can't eat most foods, especially meat and veggies.

    • @debrachapman60
      @debrachapman60 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Its not about mollycoddling. My son has been diagnosed with ARFID and it was such a relief.
      At birth he was tube fed. He struggled with feeds. Struggled with his first solids and it continued.
      Drs, health visitors all said he's fine. For three years he saw dietitians and we tried everything they suggested, in the mean time hie grew taller but his weight became dangerously low. He is skeletal. He has autism too.
      Hes not able to feel hungry. He always feels full and struggles with textures, smells etc..
      Imagine if you were offered a plate of eyeballs, jellied eels, dried crickets, sheeps brains and dog vomit. And then were told you HAVE to eat it.
      That is what it feels like for a person with ARFID.
      🙂

    • @princebuster93
      @princebuster93 Před 2 měsíci

      @@debrachapman60 Sorry to hear this about your Son, it must be very worrying and stressful for you all. Never heard of this condition and what I said could hardly apply to your Dear Son. I m not a Mother unfortunately so do not have direct experience, but I do feel for you and your family. God bless you all ❤

    • @debrachapman60
      @debrachapman60 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@princebuster93 no worries. There are parents that will give in and give their children what they want just for a quiet life but ARFID is very different.
      The boy that lost his sight is an extreme case of malnutrition. The mother asked for help so many times but was brushed off. Unfortunately this is all too common.

  • @emsdiy6857
    @emsdiy6857 Před rokem

    Okay I don't think you can go blind just for not eating vegetables you have to be extremely malnourished if you ate everything else but vegetables you would still be perfectly healthy I know many people

    • @Isabel6194
      @Isabel6194 Před rokem +3

      Severe vitamin a deficiency. Look it up.

  • @fawnchaer
    @fawnchaer Před rokem +1

    Jesus bless you

  • @arvyarvy4242
    @arvyarvy4242 Před rokem +2

    all jake needed was meat not peas or veggies

    • @aethylwulfeiii6502
      @aethylwulfeiii6502 Před 10 měsíci

      Maybe go for an octopus as they have tons of vitamins in them.

    • @louib716
      @louib716 Před 5 hodinami

      ​@aethylwulfeiii6502 how are you going to get someone with arfid to eat something like that?

  • @nataliejones2636
    @nataliejones2636 Před rokem

    Come on

  • @nataliejones2636
    @nataliejones2636 Před rokem +1

    I had my kids on a no grains, carbs, sugar, etc. total organic diet for health reasons. I get to choose what they eat. Same with how I was raised. Only they have it way better!

    • @sylwia7060
      @sylwia7060 Před rokem +9

      Good it works for you but it doesnt’ work for everybody✌️

    • @nataliejones2636
      @nataliejones2636 Před rokem +1

      @lucy the vegetables, fruit provide carbs. According to developmental paediatrician, carbs are not necessary to survival.

    • @aethylwulfeiii6502
      @aethylwulfeiii6502 Před 10 měsíci +7

      ? The eff? Carbohydrates get a bad rap but are essential for endurance and energy. There is a huge difference between pasta and donuts.

  • @lindseyhall2817
    @lindseyhall2817 Před rokem +3

    Don’t laugh

  • @dalhousiekid
    @dalhousiekid Před rokem +8

    Before there was plenty of available food through mass production, I doubt this problem existed. Is it a first-world problem? I compare it to starvation via poverty -- and primal instinct to thrive. Just my opinion; I am no expert.

    • @JosedeJezeus
      @JosedeJezeus Před rokem +1

      Yeah, totally sounds like a 1st world disorder.

    • @allen_sgtaw
      @allen_sgtaw Před 7 měsíci

      it still existed, especially in autistic people with arfid, but most likely just starved or died to other illness.

    • @user-xx6ud8iq7g
      @user-xx6ud8iq7g Před 6 měsíci +1

      I can see why you’d think this but it’s been recorded for centuries. People used to be paraded round like freaks if they had an eating disorder rather than it being treated. It also happens often in 3rd world countries where there is poverty and lack of access to food, but it regularly goes unnoticed due to the amount of unintentional starving people around the intentionally starving/picky eating ones.

  • @horsemanofwar86wawahwoowah36

    It's sad that your child tells you what he will eat

    • @ameliajayne7956
      @ameliajayne7956 Před rokem +17

      Well forcing kids to eat can lead to unhealhy relationships with food.

    • @chrissytorres6546
      @chrissytorres6546 Před rokem +10

      No it will not as you can clearly see letting them eat what they want with out forcing heathy food lead to unhealthy relationship to food…..did you comment before watching?

    • @dalhousiekid
      @dalhousiekid Před rokem +4

      @@ameliajayne7956 I'd say his relationship with food IS unhealthy, don't you think? 🙄

    • @horsemanofwar86wawahwoowah36
      @horsemanofwar86wawahwoowah36 Před rokem +2

      @@ameliajayne7956 ok well let your kids eat what they want and let me know how it goes.

    • @horsemanofwar86wawahwoowah36
      @horsemanofwar86wawahwoowah36 Před rokem

      @@dalhousiekid exactly 💯

  • @drato111
    @drato111 Před rokem +10

    very very serious first world problem... with the parents.

    • @horsemanofwar86wawahwoowah36
      @horsemanofwar86wawahwoowah36 Před rokem +2

      🤣 exactly!

    • @MsPeabody1231
      @MsPeabody1231 Před rokem +1

      Yep you are right parents can help make the issues worse. Peer pressure when they are young, so 2-5, through nurseries and other childcare without their parents helps a lot.

    • @Lea-ov8vq
      @Lea-ov8vq Před rokem +7

      Sometimes yes, but often no. I'm from a third world country and have ARFID. I developed it after trauma from GI issues, it's absolutely possible to have an eating disorder and be poor.

    • @allen_sgtaw
      @allen_sgtaw Před 7 měsíci +5

      I mean parents can help influence it but even though my dad would make me sit for hours in front of food and I'd rather starve and die then touch shrimp or any other meat. it's always existed, we just haven't been able to diagnose it, or had the ability to help treat it. especially since it's comorbid with autism

    • @11lvr11
      @11lvr11 Před 2 měsíci +3

      ​@@Lea-ov8vqI absolutely agree. But you can't explain that to ignorant people who think that we choose to have a mental disorder for fun

  • @christinajones6500
    @christinajones6500 Před rokem +8

    First world problem. This isn’t an issue in Africa and starving countries…

    • @user-xf7mu7ub9d
      @user-xf7mu7ub9d Před 10 měsíci +10

      As an African person I can assure you that there are people with this disorder. They're pretty rare as the disorder itself is rare.
      Also, as another user said, Africa has a huge problem with poverty, but this doesn't mean that everybody there is starving.

    • @aethylwulfeiii6502
      @aethylwulfeiii6502 Před 10 měsíci +3

      It definitely is, but is probably showing up more as a Pica type thing.

  • @jeenadeep
    @jeenadeep Před rokem +4

    Bad parenting is all that it is.

    • @JosedeJezeus
      @JosedeJezeus Před rokem +2

      Amen. The quality of parents has been on the DECLINE.
      Humans evolved to live in tribes not marriages! Our incorrectly structured families are the primary cause of our human dysfunction.

    • @arianarock8564
      @arianarock8564 Před rokem +11

      Tell me how? I have ARFID and my parents played no role in that

    • @jeenadeep
      @jeenadeep Před rokem +3

      @@arianarock8564 tell me how does a toddler come to know about fries and nuggets??
      Why are these problems in developed countries only??
      Parents are enablers of these behaviours.
      In developing countries kids are only concerned about getting their next meal. They don't have the luxury to choose what they would or would not have for dinner

    • @Lea-ov8vq
      @Lea-ov8vq Před rokem +2

      @@jeenadeep Many kids in third world countries with ARFID live off bread or white rice or whatever their safe food is. It has nothing to do with priveledge or money

    • @aethylwulfeiii6502
      @aethylwulfeiii6502 Před 10 měsíci +2

      That sounds like Freudian gobblygook.

  • @lovingmayberry307
    @lovingmayberry307 Před rokem +16

    I think this is pure manipulation. My child would not get away with this.

    • @unicorn-glasses
      @unicorn-glasses Před rokem +25

      So you would allow your child to starve to death? Some of these kids will throw up every time they eat anything other than the few foods they can "handle." They can't control it. They don't choose it. I'm not saying that it's all of them. But it sounds like you'd just assume that your child is manipulating you no matter what, and if they were indeed that sort, they'd end up dead. Mental illnesses and eating disorders are no joke.

    • @dalhousiekid
      @dalhousiekid Před rokem +6

      @@unicorn-glasses He's BLIND -- so maybe that method did not work, you think?

    • @Nathan_Bookwurm
      @Nathan_Bookwurm Před rokem +9

      My kid with ARFID doesn't get away with manipulation either. So she won't eat for 3 days and you'll drive to the hospital at some point. Her younger brother is already taller than she is and they're 4 and 6 just because she doesn't eat the stuff we put before her. Oh and her problems started at baby already.

    • @katlincleary1988
      @katlincleary1988 Před rokem +1

      I feel like all these kids want is just processed junk. I'm wondering how these foods are safe and ok to eat.

    • @kurotsuki7427
      @kurotsuki7427 Před rokem +2

      @@katlincleary1988 deal with this and actually dont like a lot of prossessed things, its not so much about what is eaten and more why they wont/cant eat. (A lot of textures feel like im swallowing needles to me and my nerves and brain interpret them as pain.)

  • @JosedeJezeus
    @JosedeJezeus Před rokem +3

    Starve them until they are willing to eat anything.

    • @MsPeabody1231
      @MsPeabody1231 Před rokem +13

      That doesn't work.

    • @arianarock8564
      @arianarock8564 Před rokem +12

      They did that to me. I went to the hospital. Because I would rather starve then eat. My parents checked me into a clinic were I got exposures for my ARFID.

    • @Lea-ov8vq
      @Lea-ov8vq Před rokem +1

      Well, they would starve. That's why it's an eating disorder, because the disorder is more powerful that their "will to survive"

    • @codysparks1454
      @codysparks1454 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Tf is wrong with you?

    • @kilIing
      @kilIing Před 9 měsíci

      and that's how people end up offing themselves, moron

  • @michellemacco
    @michellemacco Před rokem +9

    All MISBEHAVED children

    • @crazysanta6641
      @crazysanta6641 Před 26 dny

      Broski got no clue what she’s talking about