

When Food Becomes the Enemy: Helping Kids Through Eating Disorders [Parental Guidance Ep. 3]
What do you do when your child refuses to eat? When food, health, and body image turn into a dangerous battleground? In this deeply moving episode, Justin and Kylie unpack the devastating reality of eating disorders — with insights from a brave young woman who overcame anorexia, her incredible family, and a specialist psychologist who shares life-saving advice for parents.
KEY POINTS
-
90% of teens have negative thoughts about their bodies; eating disorders affect far too many young people, especially girls.
-
Social media and “diet culture” fuel body dissatisfaction, validation-seeking, and dangerous habits.
-
Even the most loving parents can have children who perceive themselves as unlovable — perception is reality for struggling kids.
-
Parents play a vital role: showing up consistently and lovingly is powerful even when it feels unnoticed.
-
Warning signs to watch for include:
-
Loose, baggy clothing (to hide weight loss or from skin sensitivity)
-
Avoiding family meals, picking at food, or excessive “health consciousness”
-
Withdrawing socially, prioritizing exercise obsessively
-
Personality changes, irritability, especially around meals
-
- Parents need extraordinary patience, kindness, and firmness — staying at the table for hours if necessary, showing the eating disorder who’s stronger.
-
Separate “the eating disorder voice” from your child’s real self in your interactions.
-
It’s less about finding the “cause” and more about focusing on healing.
-
The Butterfly Foundation (butterfly.org.au) is an excellent resource for specialist help.
QUOTE OF EPISODE #1299
"You need to show that eating disorder that you're stronger than it, more patient than it, and you will sit there as long as it takes — because your child is worth fighting for." — Christine Gregory
RESOURCES MENTIONED
-
The Butterfly Foundation — national support for eating disorders
-
Parental Guidance episode (stream on 9Now)
-
Happy Families articles and resources on connection and body image (happyfamilies.com.au)
ACTION STEPS FOR PARENTS
1. Watch for early warning signs and trust your instincts — you know your child best.
2. Be patient, kind, and firm — sit with your child at meals and don’t let the eating disorder win.
3. Separate your child’s identity from the illness; speak to your child, not to the disorder.
4. Don’t obsess over what “caused” it — focus on healing and connection.
5. Seek professional help early through organizations like the Butterfly Foundation.
6. Show up consistently: being present every day sends a powerful message of love and commitment.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.