The Pulse Project
Eating disorders in athletes don’t usually start with food — they start quietly in the mind, in identity, and in the pressure-cooker of performance, comparison, and control. In this episode, Stephanie Matre speaks directly to parents, coaches, clinicians, faith leaders, and athletes about the often-missed warning signs, why “high performing” doesn’t mean “healthy,” and how to start hard conversations that actually keep the door open. You’ll also hear a Catholic lens on the body as gift (not a project), a sober look at social media and recruiting pressure, and how Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) can complement Western care by reading patterns in the “body story.” In this episode, we cover: * Why eating disorders in athletes often develop slowly and silently—long before physical signs show up * How sports can build virtue and resilience, but also create vulnerability when identity shifts from “I live in my body” to “my body is a project” * Why performance is a misleading indicator: eating disorders can look like “discipline,” “focus,” or “mental toughness” at first * Early red flags parents often miss because they’re subtle—and sometimes socially rewarded * The food and meal-time warning signs: * Increasing rigidity around food * Cutting out major food groups without medical need * “Clean/earned/burned” moral language around food * Anxiety at meals, pushing food around, tiny bites, avoiding family meals, “I already ate” * Training/movement red flags: * Panic when workouts are missed * Exercising to “deserve” food * Secret extra workouts * Training through injury/illness * Inability to rest without guilt * Psychological shifts that can signal deeper trouble: * Perfectionism and black-and-white thinking * Anxiety or emotional numbness * Irritability * Obsession with numbers (macros, calories, steps, rankings, watches, metrics) * Physical signs that get dismissed in athletes: * Frequent injuries, stress fractures * Sleep disruption * Digestive complaints * Cold intolerance * Hormonal disruption or missed periods (and why this should not be normalized) * How eating disorders can overlap with OCD traits: when control becomes the “soothing” drug * Social media + recruiting pressure: the “constant mirror,” comparison culture, and digitized performance metrics * How to talk to teens without shutting them down: * Avoid body comments (even “positive” ones) * Lead with curiosity and specific observations * Stay regulated, consistent, and present * Remember: denial is often fear, not defiance * TCM perspective: treating patterns (not labels) and how restriction/binge-purge/overtraining can show up in different body systems * Faith and recovery: why “just pray more” can become spiritual bypassing—and what true encounter looks like * A powerful reminder: early support saves lives and no performance is worth a soul Important Note (from the episode) This podcast is not medical advice and does not diagnose or replace professional care. If you suspect an eating disorder, seek qualified medical and mental health support immediately. Resources & Next Steps If this episode stirred something in you, don’t ignore it. Presence heals more than pressure — and early action matters. Go deeper with Stephanie inside: * The Pulse Project Food Addiction Recovery Course * The supportive Catholic recovery community: The Ember Loft Visit www.shinerising.com/membership [http://www.shinerising.com] to learn more and find support.
14 episodios
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