Forced to fight for her life
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Jessica Garrison
To see Ann Hatfield today, perched on the couch, the phone ringing
off the hook with friends calling, it is almost impossible to believe her
story.
She pulls out the pictures to prove it: “This is me when I weighed 90
pounds,” she says, pointing to a sickly looking waif with skeletal
features and a pinched, vacant smile. Look closer and you realize with
shock that the girl in the picture is Ann.
Today Ann, a third-generation Balboa Island resident, is a healthy 125
pounds, with ruddy cheeks and an engaging dimply smile. She waves happily
to her neighbors and works two summer jobs to save money for school and
fun.
She spends a lot of time with friends, sitting in the living room of the
house built by her grandfather, which she shares with her mother, her
older brother, and her big furry dog.
She’s on the cheerleading squad at Corona del Mar High School and is a
heroine to girls and their parents for the way she has used her illness
to help fellow students who are struggling with food issues.
“Annie cracked the ice at Corona del Mar High School,” said school nurse
Debbie Norman. “She was just the biggest instrument.”
Last year, while Ann was recovering from anorexia, she spoke to her
schoolmates about her ordeal. In the days after her speech, 10 students
came forward and said they were worried about friends who weren’t eating.
Two years ago, Ann, an aspiring soccer star, decided she needed to lose
10 pounds over the summer.
Ann and her mother, Gretchen, believe that social pressures to be
beautiful and perfect dovetailed with personal issues and created a
deadly caldron in which her eating disorder flourished.
That summer, Ann came up with a meal plan that consisted mostly of fruit
and chicken.
“But I wasn’t counting calories or anything -- yet,” she said.
She lost 10 pounds. Everyone -- all her friends, her soccer coach, boys
she ran into at the movies -- told her she looked great. She decided if
she could lose even more weight, her life would be even better.
During the first months of her dieting, Ann spent hours at a time with
fashion magazines, willing herself to resemble the models in their pages.
“I flipped through issues of Seventeen Magazine, jealously analyzing the
models’ beautiful, skinny bodies, fantasizing about how perfect my life
would be if I looked like that,” she said.
Gretchen Hatfield believes her daughter’s desire to emulate the
perfection in the magazines -- which, even today, fill their house --
nearly killed her.
“The girls are not rebelling,” she said of anorexics. “They’re striving
to be perfect.”
That summer, she was already putting herself through three hours a day of
volleyball practice and three hours a day of soccer practice. Not to
mention her parents were getting divorced that summer, and she was trying
to cope with all the changes that entailed.
But while her teammates wolfed down giant bowls of pasta and then
retreated to their beds to recover from the exertion, she spent her
afternoons running more than 10 miles.
“I was shedding pounds like a snake sheds its skin,” she wrote months
later in an English paper. “I constantly ran and exercised until I could
no longer move my legs and they wobbled like Jell-O. I would collapse on
the floor in a puddle of sweat after long, grueling hours of huffing and
puffing with nothing to eat but lettuce between a scrawny, flimsy piece
of fat-free pita bread.”
She stopped eating anything at all except fruit and the occasional
nonfat, sugar-free yogurt.
“I developed a fear of fat,” she wrote. “Fat was a monster scaring me
away every time I saw it. Knowing I could resist the temptations gave me
power and authority, which gave me pride, self-esteem, and assured me of
my assertiveness.”
The notion that abstaining from food is a way of expressing power is
classic anorexic thinking, said Meg George, a marriage and family
counselor in Newport Beach.
Girls who suffer from anorexia, she said, typically have difficulty
expressing their feelings, or even figuring out how they feel, George
said. The see their families as being “very controlling,” she said.
The girls have learned not to express themselves but are often under
tremendous pressure to achieve. This can lead, said George, to a feeling
-- often unconscious -- that they have no control over their lives.
So they resort to a rigid control of their bodies and what goes into them
as a way of controlling their lives and managing their feelings.
“If I’m a girl, and I know that I can’t be angry in my family, or upset,
what do I do with my anger? I suppress it,” she said. “Food is the
easiest thing to control. Food is the thing they use to cope.”
Before long, friends from her soccer team noticed that Ann was moving
slower and didn’t seem to have as much energy as she used to.
Behind Ann’s back, they went to her mother with their concerns.
For Hatfield, it was like a nightmare repeating itself.
“I was anorexic at Corona del Mar High School 30 years ago, before they
had a name for it,” Gretchen Hatfield said.
She had been distracted that summer by her devastating divorce but turned
her full attention to her daughter, asking her if she thought she had a
problem with food.
Her daughter said no.
A few weeks later, school started. Ann had lost nearly 50 pounds over the
summer. Classmates she had known her entire life didn’t recognize her.
Just after noon on the first day of school, Hatfield recalled, the phone
started ringing with concerned teachers, the school nurse and a
counselor.
A few days later, Hatfield physically pushed her tiny, angry daughter
into the car and drove her to the doctor. Mother and daughter, each for
their own reasons, sobbed all the way.
The doctor told Ann she was in severe danger of dying from a heart
attack. If she did not gain weight, he said, she would be sent away to a
hospital. She would be strapped down, and tubes would be threaded through
her nose and down into her stomach, forcing calories into her.
He made her quit soccer and volleyball, warning that her heart couldn’t
take it.
Ann was devastated about having to quit soccer and refused to believe she
was really in danger. She went to a different therapist, who told her the
same thing.
“I was scared out of my skin, as reality finally slapped me across the
face,” she wrote.
The day Ann finally accepted that she might be killing herself was the
day she began the long, dark period of her recovery.
It was not an easy, straight path back to ruddy-cheeked health.
All the feelings she had been starving away erupted, but -- mentally and
physically - she was barely able to cope with them. Rarely a day went by
that she did not come home early from school and collapse into an
exhausted sleep.
“My thoughts were jumbled,” she wrote. “I could not understand anything
my teachers explained, and even worse, I could not focus enough to
think.”
Rarely did she have an afternoon when she did not visit her psychiatrist,
her doctor, her nutritionist, or her counselor -- all of whom forced her
onto the scale, eyeing her weight like a hawk.
“I had no breathing room,” she said. “I was constantly at different
doctors’ appointments, while trying to get enough effort to live through
the day.
“I felt so alone,” she said. “My friends were not within reach.”
Ann, in turn, pulled away from them.
“I became really unsocial,” she said. “I wouldn’t go out. I got
depressed.”
She was trying to cope with the aftermath of her parents’ divorce. Her
dream of following in her older brother’s footsteps and becoming a sports
star was shattered. Her perfect grade point average was in shambles. She
was terrified of eating, and no one could understand why she wouldn’t
eat. Relationships that had once been filled with inside jokes, slumber
parties and a shared love of sports were reduced to tense confrontations
over the lunch table at school.
“They examined my food piece by piece, making sure I gulped down every
last crumb. ... I was sick of the whole concept and wished everyone would
go away.”
Somehow, she continued on.
She went to school as much as she could -- and her teachers and
counselors were “incredibly understanding.” She kept going to all her
doctors -- although this once-golden girl was not above trying to trick
them.
“I would drink gallons of water before going, and then it would seem like
I had gained weight,” she wrote. “When I was told how much fat to
consume, I would lie about what I devoured. This convinced her of my
success, until I hopped onto the scale, revealing my secret. I began to
strap weights onto my ankles, with long pants hiding them from
suspicion.”
Of course, eventually she was caught, and her doctor, her mother and her
friends felt betrayed, heartbroken, and confused. Finally, her friends
and family were able to pull her back into the world.
“I was fed up with the lie I was living, and I really made an effort
toward overcoming this disease,” she said.
As she began to gain weight, as her hips filled out and her cheeks
rounded, her doctor allowed her to start participating in light exercise.
People started to compliment her. And she began to enjoy life again.
“I wish all of the pain I caused could be locked inside of a bottle and
buried deep in the ground and forgotten about forever,” she wrote. “Now
my smile shines so bright with joy, it is blinding.”
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