A Neurodiversity Affirming Perspective on Eating Disorders

Main Article Content

Shira Collings
Laura Yakas

Abstract

In this essay we apply the neurodiversity paradigm to the topic of eating disorders. We begin by defining several important concepts, and then we build toward our main argument: because of our anti-fat culture, traits associated with eating disorder recovery, such as unrestricted eating and fat acceptance, are often more pathologized than traits associated with eating disorders; in particular, restrictive eating and anti-fat biases are normalized and even valorized in our society. We argue that eating disorder recovery can therefore be conceptualized as “neurodivergence,” given that unrestricted eating and fat acceptance are pathologized and deemed “abnormal” in our culture. Neurodivergence refers to thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that diverge from what society deems “normal” and are pathologized, and we assert that recovery paradoxically meets this definition. Finally, we end with ideas for mad/neurodiversity-affirming and fat-affirming eating disorder care. Rather than conventional models that aim to restore "normality" and "functioning," we explore a treatment paradigm that celebrates divergence from all oppressive social norms, that creates opportunities for cross-movement solidarity and positive neurodivergent and fat identity, and which supports people on a path of personal and collective healing and liberation from oppression.

Article Details

How to Cite
Collings, S., & Yakas, L. (2025). A Neurodiversity Affirming Perspective on Eating Disorders. International Mad Studies Journal, 3(SI2), e1–17. https://doi.org/10.58544/imsj.v3iSI2.8368
Section
Critical Eating Dis/Order Studies: Madly Questioning Eating Orders (Special Issue)
Author Biographies

Shira Collings, a:1:{s:5:"en_US";s:26:"Practice of Rachel Millner";}

Shira Collings, MS, NCC, LPC (she/they) is a Jewish, queer, Mad psychotherapist primarily specializing in eating disorders. As a diet culture dropout herself, Shira is passionate about supporting others in finding freedom with food and body acceptance. Her therapeutic approach is informed by Health At Every Size and fat liberation, queer and trans liberation, and disability justice. Shira has a background in Mad and neurodivergent activism. In addition to their clinical work, they have worked at peer led organizations and co-authored research on mental health activism as well as impacts of carceral responses to mental health crises.

Laura Yakas, University of Michigan

Laura Yakas (she/they) completed her PhD in anthropology and social work at the University of Michigan, and currently serves as an instructor in the School of Social Work. Her passion is anti-saneism and Disability Justice, and she identifies proudly as Mad/neurodivergent, queer, and indigenous (Māori). She loves facilitating transformative and healing-centered courses about oppression and anti-oppression, especially anti-saneism. She also enjoys collaborating on publications with folks at the University of Michigan’s Sexuality|Relationships|Gender Research Collective and the cross-institutional Social Work Disability Justice League.

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