Self-Criticism in Eating Disorder Recovery: Why the Inner Voice Gets Louder & How to Respond Podcast Por  arte de portada

Self-Criticism in Eating Disorder Recovery: Why the Inner Voice Gets Louder & How to Respond

Self-Criticism in Eating Disorder Recovery: Why the Inner Voice Gets Louder & How to Respond

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When self-criticism ramps up during eating disorder recovery, it can feel confusing or discouraging, especially when behaviors are beginning to change. This episode explores why that intensification is often part of the healing process rather than a sign that recovery is going wrong.

In this solo episode, Dr. Marianne Miller explains why the inner critical voice often gets louder as eating disorder behaviors decrease and familiar control systems loosen. Instead of framing self-criticism as simply negative self-talk, this episode examines it as a regulatory strategy shaped by nervous system threat, social pressure, and internalized ableism.

Internalized Ableism in Eating Disorder Recovery

Recovery often collides with a world that expects bodies and minds to function efficiently, consistently, and quietly. In this section, Dr. Marianne names how those expectations become internalized as harsh self-judgment, especially for neurodivergent people, people with chronic illness, and those navigating long-term eating disorders.

You’ll hear how internalized ableism fuels self-criticism when recovery requires pacing, support, repetition, or accommodation, and why needing these supports does not mean recovery is failing.

The Inner Critic and Nervous System Threat

Many people try to argue with or silence self-critical thoughts in recovery. This episode explains why that approach often backfires and intensifies the inner voice instead.

Dr. Marianne explores how the inner critic functions as a response to perceived threat and why understanding its role is more effective than trying to eliminate it.

Responding to Self-Criticism Without Shame

This episode offers compassionate, neurodivergent-affirming ways to respond to self-criticism without turning recovery into another performance. The focus is on reducing threat, supporting regulation, and loosening the critic’s authority rather than suppressing it.

A brief clinical vignette illustrates how self-criticism rooted in internalized ableism can show up even when healing is actively underway.

Nonlinear Eating Disorder Recovery

For people with long-term or chronic eating disorders, progress often looks different than expected. This section reframes recovery as a process that prioritizes safety, accommodation, and sustainability over efficiency or perfection.

Loud self-criticism does not mean failure. It often signals that a system is reorganizing in response to change.

A Gentle Reminder

Recovery is not about proving you can function the way the world demands. It is about building a life that supports your nervous system, your needs, and your humanity.

Related Episodes

This Is Body Grief: How Ableism, Intersectionality, & Eating Disorders Shape Our Body Experiences With Jayne Mattingly on Apple & Spotify.

Size Inclusivity & Ableism: Why Body Acceptance is More Than Just "Loving Your Curves" on Apple & Spotify.

Ableism and Common Myths About Diabetes with Kim Rose, RD @the.bloodsurgar.nutritionist on Apple & Spotify.

Work With Me and Learn More

If this episode resonated and you want structured, neurodivergent-affirming support, you can learn more about my self-paced ARFID course. The course is designed for teens and adults navigating avoidant and restrictive eating patterns and focuses on sensory needs, nervous system safety, and realistic, sustainable change without shame or pressure.

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