This Is Why Recovery Feels So Hard
Recovery can feel exhausting.
You’re eating more.
You’re trying.
You’re pushing through fear.
And still your heart races at the table.
Still your body feels flooded.
Still your mind questions whether you’re doing it “right”.
In this episode of Fly to Freedom, I talk openly about why eating disorder recovery and anorexia recovery can feel overwhelming — even when you are deeply committed.
Because recovery is not just behavioural change.
It is nervous system change.
When my body had lived in chronic stress and restriction for years, it adapted. Control felt stabilising. Smaller felt safer. Needing less felt predictable. Those patterns wired themselves in beneath conscious thought.
So when I began to nourish consistently…
When I allowed rest…
When I loosened control…
My system reacted.
The panic.
The adrenaline.
The wired exhaustion.
It felt like I was under attack.
I now understand that what I was experiencing was recalibration.
In this episode, I explore:
• What early recovery actually felt like in my body
• Why hunger cues can disappear in anorexia recovery
• How survival chemistry fuels anxiety and racing thoughts
• Why comparison keeps the nervous system braced
• The difference between forcing recovery and creating safety
• What truly shifts when healing becomes relational rather than performative
Recovery can look steady on the outside and still feel chaotic internally. The turning point for me came when I stopped measuring myself and started asking a different question:
Am I building safety?
That question changed everything.
For me, eating disorder recovery became less about conquering fear and more about staying with myself.
Each time I ate consistently, even when hunger felt unclear, I was teaching my body that nourishment was safe.
Each time I rested, even when it felt undeserved, I was teaching my nervous system that stillness would not undo me.
Each time fear rose and I stayed present, I was building capacity.
Anorexia recovery is physical, yes.
It is also neurological.
It is relational.
It is a return to safety in your own body.
That return happens through repetition.
Through steadiness.
Through compassion that is strong enough to hold discomfort.
There were moments in my recovery where fear was louder than motivation.
That is why your WHY matters.
When you are clear on why you want recovery more than the eating disorder, you move differently. Your actions become intentional rather than reactive.
If you want help clarifying that anchor for yourself, I created a free worksheet to guide you through it:
👉 Find Your WHY
https://www.edrecoverycircle.com/find-your-why
Clarity strengthens commitment. And commitment builds sustainable eating disorder recovery.
I created The Eating Disorder Recovery Circle as a structured, grounded space for full recovery — rooted in nervous system safety rather than comparison or performance.
Inside, I support eating disorder recovery and anorexia recovery through:
• Structured recovery courses, including Fear of Weight Gain
• The Feelings Navigator for emotional regulation
• Expert workshops from people with lived experience
• Dedicated community spaces
• Ongoing support between therapy sessions
It exists to complement clinical care and provide consistent, recovery-focused support in the in-between moments.
You can explore The Eating Disorder Recovery Circle here:
👉 https://www.edrecoverycircle.com/join
For daily insights into eating disorder recovery, anorexia recovery, nervous system healing, and identity work, you can connect with me on Instagram:
👉 https://www.instagram.com/juliatrehane
What I Share in This EpisodeRecovery Is a Return to SelfFind Your WHY: The Anchor in RecoveryThe Eating Disorder Recovery CircleConnect With Me