Black Women’s Eating Disorders Are Not ‘White Girl Problems’

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PHOTO: August de Richelieu. Pexels

By Anissa Durham, Word in Black 

When Alishia McCullough speaks about eating disorders in Black communities, she often encounters surprise – a reaction that perfectly illustrates the problem she’s spent years fighting. Early in her career, McCullough, a licensed clinical mental health therapist who specializes in eating disorders in Black women and femmes, noticed how discourse around eating disorders remains centered on white experiences. So, she made it a point to center Black experiences.

In 2019, she started an Instagram account BlackandEmbodied, to raise awareness of eating disorders in Black communities. Later during the COVID-19 pandemic, McCullough co-founded a movement called Amplify Melanated Voices to recenter the voices of Black practitioners. The #AmplifyMelanatedVoices social media campaign ended up going viral.

Separating her own experience with disordered eating to treat clients wasn’t always easy. But McCullough uses her platform to help Black women and femmes “come back home to their bodies so they can experience true healing and liberation.” She writes about this in her new book, “Reclaiming the Black Body — Nourishing the Home Within,” which is officially being released on Tuesday.