Eating Disorders Are Not About Willpower — They’re About Survival
In this powerful episode of Field Notes, Heather Moon sits down with Jenny Loudon, co-founder of the Alaska Eating Disorders Alliance, for a compassionate and eye-opening conversation about the reality of eating disorders.
Jenny explains why these illnesses are so often misunderstood, overlooked, or minimized — especially when someone does not “look sick.” The discussion explores how eating disorders impact the mind, body, relationships, and identity, while challenging many common assumptions around food, weight, and health.
From social media pressure and perfectionism to atypical anorexia, binge eating disorder, orthorexia, and the lack of treatment access in Alaska, this episode offers both education and hope. Most importantly, it reminds listeners that eating disorders are serious, but recovery is absolutely possible with the right support.
Learn more about Jenny and AKEDA Here: https://www.akeatingdisordersalliance.org/
Key Takeaways:
• Eating disorders are both mental and physical illnesses — and they can be life-threatening.
• You cannot tell if someone has an eating disorder just by looking at their body.
• Disordered eating exists on a spectrum, and people deserve help before things become extreme.
• Social media can fuel shame, rigidity, and body comparison, so auditing your feed matters.
• Recovery is possible, especially when people get specialized support early.
Jenny
Board Member & Co-Founder of AKEDA
Jenny Loudon is a health policy and management consultant with over 20 years of experience with Alaskan non-profits working to improve services through grant writing, data analysis and reporting, budget development and monitoring, project management, and group facilitation.
She brings significant training and experience in public health policy and management and has an MPA from the University of Washington with a focus on health policy and management.
Jenny is an active member of the Collaborative for Eating Disorders Organizations and is involved with the national advocacy group Eating Disorders Coalition and the international Academy for Eating Disorders.