Male
Therapists Treating Women With Eating Disorders — Fish Out of
Water?
Social Work Today
Vol. 4 No. 1 p. 24
By Matthew Robb, MSW
“Given
the social phenomenon of men objectifying women, it’s no surprise
that so many women feel disempowered and harshly scrutinized,”
says New York social worker Stephen S. Zimmer, CSW. “What this
means for male eating disorder specialists is that we need to be the
polar opposites. We need to do everything we can to empower our female
patients—to ask questions, to understand, to help them gain
more control in their lives.”
Zimmer knows
this lesson well. He entered the field of eating disorder treatment
during its infancy, before the term “bulimia” had filtered
its way into the clinical lexicon and when therapists still regarded
emaciated teen girls as 85-pound riddles wrapped in mysteries inside
enigmas. Zimmer recalls a time when his own supervisor (a social worker)
deemed social workers ill-suited for complex psychosomatic cases such
as these, barking at him: “Refer them out!” The path to
recovery, it was said, began and ended with the psychiatrist.
Over the next
27 years, Zimmer witnessed enlightenment displace ignorance and social
workers move from the periphery to the forefront of a revolution in
diagnosis and treatment of eating disorders. It was a watershed period,
one that found Zimmer and his colleagues comparing notes, wondering
aloud, and hypothesizing on matters of “gender-based interactions.”
Hundreds of clinical cases later, they had confirmed an initial hunch:
When a male therapist treats an eating-disordered woman, the connection
is quite different from when the therapist is female. The implication
for today’s practitioner? Male (and female) therapists who factor
these differences into their interventions will be rewarded with more
nuanced, more successful therapy.
Therapist
as Student
Zimmer is both senior clinical consultant to the Renfrew Center Foundation
and a 25-year private practitioner in New York City. Together with
Renfrew psychologists William Davis, PhD, and Doug Bunnell, PhD, the
pioneering trio contends that male therapists can only understand
where female patients are—that is, they can only grasp the complex
interplay of biopsychosocial and cultural influences that shape their
eating disorders—by understanding from whence they came.
“Think
of something as commonplace as a woman walking alone on a sidewalk
in New York City,” Zimmer says. “She may experience incidents
that men rarely see—the catcalls, the ogling, the sexually graphic
taunting and dehumanizing insults—things that would never happen
to a man, nor would they likely happen to her if a man were with her.”
His point: American women are whipsawed by antagonistic demands that
pound at their self-esteem like an angry surf. A six-pack-abs-and-implant
society that elevates thinness to godliness while demonizing those
who don’t pray at its altar is a breeding ground for pathology.
“It’s
hard to be a woman in our society and not have food and body image
issues,” Zimmer says. “We have the world’s most
overweight population, yet culturally we aspire to be impossibly thin
and then emotionally punish ourselves when we inevitably fail.”
Zimmer’s observations mirror research that finds nearly 80%
of 17-year-old girls and 85% of adult women unhappy with their appearance.
While men lack
the experience of being a woman, Zimmer says that skilled male therapists
can bridge the experiential gap. “I’m still able to appreciate
their world—and maybe do so in a fresh way,” he says.
“Indeed, I think not having lived through all these body shape
pressures forces male therapists to ask more questions, to think outside
our ‘male box,’ to allow ourselves to be students and
our patients to be teachers—all of which is central to good
therapy.”
Being a good
student is key, Zimmer adds. “They really appreciate it if we’re
willing to learn their language—the language of compulsive food
behaviors and the obsessions around food. When you allow your patient
to be the expert and literally teach you what’s going on inside
them, that’s empowering.”
Bunnell agrees.
Bunnell, who divides his time between his duties as clinical director
of Renfrew’s Wilton, Conn., outpatient facility, his private
practice, and as president of the National Eating Disorders Association,
offers his insight. “There’s certainly a concern that
a male therapist isn’t going to understand how painful it is
for a woman to feel fat,” he says. “So, what this means
is that he needs to work harder to demonstrate that he understands
this powerful connection, to be somewhat more active and ask questions
that really get at that issue.” Even though roughly 90% of all
eating-disordered patients are women, Bunnell says that male therapists
should be heartened by studies that show male and female therapists
are equally skilled in treatment outcomes. Adds Zimmer, “I don’t
feel that not understanding is a disadvantage. Eventually, all therapists
get to places we don’t understand. The art of good therapy is
to ask the questions and arrive at an understanding.”
Understanding
Motivation
An eating-disordered patient’s choice of therapist is often
symbolically meaningful and provides fertile ground for discussion.
“When a woman chooses a female therapist for help with an eating
disorder,” Zimmer says, “she frequently comes with a clear
sense that she needs to see a woman, often because of a problematic
relationship with an absentee or domineering, even abusive father.
But, there are also many women who want to see a male therapist for
the opposite reason. Either their relationships with their mothers
were so toxic that it was impossible for them to begin a trusting
therapeutic relationship with a woman, or they had a positive relationship
with their fathers or other men in their lives.” The motivations
run the gamut, including this explanation from one of Zimmer’s
female patients: “I wanted a male therapist because I can’t
deal with the envy from other women.”
Bunnell offers
another perspective. “Some women seek male therapists because
these women admire ‘typical male values’ such as productivity
and hard work. Other times, they talk about not wanting to work with
female therapists because they fear overidentification with the therapist’s
body and shape issues. In fact, some of the women I see in my practice
have an almost derisive attitude about the way women supposedly treat
each other. They value the perception that men are more direct and
truthful.”
Sensitivity
and Awareness
Davis offers his perspective of the male therapist-female patient
dynamic. “The first issues that jump out are those of sexuality,
seductiveness, and potential for exploitation,” he says. “A
fairly high percentage of eating-disordered patients report some incidence
of sexual abuse, although these incidences vary a great deal and sexual
abuse itself is not predictive of an eating disorder.” The key,
he says, “is for male therapists to be mindful of the issues
of safety, intrusiveness, and power.”
Davis relates
an early interaction with a female patient “who had been badly
sexually abused.” Recalling the end of their initial interview,
he says, “I reached out to shake her hand, and she shrunk away
from me. I apologized to her, and we took the time to process her
history and how hard it was for a man to approach her.” The
lesson? Seemingly innocuous actions—even a passing compliment—can
carry powerful totemic impact and sow the seeds for future therapeutic
impasse.
Continuing his
discussion, Davis notes a potential strength that male therapists
might tap. “Female eating-disordered patients can provoke in
their female therapists primary issues of competition, of ‘cultural
countertransference,’ if you will. Because both patient and
therapist have internalized beliefs about the way women should look,
this might engender in a female therapist an unconscious ‘Your
thighs are bigger than my thighs’ rivalry. For me, however,
I can ask a female how she feels about her thighs and relate to her
without any competition whatsoever.” However, Davis cautions
both male and female therapists that exploring these issues requires
“tremendous sensitivity and awareness, as they are exposing
to a woman.”
Bunnell concurs.
“It’s important for men to develop comfort and sensitivity
in asking the difficult questions—questions about menstruation,
sexual history, sexual abuse, bloating, laxative use, and more. These
are issues that most male therapists aren’t automatically attuned
to, meaning that we must make special adjustments to demonstrate our
comfort and familiarity.” Says Zimmer, “Unless eating-disordered
women are obviously emaciated, you may never know they even have an
eating disorder. And, if they are eating disordered and you don’t
find out, your treatment is likely to be superficial at best.”
Accepting,
Not Judging
Male practitioners must perceive yet another potentially dicey gender
association, Zimmer says. “My newer patients sometimes assume
my judgment. In traditional families, the father is often focused
on achievement, assuming the role of judge by rating and valuing his
daughters based on his perceptions and definitions. It’s no
wonder my female patients sometimes look at me askance, expecting
judgment from me after they share sensitive personal information.”
Zimmer’s response is elegant in its simplicity: “Not only
do I not judge what they say, but I comment on their expectation of
my judgment as a springboard for further discussion.”
To illustrate,
Zimmer provides the example of a family dynamic in which parental
interest focuses on the son’s academic performance and the daughter’s
appearance. “This dynamic means that we therapists really need
to listen to the person we’re sitting with because females get
the opposite treatment all the time. When you start relating to some
young girls this way—when you are really interested in what
they’re thinking and feeling—at first, they don’t
even know how to respond. They hardly believe you.”
Adds Davis, “While
a female colleague might experience her female patient as a peer,
I sometimes experience my patients in more of an idealized father-daughter,
older brother-younger sister transaction. When I see a young anorexic
girl, I’m very much aware of a paternalistic protectiveness,
of wanting to protect her.”
Thinking Globally
While beginning therapists—male or female—may be tempted
to specialize early on in the treatment of eating disorders, Bunnell
suggests rethinking this inclination. “ Therapists must have
a broad experience in psychotherapy, psychodiagnostics, and understanding
the full range of psychopathology,” he says. “You can’t
understand treating people with eating disorders without understanding
the underlying functions that the disorders serve in their lives.”
In short, either a personal experience with eating disorders or an
abiding intellectual curiosity are no substitutes for clinical finesse—for
the ability to connect dots and plumb the depths of human behavior
at the individual, family, and sociologic levels.
“These
are serious disorders needing specialized treatment,” Bunnell
says. “They often come in packages bundled with other psychiatric
diagnoses: depression, anxiety, substance abuse, sexual trauma, or
personality disorders.” Bunnell partly blames Hollywood for
its portrayal of eating disorders as fleeting problems that afflict
“vain white women.” He adds, “These are nasty, life-threatening
disorders with the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric illness.
These disorders can last a lifetime, wreaking havoc on a person’s
psychological, emotional, and physical development and ripple out
to touch their families and everyone who knows them.”
Bunnell underscores
the therapist’s key role as listener, educator, arbiter, and
coach. “When you bring the dads in to deal with the family issues,
they don’t instinctively get the connection between eating,
body shape, and self-esteem. Moms often grow up with these issues
and understand this connection in the core of their being; they sort
of grasp how it makes some sense.”
Beyond Gender
Whether male or female, therapists—just like their patients
or clients—are not blank slates. We have our own experiences,
perceptions, biases, strengths, and limitations. The differences among
us far outweigh those between us.
Echoing the consensus
of his colleagues, Bunnell says: “The more therapy I do, the
less I think gender is an all-encompassing issue. There are some key
differences, but not so many hard and fast rules.” Nodding in
agreement, Zimmer says, “Sure we behave somewhat differently
according to our genders. There are always going to be different flavors
to our work, but we’re not that focused on male-female distinctions.”
Gazing at a culture
that finds women objectified, Zimmer offers this parting thought:
“I think that many women find it quite therapeutic to engage
with male therapists who are willing to listen and learn from them.
It’s a relief and pleasure when their therapists can acknowledge
what they don’t understand—and will change the way they
behave in response to their patients’ needs. All of this is
reassuring and can give a woman hope for her future as she goes out
into the world.”
— Matthew
Robb, MSW, is a Frederick, Md.-based freelance writer.
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