Friday, November 4, 2016

Fasting Girls pt 2 - Anorexia Nervosa, Anorexia Mirabilis, and Anorexia Mendaci



In the 1800s a series of young girls (adolescent and preadolescent) claimed to live without eating for long periods of time. These “fasting girls” became bedridden celebrities. Publishers sold pamphlets detailing their cases, and showmen went to court over their public display rights. Well-wishers donated funds for their care, and gawkers paid to visit. Their apparently supernatural survival on little to no nourishment fascinated the public, and led to fame, wealth, and death.
These bizarre stories and miracles connect to many strange pieces of folklore, medicine and religion.

The Tricks
Chances are most, if not all, fasting girls were frauds. These bizarre cases invariably led to the attention of the medical establishment, so how did they continue their scheme under skeptical vigilance? Most fasting girls simply ate when alone or with their compatriots, but a 24 hour watch complicates their situation. The families of fasting girls invented some clever (and often disgusting) tricks:
- A parent passes a small morsel of food through a kiss
- Food could be hidden in folds of clothing ready to be eaten at a providential time
- A rag soaked with broth was rubbed on the child’s face and subtly squeezed in their mouth
- A compatriot distracts the watcher while the fasting girl grabs a quick bite
- Food might be folded in handkerchief and dropped into the mouth during a pretend sneeze
-A little chewing and swallowing might be covered by a yawn

Sometimes the quality of the watchers helped the fasting girl. Not everyone was a trained medical professional ready to question everything. Some of the watchers were neighbors, who might have been in on the scheme. Often watchers left their shift early before their replacements arrived, giving the girl time for a few mouthfuls. Many watchers paid little attention to the fasting girl’s parents when they were in the room out of a polite respect for privacy. Several of Sarah Jacob’s watchers brought alcohol with them, and at least one left her home drunk.

Anorexia Nervosa
The feminine ideal of the mid 1800s had pale skin, small hands, cleanly parted hair, and most importantly a small waist. Fashions dominated by corsets, and crinolines were designed to give a woman’s figure an hourglass shape. Much like today, the pressures of the feminine ideal drove girls to starve themselves trying to attain the perfect figure. Sir William Gull (one of Queen Victoria’s physicians) diagnosed and named the eating disorder “Anorexia Nervosa“ in 1873.

Anorexia Mirabilis
Many female saints and blesseds of the Catholic Church reportedly suffered through “Anorexia Mirabilis”, miraculous starvation out of piety, penitence, and devotion to God. Some ate nothing but small amounts of vile substances, some ate only the Eucharist, and some starved to death after many years with no food.
During the height of the public’s excitement with fasting girls, miraculous signs were rumored to accompany their starvation, such as stigmata, the expelling of strange fluids (ectoplasm?), prophecy, and second sight. Many of these abilities also exist in stories of Anorexia Mirabilis as signs of God’s power in his saints. They are also said to have healed the sick, and miraculously produced oil, food and drink.

Adventure Idea
Miracles seem to keep happening near the home of a fasting girl. A growing number of her faithful admirers want her to be made a saint of the Aluminate church. Church officials are dubious of their claims and need someone to quietly look into it.

A strange disease keeps children from eating. Their throats close up in the presence of food, and any attempt to force feed damages the esophagus. Can the children be saved before they starve to death, or worse the disease develops to the next stage?

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