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Racheal Baughan hates mirrors. She suffers from body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), a compulsive disorder which means that the image she sees of herself is a distortion of reality.
As a teenager she became so preoccupied by her appearance that she left her bedroom as little as possible. If she did go out, she spent hours beforehand piling on thick make-up. At one point she couldn't even face her family without wearing a home-made veil.
Meeting Baughan, 26, from Crawley, looking fabulous in hooped earrings, combat trousers and a skimpy top, it's hard to believe that she suffers from BDD. The only clue is that the curtains in her living room are drawn, despite the sunshine. She explains that, having grown up in the country, she guards her privacy. But it feels like an uncomfortable reminder of teenage years wasted in a darkened bedroom.
She has learnt to control the illness and for the past four years has run her own model agency, promoting young models and taking an active stance against size zero. One of her strategies is to avoid focusing when she looks in the mirror. She explains: “Sometimes even now if I allow myself to look too closely, I focus straight in on my bad skin, my small lips, my double chin, my flat head and the bags under my eyes. When I was younger it wasn't just about other people judging me, although that was a big fear, it was about feeling I was an alien, and that I shouldn't be here. What's so hard about BDD is that other people can't see what you're talking about. They just think you're vain and self-obsessed.”
Groups supporting those with BDD believe that about 1 per cent of the population is affected, and the popular belief is that the disorder is linked to our obsession with perfect bodies and cosmetic surgery - although leading researchers say this does not stand up to scientific scrutiny. Many sufferers don't try to get help because they worry that their symptoms will be dismissed; some doctors misdiagnose BDD as social anxiety or agoraphobia.
Her father was worried about his looks.
Even at primary school Baughan felt insecure about her looks, a trait she says she may have inherited from her father, who avoided some situations because he was worried about his appearance. When she was 10 she started disguising what she saw as “severe acne” - though her complexion was almost perfect - with cream her mother had been prescribed to camouflage scars. Then she was bullied at secondary school. Her mother is Sri Lankan, and Baughan says that she was called racist names, or told that she was fat. She thought she deserved the taunts, and began to plaster her face with make-up and to hide behind a curtain of long hair. Some days she looked like a goth; others like a drag queen.“The make-up made me stand out even more, but if someone called me a tart they were bullying me for my disguise, not my face. I could cope with that more easily.”
When her best friend died suddenly when they were both 13, she became severely depressed, spending most days asleep and barely communicating with her family. The GP thought her symptoms were due solely to grief and general teenage anxiety, and referred her for NHS counselling, but it didn't help. She refused to go to school, apart from the occasional day, and when social services started chasing her parents, they simply ignored them.
Panic attacks, sometimes triggered by looking in the mirror or when her painstaking application of make-up went awry, became more frequent. “Even now if I look in the mirror too much I can feel my chest tightening and I start to feel sick and my head spins.”
Between the ages of 13 and 17 Baughan pestered her parents to allow her to have cosmetic surgery on her nose, made four suicide attempts and developed anorexia. She went down to a size 4 and 6st (she's 5ft 8in.
It was only when she was 15 that a doctor on a GMTV show diagnosed BDD. Her mother had forced her to appear as a last resort, having got no answers from doctors or counselling - she had even gone on a course to try to help her daughter. TV was an ordeal, but the letters that Baughan received from fellow suffererswere a huge help and she now runs a website for them (www.rachealbaughan.co.uk).
Small steps towards recovery
She has recovered by setting and achieving small goals. At first she wore less make-up when she was with her family and her boyfriend, with whom she lives. She then went to the local shop without lipstick, and later to her job at a local health club with minimal camouflage. The ultimate challenge came four years ago when she entered the Miss England beauty contest. And just as an arachnaphobic might be treated by exposure to spiders, it made her face her worst fears. It worked. She no longer hides when the postman knocks and wears only a little make-up when she goes out. “I still see the same things when I look in the mirror; I just don't allow them to affect me now.”
The Butterfly Girl by Racheal Baughan is published by John Blake, £17.99
BODY DYSMORPHIC DISORDER - THE LOWDOWN
WHAT IS IT? Body dysmorphic disorder causes sufferers to be so preoccupied with imagined defects in their appearance that it may stop them working and socialising. Concerns most often focus on the face or head and usually begin during adolescence. It was recognised as a mental health problem by the American Psychiatric Association in 1987. A brain-imaging study at UCLA, published last December,demonstrated a biological basis for the disorder for the first time
WHO IS AFFECTED? Misdiagnosis is common, but it is estimated that about 1 per cent of the population is affected.
TREATMENT Cognitive behavioural therapy, in which the patient learns alternative ways of thinking about his or her appearance and to cope without camouflage. Can be used with anti-obsessional medication such as serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs).MORE INFORMATION
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Psychological conditions are far from 'all in the mind' and I think our society could do much more to support people like this lady who have these real and life altering conditions. People do not choose to suffer with these disorders and anyone can be affected, so lets offer our support to them.
Mrs Kelly, Coventry,
I think in a rich society like ours where food and shelter and even peace are readily available i think problems like anorexia and body dismorphia stem from our vanity, and self-absorption. I'm sure you don't get it in countries that have real problems.
Chonts, London,
"Hooped earrings, combat trousers and a skimpy top" - oh dear.
Anna, London,
I'm french and we also know this trouble. It's named dysmorphophobie and is part of different diseases, sometimes very serious (schizophrenia for example) and sometimes much less serious, more the effect of body or face changing during adolescence. Anyway, always something to do with identity trble
L drillet, nantees, france
All the really nasty comments are by "men", and the ones who have made spiteful remarks also seem to have completely missed the point of BDD - an illness. (I'm not referring to the guys who have said something constructive.) Hmm, can't imagine why so many girls are insecure about their looks!
Sophie, Bath, UK
From reading these comments I find it unbelievable how short sighted people are. I suffer from BDD and am struggling to overcome it and keep it a level where i am still functioning (i.e. not staying in doors) This girl is an inspiration to all those out there suffering from BDD, men and women!!
Kitty, London,
If you don't like your body, you don't pose for a photograph like that. She's got BDD? What a load of rubbish. She got her 5 minutes of fame though didn't she? Is she waiting for the phone to ring now with the offers and deals?
James, London, London
Nobody seems to be listening! Is it mere vanity to feel so ugly that one wants to rip off one's own skin, to be phobic of mirrors, to be unable to concentrate on anything but the foul sensations coming from bulging fat that is apparently not there?! No, it is BDD - it has nothing to do with fashion!
Miranda Dearing, Hastings, United Kingdom
BDD is a serious mental illness, I have been house bound for years with it, it states that this girl is speaking of her past, I think she is very brave to face the world this way and use her recovery to create awareness, by these comments it is still clear that people do not understand this 'illness
emily, London, UK
Why does she think sh'es ugly ?
Because she is !
tony, Canary Wharf,
Much like the world thinks the USA is like Hollywood movies, girls think they need to be Hollywood sexy to be attractive. Our young girls dress like gansta ho's, we say its their bodies to do with as the please then they get pregnate at 14, kidnapped, internet nudes, dead on a beach.....
William, Atlanta, USA
TOM FROM LONDON!! sorry to be rude but do you know this girl? well i do i meet her at a comp ( misslimo) when i was modeling and she is not a wanna be shes a realy nice girl she is talking about the way she felt when she was younger and how people made her feel dont be so mean if you dont know her
jemma davies, runcorn, cheshire
So she's so shy, she's been on GMTV three times, she entered Miss England, and she's written a book about her 'condition' (on the cover of which she's pouting away), and which she's now promoting it? Seems like a bit of a glamour model wannabe - but with an added USP for promotion purposes.
Tom, London,
Whether or not we think she is good-looking is not the point. She was so anxious about the world that she didn't go out.
There are people with the opposite problem, who think that they are extremely attractive when they aren't. They've got Narcissistic Personality Disorder.
Helen, Southampton,
BT, the reason is: appearance is one thing that is always on show and impossible to hide, unlike one's 'character' or ability to do maths. People continually judge on looks above anything else - when was the last time I got whistled at in the street because some man appreciated my beautiful nature?
Laura, Reading,
It is no wonder in the society in which we live. It is topical regarding the influence of models and fashion magazines upon girls. The consequence is this caes here. When will someone address this issue of model/size. Generations of women are being made ill and miserable.
jane, york, uk
Lets not all forget and keep to the facts THIS IS A Psychological disorder
Not an excuse for criticism.
Dr Stan, LA, US
Racheal is not ugly but might come across as unattractive. She is conspicuously made up and simpers up at the lens. Hopefully she will realise that there are different types of beauty and she is not doing herself any favours by making herself up like a glamour model.
Barbara, Croydon, Surrey
Does it work the other way? Would a girl with Mr. Toad's face think herself one step above Ornella Muti? As to this babe, didn't she have suitors around to show her just how effective her looks are?
Eugene, heidelberg, germany
She's gorgeous.
Martin, Newmarket, Suffolk
Who cares - I look in the mirror and I'm really ugly but luvly wiv it.
Frederick, London, UK
Girls always focus too much on their faces. They like to do many preparations before they go outside. That is reasonable if they could manage it within not long time. But actually one's appearence is not so important if compared with his or her characteristic.
lynn, china ,
women are always more critical about their appearance than men. they never feel satisfied with themselves. i think women shall pay more attention to their thoughts and inner feelings.
dorothy, jinhua,
E U- galy !!!
She sure as hell is honest about it ! In this country though anyone ugly as a bull hind end can make a big buck. Don't know England all that well....
Gerard, milford, USA
She's right. But ugliness is not the end of one's life.
wilson, london, uk
How come people feel bad about themselves if they think they are "ugly" but they don't feel abd if they are bad at math, or not good athletes etc?
Perhaps we place too much emphasis on looks and not the actual content of one's character.
BT, Harrow,