Drama Therapy for Eating Disorders
How embodied, creative approaches address the emotional and identity dimensions of eating disorders that standard treatments often miss.
How embodied, creative approaches address the emotional and identity dimensions of eating disorders that standard treatments often miss.
Eating disorders are among the most complex mental health conditions. They are not primarily about food. They are about control, identity, emotion regulation, body relationship, trauma, and self-worth. The eating disorder behaviours serve a psychological function: managing feelings that feel unmanageable, maintaining a sense of self that feels otherwise formless, or communicating distress that has no other outlet.
Standard treatments for eating disorders, cognitive behavioural therapy, family therapy, dietary support, are effective, but they often struggle to reach the deeper layers. A client can understand intellectually that their beliefs about food and their body are distorted while remaining completely unable to change them. The problem is not primarily cognitive.
This is where drama therapy can help. It addresses eating disorders through embodied experience, story, and relationship, reaching the emotional and identity dimensions that underlie the behaviours.
Not the behaviour itself, the psychology underneath.
Who am I beyond the disorder?
From enemy to expression.
Giving feeling a form.
Externalising the voice.
Witnessed without rejection.
Eating disorders frequently co-opt identity. The anorexic person becomes "the one who doesn't eat." The person with binge eating disorder defines themselves by shame and loss of control. When the eating disorder has been present since adolescence, the person may genuinely not know who they are without it.
Drama therapy's role work directly addresses this. Clients explore identities beyond the eating disorder, characters they have never been allowed to play, strengths they have suppressed, ways of being that the eating disorder has crowded out. This is not pretending. It is the beginning of building a self that can exist independently of the disorder.
Eating disorders involve a profoundly disturbed relationship with the body. The body is experienced as enemy, as object to be controlled, as source of shame. Most direct body image work (looking in mirrors, discussing appearance) activates the eating disorder's defensive system and produces more distress than change.
Drama therapy approaches the body differently. Embodied warm-up work, physical games, movement, breath work, reconnects clients with bodily sensation and agency without triggering body scrutiny. Over weeks and months, clients develop a felt sense of the body as a place of expression and experience rather than a problem. This shift is difficult to achieve through any purely verbal approach.
Eating disorder behaviours typically function as emotion regulation strategies. Restricting creates a sense of control when life feels chaotic. Bingeing provides emotional numbing or comfort. Purging releases tension. Until clients develop other ways to manage overwhelming emotion, asking them to give up the behaviour is asking them to give up their only coping mechanism.
Drama therapy builds emotion regulation capacity through embodied expression. It gives feelings a form and a container, a character, a story, a dramatic scene, which is often more accessible than verbal description. Clients who cannot say "I am terrified of losing control" can often play a character who is. The distinction matters.
One of the most effective drama therapy techniques for eating disorders is borrowed from Narradrama: externalising the eating disorder as a separate character. Rather than "I am anorexic," the client works with "the anorexia" as an external presence, giving it a voice, a form, a personality, a set of demands.
This externalisation creates distance and perspective. Clients can talk to the eating disorder, argue with it, make deals with it, and gradually resist it, in ways that feel impossible when the disorder is experienced as the self. Research on narrative therapy approaches in eating disorder treatment supports this approach.
Eating disorders thrive on secrecy. The hiding, the lying, the performance of normality, all of this reinforces shame and isolation. Group drama therapy provides an antidote: a context where something hidden can be given form and witnessed without judgment. Being seen, even obliquely, through a character or a story, and not rejected is a genuinely therapeutic experience for someone whose eating disorder has been maintained by shame.
Clients can talk to the eating disorder, argue with it, make deals with it, and gradually resist it, in ways that feel impossible when the disorder is experienced as the self.
Anorexia involves rigid control, perfectionism, fear of losing control, and a body image disturbance that persists despite evidence. Drama therapy for anorexia addresses the identity rigidity and perfectionism through play and improvisation (which require tolerating imperfection), the emotional suppression through gradual embodied expression, and the body relationship through non-threatening physical engagement that doesn't involve scrutiny or comparison.
Important caveat: drama therapy with people who are medically compromised by anorexia must be adapted carefully. Intensive embodied work is not appropriate when someone is severely malnourished. Coordination with the medical team is necessary. At lower weights, drama therapy may focus more on gentle relational work and storytelling than on physically active approaches.
Bulimia and binge eating disorder typically involve intense shame cycles, emotion dysregulation, and impulsive behaviour driven by emotional states the person cannot tolerate. Drama therapy addresses the emotional triggers through creative exploration, builds distress tolerance through playful and expressive work, and works directly with the shame through witnessing and group drama.
Binge eating disorder in particular responds well to character and role work focused on self-compassion and the development of an inner critic that is less absolute and punishing. The client who can play a character who is kind to themselves, even in fiction, has begun to access something real.
Drama therapy works best for eating disorders as part of a broader treatment approach that includes medical monitoring (especially for anorexia), nutritional counselling, and a therapist experienced in eating disorders. Drama therapy can be delivered individually or in groups. Specialist eating disorder day programmes and inpatient units in the UK and North America increasingly include creative arts therapies as part of the treatment programme.
For someone accessing drama therapy privately alongside other treatment, it is good practice for the drama therapist to be in contact with the broader treatment team, particularly around any medical concerns.
Different jobs, same treatment team.
| Drama therapy | CBT-E | FBT (family-based) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Works through | Embodied story, role, character | Cognitions, behaviours, food records | Parents refeeding the adolescent |
| Best for | Identity, shame, emotion, body relationship | Behavioural change, thought patterns | Adolescents, weight restoration at home |
| Session feel | Play, movement, witness | Structured, homework-driven | Family meeting, meal-based |
| Typical length | Long-term, often 12+ months | 20 to 40 sessions | ~20 sessions over 6 to 12 months |
| Role in team | Adjunct to medical + ED specialist | First-line for adults | First-line for adolescents |
A drama therapy session for someone with an eating disorder might include physical warm-up work (kept gentle and body-safe), an improvisation exercise or game that engages with a theme relevant to the client's work, story or character exploration connected to identity and emotion, and a period of verbal reflection on what emerged. Clients are never asked to discuss food, weight, or body directly unless they choose to. The work tends to approach these themes through metaphor and character, which is both less threatening and often more effective.
Early sessions focus on building trust and the therapeutic relationship. Embodied and dramatic work deepens gradually over weeks. Most people working with eating disorders require longer-term treatment, this is not a problem that resolves in eight sessions.
Or read about the techniques drama therapists use.
Yes, as an adjunctive treatment. Drama therapy addresses the emotional and identity factors that maintain eating disorders, not the behaviours directly. It works best alongside medical monitoring and specialist eating disorder treatment.
Indirectly, through movement, character work, and embodied play rather than direct confrontation. Because the eating disorder's defensive system is less activated when the body is encountered through story and play, clients often make more progress than through direct body image work. Over time, the body becomes a place of expression and agency rather than a problem to manage.
Externalisation (treating the eating disorder as a separate character to engage with), embodied warm-up work that reconnects clients with physical sensation, role work to build identity beyond the disorder, storytelling to develop alternative self-narratives, and group drama therapy to address shame and isolation.
With appropriate adaptation, yes. Intensive embodied work is not suitable when someone is medically compromised. At those times, drama therapy focuses on gentle relational and storytelling work. Coordination with the medical team is necessary. At a stable weight, drama therapy can address the perfectionism, identity rigidity, and emotional suppression that characterise anorexia.
Yes. It addresses emotional awareness and regulation, the triggers that precede bingeing, body attunement, and the shame cycles that maintain the disorder. Role work focused on self-compassion is often particularly effective.
Online-Therapy.com is a structured online therapy platform with worksheets, journals, video sessions, and licensed therapists. A useful bridge if you need to start online while searching for a specialty drama therapist.
See the mental health section for related titles. Trauma-informed and group therapy references on the bibliography are also relevant.