Welcome!

Welcome to ARFID Circle. ARFID Circle is a resource for parents, caregivers, and for anyone who struggles with ARFID.

We are not medical professionals, and our purpose is simply to share first-hand knowledge of living with ARFID and sharing real-life stories about the challenges that ARFID presents.

We are noticing an uptick in ARFID in the news. We aim to keep our resource page up to date with real-life stories and information on groups/organizations that provide services. We also have links to books published on ARFID by some of the leaders in ARFID research.

For parents and anyone with ARFID, we hope that ARFID Circle helps you feel less alone.

Meet Emma, founder of ARFID Circle who struggles with Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder and raises two children

My Story

During my childhood in Ireland, my relationship with food was marked by an unusual and isolating experience. A daily occurrence in my house was family dinners at a set time every day. Pretty much most days I never ate family dinners when my siblings and parents ate dinner. But it wasn’t just dinners, it was all meals and all foods. They had variety in their meals and foods that they ate and my variety was pretty much nonexistent.

My eating habits also went in patterns, I would favor a food, for example toast and then have it for breakfast, dinner and lunch for weeks on end. Then I would drop or get sick of this food and replace it with another food, for example sausage rolls (or what they refer to as Pigs in a Blanket in the US).This cycle continued, with me repeatedly fixating on a preferred food and then abruptly abandoning it for something else. Junk food such as candy bars and chocolate were things that I would favor outside meal times for snacks/treats.

How long did this go on for? Well pretty much until I was 19 years old.

When I left home and moved to college I had 3 roommates, to them it was interesting that a person could eat that much toast and especially for dinner in the evening. While at college watching peers cook and eat meals, my interest in non-preferred foods was aroused. At times I asked to try foods they were having or I simply started cooking them and trying them myself.

On trips home to visit my family I would sometimes announce ‘Did you know I now like Fries with Curry Sauce?’ My third year of college involved a placement year in the US and during this time I tried even more new foods. In our group of friends/roommates, I was still considered to be a picky eater.

This is the why to ARFID Circle.

—Emma