In the heart of Paris, a young woman navigates the fragile terrain between healing and harm, carrying the weight of her past struggles with anorexia and bipolar disorder. Her journey is shadowed by the relentless pressures of societal expectations and the well-meaning but misguided interventions of those around her, turning a simple nutrition class into a battleground of vulnerability and courage.
As she confronts the professor’s demands to expose her body’s numbers and document every bite, she feels the sting of old wounds reopening, the classroom’s fluorescent lights casting harsh judgment on her scars. This is not just a lesson in nutrition; it is a test of resilience, identity, and the right to reclaim her own story without shame or scrutiny.

AITA for pushing back on my nutrition professor’s assignments?












Dr. Renee D. Thompson, a registered nurse and expert in health care communication, emphasizes the critical importance of providers (which can extend conceptually to educators in health-related fields) ensuring patient or student safety and respecting individual needs. While the professor’s intent may have been educational, the mandatory public disclosure of BMI and food logging ignores established best practices regarding sensitive health information and the known triggers for individuals with a history of eating disorders.
The OP’s actions stem from a legitimate concern about psychological safety, especially given their documented history of anorexia and recent weight changes related to mental health treatment. When the professor dismissed these concerns, prioritizing curriculum rigidity over student well-being, the situation escalated. This demonstrates a failure in communication and a breakdown of professional boundaries on the part of the instructor. The assignment itself—public analysis of individual eating habits—invites social comparison and disordered thinking, which is particularly damaging in a college-age cohort already navigating identity and body image issues.
The OP was appropriate in speaking up, as they were advocating for their mental health in an academic setting that failed to provide reasonable accommodations. A constructive recommendation for future situations would involve seeking formal documentation of the disability/history through the university’s disability services office *before* class begins. This formal channel can compel the instructor to offer necessary alternatives without the student having to engage in uncomfortable, direct confrontation.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.














The individual felt deeply conflicted, as their personal history with eating disorders and weight sensitivity clashed directly with the mandatory, potentially triggering academic requirements imposed by the instructor.
Is it more important for an instructor to adhere strictly to a set curriculum, or to adapt assignments to prevent known psychological harm to students with documented vulnerabilities?







