 it's kind of like inherently assumed that if you have, you know, diagnosed anorexia, that label, that you also have body dysmorphia as well. And you're kind of saying that you don't need to have body dysmorphia to be anorexia. Like you can see that you're very, very, you know, skinny and you can be like, okay, right, this is actually a problem. The idea of changing my ways of changing my habits was more scary to me than being like, okay, I just looked this way and I could die any day, right? Like that's how scary the change was for me. And I think this is really, really common in eating disorders, because in the end, like an eating disorder is an addiction, just like smoking or sex addiction or alcoholism, like the person suffering from the addiction often knows that what they're doing is not good for them.