Yes I agree with all of that but the point I keep trying to make is that when it becomes a period of enforced hunger, fasting and severe calorie restriction with the sole purpose of "balancing" out a binge, then that is bulimic behaviour. If the "binge" is a way to enjoy different foods and delicacies or as a way to reward a hard training session or post competition than this is fine, as long there is no feeling of guilt or a yearning to undo the binge by restricting.
Sure, there would have been times in our evolutionary past when our species would have endured periods of feast and famine (however this is blown out of proportion - apart from the cold winter months as hunter gatherers we would have had access to food more regularly than many seem to think). And the only reason we ever went through a famine/feast cycle was because food availability could sometimes become intermittent so we had no choice.
Very interesting... You bring up a lot I want to talk about, but I don't have nearly enough energy to address it all.
I used to try to 'compensate' for my binges. Back when I followed the 'galeniko principles', I was under 2k calories a day and cooked almost 100% of my own food. Binges weren't planned, they simply happened.
As I recall galeniko saying he would do a monstrous workout the next day to compensate for such occurrences, I tried the same. For me, this always ended in failure... My binges haven't once allowed me to perform extraordinarily the next day.
I feel less bad about each one. I get smarter about each one, too. I realized they CAN provide a lot of enjoyment to my life if performed correctly. They provide variety which greatly reduces the stress I place on myself with regard to cooking (my hobby), and the stress from constantly denying myself all sorts of food. When I know the next opportunity to try a particular food is just around the corner, I can ignore it very easily.
I no longer try to compensate with exercise at all, either. In fact, sometimes I hold off until Saturday night, as Sunday is typically my 'day off' (if I take one).
I have a lot of problems, but I'm learning. To be honest, I think most of my coworkers have an eating disorder: walking around gorging yourself, bridging one glucose flood into the next. They end up far overweight, with a habit of reaching for a sugary treat every time they feel less than stellar. I might be too far on the other end of the spectrum -- overly afraid of 'feeling too good' -- but we're all
somewhere in the same spectrum... I just need to move into a range that makes me stronger, not weaker. To not even consider one's eating and yet fall, by instinct, in this range... That's what I call healthy, well constituted -- but how many people qualify for this label?
Very few, by my estimation.