“…Safety maintains the body as a site of positive connection, agency, subjective attunement, and pleasure, while violations lead to dissociation, disrupted connection with the body, blocked agency, disrupted attunement, and a host of negative feelings (van der Kolk, 1996). Sexual harassment and other violations are very common during adolescence (Tjaden & Thoennes, 2000;Young, Grey, & Boyd, 2009), and while violations are a general risk factor to multiple expressions of disrupted embodiment and not a specific risk factor to disordered eating, they are just as relevant to prevention work (Piran, 2010). The provision of safety is challenging to achieve as it is tied to widely accepted ideologies and social structures of power and privilege (Senn, Gee, & Thake, 2011).…”