tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-40614830267362558432023-11-17T00:34:23.671-08:00life.after.anorexia...<center>burying the bones</center>lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.comBlogger133125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-15034806950160801422012-04-20T11:43:00.001-07:002012-04-20T11:43:35.406-07:00Where I've Been and Where I'm GoingIt's pretty obvious that I have not been dedicated to writing this blog in a long time. I love all of you dearly. You have helped me in many ways through your sweet and insightful comments and e-mails, and I am thrilled to know that my words have helped some of you as well. One reason why I haven't been writing is because, for once, as far as my eating disorder goes, things are finally okay. I'm eating three "normal" meals a day. I'm not counting calories. I'm not losing or gaining weight. I'm just doing the very best that I can to take care of myself. I have also been very busy with work. I've been traveling recently, making wedding plans, looking at houses to purchase, applying to PhD programs, and spending time with my fiance and our cat. It seems like I am only inspired to blog when things are going horribly wrong. But lately I have been thinking that I should change the focus of this blog, or create a new blog altogether, where I focus on being healthy. I'm not sure if that's what I'll do. I'm just tossing ideas around. I feel like I just need to move forward and leave my eating disorder in the past. Sometimes blogging about it feels like a step backward, like I'm giving it too much thought and attention when what I really need to do is abandon it and move on entirely. <br />
<br />
Regardless of the decision I make, for all of you who e-mail me or contact me, that doesn't mean I don't want to talk to you. I do! I love talking to you. If you need advice, if you have questions about recovery, or if you just need someone who understands to listen, <u><b>I am and always will be available. Always.</b></u> So please do not hesitate to <a href="mailto:lifeafteranorexia@gmail.com">contact me</a><a href="mailto:lifeafteranorexia@gmail.com"></a>. It won't impose on me, offend me, or trigger me in any way. I love hearing from each and every one of you. I know how scary an eating disorder is, how isolating it is, how hopeless it feels. But I promise you, it doesn't have to feel that way. You can live a better life. You can be a whole person. You can be healthy, you can be happy. But you cannot do it with an eating disorder holding you back. You have to let it go.<br />
<br />
That's really all I'm trying to do.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-65290241432749346322012-03-05T13:03:00.000-08:002012-03-05T13:03:03.604-08:00Normal vs. HealthyThere are several ED-related buzzwords that make me cringe a bit each time I hear them: "triggering", "fear food", "thinspiration", "meal plan". Today, however, the words I am focusing on are "normal" and "healthy". I don't like either of these words because I believe their definition varies from person to person. Too often, society tries to measure everyone against someone else's vision of normal and healthy.What is normal for me or healthy for me is not necessarily normal or healthy for you. But, more importantly, what is normal for me, isn't necessarily healthy, period.<br />
<br />
I realized this a few moments ago while enjoying my lunch which consisted of a mandarin orange, one of those 100-calories bags of popcorn, and a handful of chocolate candy. By no means is this lunch the nutritional ideal for anyone, but, for me, it's quite normal. In other words, within the context of my life,this was not an unusual lunch for me to have (usually I eat breakfast, try to skip lunch, then eat dinner, only to end up snacking on a variety of nutritionally-derelict items). While this might be normal for me, it is not healthy, even though I do little to change my behavior. It seems I need to be reminded that behaviors aren't normal just because they are repeated over and over again.This is an important concept to keep in mind during recovery. It is easy for us to fall into patterns, to repeat certain behaviors, and become oblivious to them. But we need to be self-aware enough to identify which behaviors are "normal" in the larger scheme of things, and which behaviors feed from eating-disordered thoughts and impulses. Next, we have to fashion a plan to remedy these behaviors if they are damaging or if they interfere with our recovery, our health, or the quality of our lives. I can guarantee that my substandard lunch was the product of my eating disorder. Now, what am I going to do to fix it? Stop skipping meals. Stop restricting. Eat well-rounded meals with proper nutrition to avoid absent-minded snacking and hunger-induced binges.<br />
<br />
I also have to remember that eating disorders are not normal. Of course this seems like common sense, but after you've lived with an eating disorder for a number of years (whether you are in recovery or you are not) your life begins to feel somewhat normal because it's all you know. Even if you aren't happy with the way your life is progressing, if you're sad, if you're tired of being sick--whatever-- it begins to feel safe and normal and the desire to change things lessens. The need for total recovery fades and you begin to live this pieced together sort of life in which you are partly recovered and partly broken. You step in and out of both realms, trying on both masks and constantly swapping one out for the other. But in order to ever be truly happy, or truly healthy, or truly normal in the most basic sense of any of those words, we have to self-aware. We have to look inward, notice our patterns and behaviors, and work hard toward changing those which are negative, destructive, lazy, neglectful, or hurtful.<br />
<br />
Otherwise, we're living life half-full. <br />
<br />lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-45575210205549574712012-02-13T09:22:00.000-08:002012-02-13T09:23:57.871-08:00Let's Be Honest: Recovery WarfareDo you want to recover from your eating disorder?<br />
<br />
Do you <i>really</i> want to get better? <i>Wholeheartedly</i>?<br />
<br />
For the last five years or so, I have told myself and everyone around me that I genuinely want to recover from my eating disorder. The problem is, that's a lie, sort of. Of course I want to recover from my eating disorder. Of course I know it's deadly, it's killing me, it has stolen everything from me, destroyed my health, and destroyed my relationships. Of course I want to get better. Don't I? Then why haven't I done it already?<br />
<br />
I admit that deep down I have been afraid to fully part with my eating disorder because I feel to some extent defined by it. I realize this thinking is illogical, though all eating-disordered thinking is illogical, and that is precisely the point. <b>I will never be fully recovered unless I am willing to give up my eating disorder. It isn't going to disappear. I have to sacrifice it fully. Give it up. Burn it. Kill it. Destroy it. Forget about it. Let it go. Move on. </b><br />
<br />
I realize this isn't easy. I know that recovery isn't as simple as making the choice to get better and trying to implement changes in your life; it takes dedication and daily commitment to overcome an eating disorder. Recovery is most definitely an active choice--something we have to work towards and put effort into. But I believe that if we aren't willing to let go of our eating disorders, of course they aren't going to leave us. We have to leave them. <b>We have to put more effort into being well than we put into being sick.</b> Granted, eating disorders aren't choices and all behaviors and compulsions fueled by our eating disorders are/were out of our control. I know that when my eating disorder was at its worst, I put a lot of effort into being sick-- obsessively counting calories, hardcore restricting, adhering to strict workout regimens, etc. Even though this behavior was fueled by madness, I put effort into obeying it. Why can't we take that same amount of effort and discipline and apply it to our recovery? Why can't we channel the dedication and discipline created by our eating disorder and turn it into a weapon to aid in our recovery? <br />
<br />
Guess what: we can. And we have to, if we ever want to be free.<br />
<br />
I know I am guilty in being "lazy" in my recovery. It's time to get tough. I am kicking my eating disorder's ass and setting it on fire.<br />
<br />
Forgetting about it<br />
Letting it go<br />
Moving on<br />
<br />
Who's with me?<br />
<br />
<br />lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-88158643990428677772012-02-08T20:08:00.001-08:002012-02-08T20:33:51.004-08:00Why recovery is STILL worth itI was invited by Anne-Sophie from <a href="http://fightinganorexia.com/">Fighting Anorexia</a> to participate in a recovery advocacy project. I, along with Anne-Sophie and a list of other great bloggers, are posting this month on our reasons for recovery. Though I have written on the reasons I entered recovery several times on my blog, one particular entry of mine stands out the most. In August of 2010, I wrote a very short post called "Why Recovery is Worth it". Here is what I said: <br />
<br />
"Why recovery is worth it:<br />
In recovery, you realize your body is special.<br />
You are worth saving.<br />
Life is too short to be miserable, sick, and hungry.<br />
Food has a purpose.<br />
It fuels your body to give you the energy to live.<br />
You will remember what it feels like to hope and to dream.<br />
If you're healthy, you can actually begin to make them come true.<br />
When you're free from your eating disorder, you are free.<br />
Your thoughts are your own.<br />
You don't have to answer to anyone.<br />
You don't have to lie to people or live a double life.<br />
You don't have to feel guilty.<br />
You don't have to hate yourself.<br />
Food is not the enemy.<br />
You don't have to be afraid of food.<br />
Your hair will stop falling out.<br />
Your stomach will stop growling.<br />
You won't be light-headed.<br />
And you won't gain a hundred pounds.<br />
Eventually, you'll stop fighting with the mirror.<br />
You will begin to trust yourself.<br />
You will begin to take care of yourself.<br />
You will begin to love yourself.<br />
You can start over.<br />
It's not too late.<br />
You are worth saving. "<br />
<br />
After rereading this post today, I've realized a number of things:<br />
1. I still believe every word I wrote back in August of 2010, even if I don't always follow my own advice. I know that I should, and I'm trying to do better.<br />
<br />
2. I believe I am worth saving. I believe you are worth saving too.<br />
<br />
3. Sometimes, dedicating your life to recovery once is not enough. Sometimes we fall down. Sometimes we need reminders. Sometimes we need to take a step back, reevaluate where we stand, and learn the best way to move forward. We need to dedicate ourselves forever, not just a moment in time.<br />
<br />
4. Transformation is not a future event. It starts now. Today. Don't say you'll begin recovery tomorrow or next week or next month or when you've lost another five lbs. Do it now. None of us have any promise of tomorrow.
Life is too short, too beautiful, too precious, and too fleeting. Even if your world is so dark you can't possibly see that right now, I promise you, it is.<br />
Recovery is possible.
Recovery is worth it.
Recovery is necessary.<br />
<br />
I also once said:
"But I've realized recovery doesn't mean boring.
It doesn't mean normal or mediocre or bland.
Recovery just means healthy.
How can I be spectacular and different and unique if I'm dead?
Anorexia = another statistic.
Anorexia = death.
Dead means dead.
Dead means it's over. No more chances. No coming back.
But with recovery comes hope.
Hope means good things will come.
Recovery means energy.
Energy means I can do all the things I want to do.
Recovery means promise.
Promise means a chance to be all the things I want to be.
Recovery means life.
It means more than life.
It means to be alive.
Unique. Special. Free."<br />
<br />
Are you ready for freedom?<br />
What will you do today to take steps toward recovery?<br />
What does recovery mean to you?lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-50014571943144022982012-01-17T07:51:00.000-08:002012-01-17T07:54:46.415-08:00Breaking Free From BananasI will admit it. I am addicted to bananas. I eat one banana per day for breakfast, alongside a whole-wheat english muffin and a ginormous cup of coffee with two tablespoons of soymilk. Always. For the last four years. Every. Single. Day. I purchase bananas each time I'm at the market, regardless of the quantity I have waiting for me at home. This never changes and I don't want it to. At least I didn't, until I realized this breakfast routine was the dirty work of my eating disorder.<br />
<br />
I realized this today when I woke up and started making my usual breakfast. I scooped out the appropriate amount of coffee beans and filled the coffee maker with water. I opened the english muffins, popped them into the toaster, and reached for one of three bananas that were sitting in a wooden bowl on my kitchen counter. All of the bananas were a little overripe, which is how I like them. As I peeled the first banana, the entire thing was rotten inside. Like, brown mushy rotten. Like, no one on the planet would find this appetizing rotten. So I tossed it and opened the second banana-- same thing. Gooey mushy brownness. So I peeled the third banana, same thing. All three completely inedible and now staring up at me from inside the trash can. The coffee had finished brewing, the english muffin had finished toasting, and I had no banana. I commenced freaking out. I paced around my apartment mumbling. Stood there in disbelief. Sent a text message to my fiance, as if somehow he could fix the Bananaless Breakfast Disaster of 2012. Just as I was considering hopping in my car in my pajamas and house slippers to buy more bananas in order to complete the missing breakfast component, my fiance responded with a text of his own that read simply, <i>"You're crazy."<br />
</i><br />
He's totally right. <br />
<br />
<b>I am crazy.<br />
<br />
This is not normal.<br />
<br />
It's not about bananas at all.<br />
<br />
I have an eating disorder.<br />
<br />
It's about control. </b><br />
<br />
<b>It's about patterns and likeness and familiarity</b> in a world that is constantly changing and overwhelming me.<br />
<br />
<b>It's about calories, or the lack thereof.</b> I know a breakfast of a banana and an english muffin is not substantial enough to fuel my body throughout the morning. That's why I'm tired and hungry again not long after I've eaten.<br />
<br />
<b>It's about my eating disorder ruining my life</b>. It is not normal to have a major meltdown when I have no bananas for breakfast, when there is a refrigerator and pantry full of perfectly suitable breakfast foods at my disposal. It is also not normal to panic when my banana supply, or my english muffin supply, is dipping dangerously low and run out to the store to buy more. I feel like a drug addict. That's how serious I get about this. And it scares me. <br />
<br />
I know that bananas are good for you. They're full of potassium and fiber and even have a considerably high amount of iron for a fruit, which I need because I'm severely anemic. They can also help to regulate your digestive system, and some say reduce your risk of stroke. Plus, they're really tasty and I enjoy eating them. I'm not going to stop. But I know my dependence upon them are the work of my eating disorder, so I have to break free. No more bananas for me, at least not for breakfast, that is.<br />
<br />
I am proud of myself for labeling this behavior as ED related, and furthermore, for shutting it down. <br />
<br />
So, what did I eat instead of bananas this morning?<br />
<br />
I had grapes instead. Tomorrow, who knows? <br />
<br />
<br />
Do you have any foods that you are dependent upon?lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-91645333570929774242011-12-16T08:00:00.000-08:002011-12-16T09:32:39.123-08:00Starting over, again.Thank you all so very much for all your wisdom and support. You guys are truly, truly amazing and know how to make a gal feel loved. Since my last post, I have made an effort to be more positive and to treat myself better. Last night, one of my friends on Facebook posted a link to a blog that really inspired me. It isn't targeted at ED recovery, but all of the advice listed can be applied to recovery and to every aspect of life, so I'm sharing it with all of you. More than that, I am taking the advice to heart. Maybe it seems simple and self-explanatory, but we need to be reminded of these things from time to time to ensure we are valuing and protecting ourselves. <br />
<br />
The post is called "30 Things to Stop Doing to Yourself". Though I am guilty of most of these, the ones that stand out so much for me personally are:<br />
<br />
#2 Stop running from your problems<br />
#3 Stop lying to yourself<br />
#6 Stop trying to hold onto the past<br />
#7 Stop being scared to make a mistake<br />
#11 Stop being idle<br />
#18 Stop holding grudges<br />
#23 Stop trying to make things perfect<br />
#28 Stop worrying so much<br />
<br />
After reading this post I started thinking about my life, my eating disorder, my recovery, choices I've made, my past, my future-- basically all of the things I try to run from daily. But you can't do that. You can't bury all of your crazy and all of your problems underneath distraction after distraction, which is precisely what I am so skilled at doing. But I'm only hurting myself.<br />
<br />
Once it's gone, you will never have the chance to get today back again. Once a moment has passed, it's over. There are no do-overs. But there are do-betters. Tomorrow is new, unspoiled, and full of promise and potential. Tomorrow doesn't have to be the same as today, or yesterday, or last month or last year. Tomorrow is untouched, undamaged, and the perfect opportunity for starting over.<br />
<br />
To read "Thirty Things to Stop Doing to Yourself", click <a href="http://www.marcandangel.com/2011/12/11/30-things-to-stop-doing-to-yourself/">here</a>.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-43735979566286041662011-12-06T14:02:00.000-08:002011-12-06T14:02:02.901-08:00Redefining my RecoveryI have been thinking lately about the possibility of seeking formal treatment. As far as ED recovery goes, I have never played by the rules. After one bad encounter with a medical professional when I was at my worst point, about 6 years ago, I swore off formal recovery and vowed to beat this on my own. But now, for the first time in a long time, I am feeling very vulnerable, very dysfunctional, and very sick of having an eating disorder. <br />
<br />
Somehow, within the last three months, things went from good to bad to terrible. As indicated in my last few posts, after a brief relapse, I had lost 14 lbs. I wasn't eating at all. Now, I've gained it all back and I'm experiencing binge after binge after binge. It feels like I have lost control of my life again and all I can think about is food-- or, more precisely-- hunger. I have this burning, irrational, all-encompassing hunger that I try so greatly to suppress and deny. Honestly, it's exhausting. I'm not sure how I got so far off track, but I know that, once again, this thing is controlling/destroying my entire life.<br />
<br />
I had today off of work. There were so many things I needed to accomplish but I didn't have the energy to do any of them. I spent my entire day fighting this battle between eating and not eating, switching loyalties from one side to the other and back again. Part of me wants to eat properly and nourish and care for my body, the other part wants nothing more than to lose weight. I am so conflicted that it wears me out. I starve, I binge. I eat normally. I work out. I skip a meal. I binge again. I work out again. There seems to be no logic or reason behind it. There are no decisions being made. It's as if I'm on auto-pilot and just going through the motions that some remote part of my brain signals for me to carry out. I feel so unbelievably, uncontrollably fat. It's as though moving and functioning and carrying out normal tasks are so much more exhausting because I feel like I'm twice the size I actually am. Again, I know that it's not "real", or that it isn't apparent to the rest of the world. It's my own issue inside my own head, but I can't find the switch to turn it off.<br />
<br />
I realize this post is a major downer, but I had to say something. Until now, no one else has known what's going on with me. I have just been keeping it all inside, and I know how dangerous that can be.<br />
<br />
I hope those of you who are reading this find yourselves in better spirits and in better health. I know that, like all things, this too shall pass. My faith in recovery has not wavered. I still believe it is possible, it is necessary, even, and that we all deserve it. I'm just realizing now that I can't do it on my own, and changes need to be made in order to achieve it.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-48748663239771310822011-11-04T08:11:00.000-07:002011-11-04T08:11:03.016-07:00Welcome to MichiganI haven't written in a few weeks because I was in the process of moving all the way to Michigan. The fiance, the cat, and I are all safe and happy and tucked away in our new place here. The cat did much better with the move than I anticipated. When I moved from Las Vegas to the east coast, he had such a difficult time in the car. Moving is hard on everyone. There are still a lot of things left to unpack and sort out, but it's coming along. I started my new job a few days ago but I'm not sure I will be keeping it. The pay is great but it's very boring, not at all what I expected, and it's about a 25 minute drive. That doesn't sound like very far, but it's all these twisty little lakeside roads that will be hell to maneuver once winter comes. Living on the west coast for so long, I am certainly not used to driving on wintery roads! Plus, I drive a sports car. I am looking for jobs closer to where I'm actually living and I've had two interviews at one place so far. I'm really hoping it works out. I also plan to start tutoring and doing freelance work as well once I'm more accustomed to the area.<br />
<br />
We have an apartment at the moment which is much much smaller than our previous one. It's a two bedroom but there's only one bath. The kitchen is tiny! I just tell myself that it's "cozy". It really is, in a way. We have a fireplace (which we haven't used yet) and a little pond nearby with wild geese and swans and ducks. We are on the first floor, which means our kitty can't go out and play on the balcony unsupervised, but there are evergreen trees around our patio which add some privacy. Plus, they're nice to look at. And there are lots of birds and squirrels living in them. <br />
<br />
It's always difficult adjusting to a new area, but since I've moved to different states so many times during the last few years, I'm used to that. I do have a an issue with the concept of "home" which I have written about before. For so long I felt like I didn't have a home because my father passed away and my mother got rid of our childhood home and moved in with another man. I've been shooting around from state to state and haven't settled in one place long enough to create a home of my own. Now it feels like everywhere is home. Or better yet, everywhere is<i> not home</i>. I don't feel like Michigan is much different from where I lived before. It's all unfamiliar. It's all this uniform "non-home", this state of "otherness" that encompasses everything that is not the life I used to have. That isn't necessarily a bad thing. I think it's made moving here easier. <br />
<br />
Part of me wants to settle here. We don't have any foreseen plans for moving, but we are keeping the option open. Because of my fiance's job, we will be here for at least a year, but most likely a minimum of three. If we stay for the full three years, that will be longer than I've stayed in any of the cities I've ever lived in except my hometown. Then again, if we love it here, we could stay forever. My fiance wants to purchase a home somewhere outside the city. A forever home. That's a concept I'm not familiar with, but I'm open to. But it scares me, too. It's a big commitment. What if we buy a house here and want to leave, but can't sell it? I'm terrified of the idea of being trapped. Maybe it has something to do with those tricky control issues. Regardless, I am open to making the best out of our stay here, whether it's temporary or permanent. <br />
<br />
As for my eating disorder, things still aren't where they should be. While my fiance was gone away on business, I lost 14 lbs. I know. It's a lot. Since he has returned, I have been eating a lot more and I've gained back 8 or 9 lbs. This stresses me out immensely. I feel like a big blob wobbling around from place to place. I know that it isn't true, but I can't help feeling that way. I need to stop weighing myself. There are so many issues going on in the world and so many people with so many problems. I feel like me worrying over what size my jeans are is so shallow and stupid. Then again, I know that it isn't my fault, that it's not a choice I am consciously making. I'm just so incredibly tired of dealing with my eating disorder. I wish I could just forget about it. Wouldn't that be great?<br />
<br />
I hope you're all doing well, eating well, and feeling well.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-28397222671895951712011-10-04T19:25:00.000-07:002011-10-04T19:34:16.430-07:00Hiding, Coming Clean. Starting over.There is only one real explanation as to why I haven't been blogging lately. I could lie to myself and say it's due to all the stress of moving (we're moving to Michigan in three weeks!) but that's not it. I am not blogging because I am not in a good place right now in terms of my recovery. I am not eating enough. I am losing weight. I am not proud of this, but one thing I have never been is a liar. Over the past year and a half, you, my beautiful readers, have become my friends. I respect you all too much to lie to you. Also, I love you enough to urge you not to follow my mistakes.<br />
<br />
I know. That sounds messed up. It's like a parent who smokes cigarettes then warns their children to never smoke. It's contradictory. It's a little hypocritical. But it comes from a place of love. It comes from a place of, <i>"I want to save you from making the same mistakes I've made. I want you to have a better life than I've had."</i> In other words, I am human. Eating disorders suck. They are hard to recover from, but not impossible. Recovery is worth it. This disease doesn't have to be all-encompassing. I haven't forgotten that. I will always believe that. Even if, right now, it doesn't really seem like it. <br />
<br />
Ultimately, I know that <b>I need treatment. I need help. I cannot do this on my own.</b> I am no longer too proud to admit that. I have avoided formal treatment for my eating disorder for the past 7 years. I like to blame it on my contempt for doctors (you can read a blog post I wrote about it <a href="http://lifeafteranorexia.blogspot.com/2010/10/why-i-dont-trust-doctors.html">HERE</a>) but that's not the real reason either. The truth is simple: I don't want to give up control. Hmm. Let me repeat that:<br />
<br />
I don't want to give up control.<br />
<br />
At this point, "control" is such an eating-disorder buzz-word that it's almost lost its meaning. But, honestly, that's really what it comes down to-- I'm terrified of not being in control. Terrified. The thought of handing my life over to a staff of medical professionals makes my throat feel tight and my heart beat quickly. I get that little pit in my stomach. I want to hide, to run away. Basically, I want to keep doing what I'm doing, even though I know it isn't the solution.<br />
<br />
Of course, you could make the argument that I'm not in control as it is-- that my eating disorder is controlling everything. While that may be true, I am more comfortable allowing my eating disorder to manage my life than a nurse or a doctor or a therapist or a hospital bed. It's not that I don't want to lose my eating disorder. I do. I just want to do it my way.<br />
<br />
Obviously, my way isn't really working. <br />
<br />
I know my life is changing drastically within the next few months: I am moving to Michigan, I am (at some point) getting married, we're looking to buy a house, I am starting a new job. And I realized that, for the last several years, my life has never been calm. I'm always moving from one state to another, starting jobs, quitting jobs, moving on. Changing. Expanding. I have never allowed myself to stay put and just to <b>be.</b> I think that would help a lot. It's time to stay put in one town long enough to make friends, to feel familiar, to redefine my negative definition of "home" by building one of my own. <br />
<br />
On a side note, I'm thinking of tutoring once I get to Michigan for some extra income in addition to being a professional writer and a part-time makeup artist. I've been applying for teaching positions at colleges and universities, but none have worked out yet. I'm keeping my fingers crossed. My hopes for Michigan are high. I've never been there and I don't know what to expect, but I'm staying positive. As cliche as it sounds, I'm going to let myself start over.<br />
<br />
Fresh start.<br />
<br />
New beginning.<br />
<br />
All baggage left behind.<br />
<br />
Can it really be done? We'll see.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-1401212066123364862011-09-08T21:37:00.000-07:002011-09-08T21:39:31.238-07:00Separation of Self: Is My Body Me?For the last several weeks I have been unable to fall asleep before three in the morning. It hasn't been on purpose. I try to sleep-- I just can't. It could stem from my work schedule, or more likely, my caloric restriction (which I am working on). Regardless, I've been spending more time watching television at night than I have sleeping. During a late night tv session, one commercial caught my attention. It said:<br />
<br />
"Your body can tell you're pregnant before you can."<br />
<br />
Think about that for a second.<br />
<br />
Isn't the "your" and the "you" in this sentence referring to the same thing? It got me thinking-- why do we continually think of our bodies as separate entities from "ourselves" ? <b>If we are not our bodies, then who are we?</b><br />
<br />
Naturally, I applied this logic to my eating disorder. Nearly all of the scholarly research I've done on anorexia (I gave a lecture about this in December) refers to a paradoxical split that often occurs between the mind and the body of the anorexic. It becomes a matter of me versus she, of me versus it, me versus my body. This has certainly been my own experience. Throughout the madness and hysteria of my disorder, I never thought of my body as "me." My body was only this oddly shaped, inferior shell that I could shape and wield and torture and mold and control. I could change it. I could manipulate it. I was in control, not my body. But when I say "I", who do I mean? My brain, my soul, my spirit? Why is there a separation between body and between self?<br />
<br />
Of course, a biblical explanation seems like it might do-- (as Christianity urges us to kill off the desires of the flesh and the physical body to strengthen our souls, which will never die) but I'm not sure if that is the only reason. I think it's probably more of a cultural habit that stems from philosophical theory which urges us to think of our bodies as separate from our physical beings (think Descartes and the solitary self). It seems as though the "self" is largely interior. But, to me, the self is more than just the body-- it's all-encompassing-- body, mind, spirit, soul. <br />
<br />
Is anyone still reading this? :)<br />
<br />
What I'm trying to say is this:<br />
<br />
Though I have a tendency to get lost in my own mind, I am very much my body.<br />
<br />
My body is very much me.<br />
<br />
One cannot escape the other.<br />
<br />
I am she and she is me. <br />
<br />
If I am not my body, why is my body responsible for the way others see me? If you asked someone to describe me to you, odds are they would say I have brown hair. My eyes are blue. My skin is fair. <br />
<br />
If I am not my body, why does it hurt when I fall down (which I do often) or burn myself or scratch myself? <br />
<br />
I am my body. My body is not merely a mindless vessel equipped with arms and legs <br />
to scurry me around wherever my mind desires. If our minds are in control, why do people get cancer? Why do organs fail? <br />
<br />
I am my body. My mind is my body. My body is my mind.<br />
<br />
It's the same thing.<br />
<br />
That's why controlling and manipulating and torturing and shaping my body never worked the way I hoped it would-- because my entire being is interconnected. It's yin and yang. One part of affects the other, like an algebra equation. You can't divide one side without dividing the other. You can't declare war on one side without affecting the other. <br />
<br />
You can't destroy one without destroying the other.<br />
<br />
I don't know why, but I need a reminder from time to time to nurture and respect my body. It has never been natural for me to do this on my own. In fact, it's taken 27 years for me to realize that I even deserve it, but I do. Lord knows I haven't been doing all that I can lately to be good to myself.<br />
<br />
Have you?lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-57179404253948190042011-08-28T21:26:00.000-07:002011-08-28T21:30:29.136-07:00Saying vs. BelievingI was a chubby little girl. I had pin-straight brown hair and endless energy. I did cartwheels and handstands on the grass hoping to impress aunts, uncles, and cousins. I made dandelion bracelets and drank kool-aid on the front steps of my grandmother's porch. I rode my bicycle all evening long until the sun began to set and fireflies crept out from the trees that lined our street. I was happy. I had thick little legs, chubby little cheeks. But I was happy.<br />
<br />
The hatred and discomfort I felt toward my own body started when I was 8. Until then, I had never cared, or realized even, that my body was different from anyone else's. At eight 8, my two best friends were cheerleaders. They weighed less than me. They were prettier than me. They could do better cartwheels and handstands than me. They looked different in their bathing suits. I remember realizing that and being very upset about it. I understood, even then, that food was what separated fat from thin. I asked my mother once why I couldn't just chew my food up and spit it out again without swallowing it, since the flavor was all I wanted anyway, and the flavor wasn't the part that made you fat. I've never been able to forget the look of horror on her face-- the same look she gave me when she saw me skipping meals years later, when she watched me lose 80 lbs, when I admitted to her that I threw up 8 times a day. When I admitted to her I didn't want help.<br />
<br />
Throughout the rest of my childhood and young adulthood, I continued to struggle with my weight. My mother was always present in this battle, hovering in the background and shaking her head with that same look on her face. She had always been a thin woman who could eat whatever she wanted to without gaining any weight. On several occasions I recall her telling me that she would gladly trade me places-- that she felt guilty I wore larger sized clothes than she did. I remember how helpless she looked each time we went shopping. I always wanted the cute outfits and the cute outfits never fit me-- or, if they did, they didn't look how they were supposed to. Each shopping trip led to me holed up inside a dressing room crying. Crying and hating the person I saw reflected in the mirror-- the chubby girl standing in her underwear with a pair of cute jeans that wouldn't pull up any higher than her chubby thighs. My mother always said the same things: <br />
<font size="3" color="oldlace" face="courier new"><br />
That I was beautiful.<br />
That she loved me just the way I was. <br />
That God did, too.<br />
That he made me this way for a reason. <br />
That I needed to respect myself. <br />
That I needed to love myself. <br />
That I was just as good and as worthy as anyone else. <br />
That I was just as beautiful as all my friends.<br />
That I was gorgeous. <br />
That I was perfect... just as I was.</font><br />
<br />
Although everything my mother told me was true, I never believed it, even when I told her that I did. It took me gaining and losing mass amounts of weight, starving myself to the point of exhaustion and physical collapse, fighting for recovery, relapsing, wanting to die, repenting, wanting to live. It took a whole decade of downward spiral and victory and sorrow and happiness and triumph and defeat and I still haven't been able to fully believe all of what she said to me. I know that I should believe it. But how do I make myself?<br />
<br />
I've learned that recovery from an eating disorder-- and from anything else, I guess-- is like this. There is so much space between saying and believing-- so much space. I know that I need to rid myself of my eating disorder forever. I know that. And I say that. But do I believe it? My first instinct is to say yes-- of course I believe it. But do I really? If I really believed it, wouldn't I be working harder toward making it come true?<br />
<br />
I've realized that recovery with good intentions is a beautiful thing. That's how I started-- with all the best of intentions. With a whole new outlook on life and living and loving and existing. That was pure. That was real. Somehow my definition of recovery has shifted. Maybe I've been at it too long. I wonder to what extent I am hiding under the umbrella of "recovery" because I'm too scared to step out into the rain. As long as I say I'm in recovery, then people will leave me alone and start believing it. As long as I cling to recovery, people will pat me on the back each time I falter and understand that I am trying. But what if I'm not trying anymore? What if I can't believe it myself?<br />
<br />
I have to step back out into the rain and face the storm. I have to put the effort into recovery that it requires. It's like going to the doctor for a sore throat. He gives you medicine to treat it. What if you don't take it? Just because you've seen the doctor doesn't mean you'll get better unless you've done all that he's asked of you. Recovery is no different. It takes effort. It takes cooperation. It takes commitment and dedication and passion and determination. <br />
<br />
Honestly, I've been running low on all of those lately. After my last post, several of you reached out to me, whether in comments here or through facebook and e-mail, telling me exactly what I needed to hear. It really touched me to hear all of your heartfelt words and it helped put things in perspective. No one else in my life knows what I'm going through right now in terms of my eating disorder. Honestly, most of them never have. They don't understand. It feels good to be honest, and it feels good to know so many people care. <br />
<br />
Somehow I feel like the worst of this is over. That by coming clean I can exhale and slowly start to move forward-- that I can stop excusing my negative behavior and own up to it for what it is-- that I can take a step back, be honest with myself, refocus, rebuild, and set off again in the right direction.<br />
<br />
lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-57703449080149308432011-08-16T22:19:00.000-07:002011-08-16T22:23:11.666-07:00Self-SabotageAs I’ve mentioned previously, my fiancé is away on business in another part of the country until October, so I am alone. Well, not entirely. I do have the cat to keep me company. I also have my job, though my hours have been cut back to roughly 10-12 per week. So I have a lot of free time. I have so many hours where I could be doing so many productive things—<i>editing my book-in-progress, devoting time to my fiction side project, updating my blog, cleaning our apartment, making a dent in my mega-long reading list. Sharpening my guitar skills. Brushing up on my French. Planning our wedding. Applying for a better job.</i> There are so many productive ways I could be spending my time. What am I doing?<br />
<br />
<font face="courier new" color="oldlace" size="3"><br />
Working out (far too often)<br />
Obsessing over food<br />
Weighing myself<br />
Watching reality television<br />
Sleeping<br />
Playing Angry Birds<br />
Listening to pensive indie bands (which I do love)<br />
Avoiding reality<br />
Avoiding responsibility<br />
Avoiding recovery<br />
Self-sabotaging<br />
Self-destructing<br />
</font><br />
<br />
Somehow I’ve found myself in the midst of a depression. Depression is nothing new to me. I’ve dealt with it since I was twelve when my father was first diagnosed with colon cancer. I fade in and out of it so fluidly that sometimes I don’t even recognize. For the last few years it has been relatively mild (I don't take any medication). However, it worsened back in January when my mother remarried. I don’t know if I’ve mentioned her husband (soon to be ex-husband, God willing), but he is a very, very negative and verbally abusive person, which yielded a whole host of trouble. I’ve been so stressed and worried about my mother, among other things. Of course, my eating disorder is closely linked to my depression. And, of course, I’m not eating nearly enough. But it’s hardly even a conscious choice this time. It’s because my fiance is gone and I’m here on my own. There’s no one else to cook for and I’ve been too emotionally drained to cook for myself. I don’t have the energy to do anything at all. All I want to do is sleep. I started out eating frozen dinners just to keep from cooking—which I normally love to do—and I’ve slowly been eating less and less. In the back of my mind I know it isn’t right, that I was doing so well in my recovery for the last several years really, and that <b>not eating is never an option.</b><b> I know how unhealthy it is, I know how hard ED behavior is to overcome. I know how hard I’ve fought this thing and how much progress I’ve made and how I never ever ever want things to go back to the way the used to be.</b> I know all of this but I can’t snap out of it. I can’t snap out of it because, without really trying to, I’ve lost about 8 lbs. Suddenly my brain insists that I can and should lose more. <br />
<br />
<font face="courier new" color="red" size="3"><b>“Don’t you love a challenge? 8 was easy. Let’s do 15!”</b></font> <br />
<br />
The one thing that has been keeping me solid in my recovery all these years is my ability to block out those eating-disordered thoughts. They have always been there, but I’ve been able to override them and do what is right. But now, it seems so much easier and requires far less effort just to let my eating disorder do the thinking for me. I’ve been fighting this for 7 years. I’m tired.<br />
<br />
I’m not saying I’m giving up on my recovery. I’m not giving up and I’m not going back. I just need help, and thoughts, and prayers right now to keep me grounded and give me the energy and motivation to keep fighting. It is worth it, I know that. I believe that. Really I do.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-26472720018697159042011-08-06T18:50:00.000-07:002011-08-06T18:58:33.267-07:00RebirthOne of my favorite authors, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, once said: <br />
<br />
<i><font size="3" color="oldlace" face="courier new">"...human beings are not born once and for all on the day their mothers give birth to them, but life obliges them over and over again to give birth to themselves."</font></i><br />
<br />
I have reflected on these words many times throughout the years, especially in regards to my eating disorder. But, in the past, I often used this quote to negatively inspire myself. It fit perfectly. I could be reborn. I could change everything. I could alter my course, suppress what I ate, sculpt my body and emerge skinnier, better, more beautiful. I would be me, only better. I would be me, only perfect. Searching for this perfection became an all-encompassing obsession that ruined my life. I refused to believe that "perfect" was unattainable. I reached one weight loss goal only to set another. Before long, the number on the scale didn't even matter. Unless it flashed back 0, it wouldn't be good enough. <br />
<br />
Is it good enough now?<br />
<br />
A lot has changed since I've been in recovery. My body has changed; it's gotten bigger. It's gotten stronger. This was enough to convince everyone who knew me that I was also better. <br />
<br />
<font face= "courier new" size="3" color="oldlace">"<i>Better</i>. Synonyms: convalescent, cured, fitter, fully recovered, healthier, improving, less ill, mending, more healthy, on the comeback trail, on the mend, on the road to recovery, out of the woods, over the hump, progressing, recovering, stronger, well".</font><font size= "1" color= "oldlace"> (http:thesaurus.com)</font><br />
<br />
In other words, all former symptoms and issues vanquished. Anorexic no more!<br />
<br />
If only it were that simple.<br />
<br />
One does not go from Anorexic to Formerly Anorexic so easily. There is a long period of transition. A great chunk of time to think and reflect and heal and cry and eat and struggle and starve and struggle and fight and celebrate and lose and love and win. A lifetime of great, marvelous, continuous rebirth.<br />
<br />
The quote is still one of my favorites, but I see it now for what it is: a celebration of our imperfections. An urging to grow, to try, to change and be changed. It isn't about being perfect at all. It's about doing the best with what we're given-- it's about making the decision to adapt to any obstacle-- and to grow because of it.<br />
<br />
I may never be fully recovered, but I've come far enough to know that <b>I am never going back. </b> I will never treat myself the way that I once did. I am not perfect now and I never will be. Finally, I'm okay with that.<br />
<br />
Are you?<br />
<br />
Stop chasing perfection.<br />
<br />
You won't find it.<br />
<br />
Stop punishing yourself.<br />
<b><br />
You are beautiful now. In this moment.</b><br />
<br />
Right now. <br />
<br />
<b>You are good enough.</b><br />
<br />
<b>You are worthy.</b> <br />
<br />
You don't have to pull it together to begin recovery. You don't have to lose 10 lbs to begin recovery. You don't have to get a whole lot worse to "deserve" recovery. <br />
<br />
You just have to let your body speak. Not your mind, your body. Your heart, your organs, your skin and blood and stomach and hands and feet and bones. Your body, the one you're hurting, the one you're depriving, the one you're neglecting, the one you're killing. You have to let it speak. <br />
<br />
And then you have to listen to what it's telling you.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-27497147458197582162011-08-01T13:25:00.000-07:002011-08-01T13:25:10.712-07:00Thank You! Plus, Big News! Plus, I haven't abandoned you!So, first of all, I want to thank all of you for helping out the Geese by signing the virtual petition! That petition, along with local media coverage, protests, and letters written to editors and the humane society helped to save the geese! At least for now. The homeowners withdrew their request to have the geese murdered and are looking at other options to control them. Though their future is uncertain (this will be a big problem again next year, and the year after that, and the year after that) the geese can at least for now, relax. So, thank you again. I knew I could count on you! Here is a picture of the protestors via the local news channel.<br />
<br />
<img src="http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTHGjCPgWg6Gf-XBvam3OPILYL-1g0uGAlTYyuRhzD42hUPsYIH"><img src="http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRddWwYAsfjuFh_P0QgHKZOqs4O5cLMI2R3LmnpyS5E2kxabRQiXw"></img><br />
<br />
I also have some very exciting personal news. If you follow me on facebook you may know this already, but... <b>I am engaged!</b> My boyfriend, err, Fiance, proposed to me a little over a week ago. I am very excited about it. No wedding plans have been made as of yet, except I know that I want to have an outdoor wedding. The when is the big question. On a sad note, he will be out of town--and out of state-- for the next two months. He is en route to Wisconsin as we speak because of his job. This also happened last year. I was worried then that I wouldn't be able to properly feed myself and care for myself in his absence, but I did, proving to myself that I can take care of me. I won't lie, it's not easy. I have a hard time cooking a meal for just myself, but I do it anyway. I'm already thinking about what I'll make for dinner tonight. In my refrigerator I have zucchini, fresh corn on the cob, cabbage, leftover quinoa, green peppers, and a bunch of herbs. I'm sure I can whip something up out of those goodies. Speaking of cooking, my boyfriend... err.. Fiance and I have been thinking about starting a video blog featuring various cooking tutorials. He is a classically trained chef and I, well, am not. I doubt that we would actually go through with it, but, if we did, would anyone want to watch? I guess that's the question.<br />
<br />
Finally, I want to apologize for my absence over the last several months. I feel like I have let some of you down. Maybe it's myself I'm letting down. I used to blog daily, then weekly, then, well, randomly. I want to recommit myself to blogging more often. The truth is, for now at least, it seems my eating disorder is pretty well controlled. I still have issues but they're not as common as they used to be. I've considered allowing my blog to drift slightly into the "healthy living" realm posting about my ed when it's particularly relevant, and posting about other things when eating isn't a real issue. But, I'm not sure if that is something you ladies and gentlemen would be interested in reading about? So, there are a few things I need to work out, but I will be blogging more often.<br />
<br />
As always, I hope you all are well and wonderful. I hope you're being kind and gentle to yourselves, taking care of yourselves, and wearing sunscreen. Seriously. It's hot outside. At least it's hot here. And humid.<br />
<br />
Take care!<br />
<br />
<br />
- Jesslifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-32326582677089319782011-07-14T11:56:00.000-07:002011-07-14T11:56:24.468-07:00Have a heart! Please help.Hi everyone. This post is totally unrelated to eating disorder recovery, but I have a favor to ask each of my readers. In the city where I live, one community is planning to trap and kill over 50 wild Canadian geese because they feel the animals are a "nuisance". (One man complains they poop everywhere and eat the his precious lawn. So they should be killed?) Honestly, the geese are my favorite part of living here. They are so beautiful and magnificent. It breaks my heart at the thought of someone rounding them up and killing them. Our local SPCA has started a petition to try and save the geese from being murdered. I know that none of you (I think?) live here, but I'm asking, will you please have a heart and sign this petition anyway? You can remain anonymous and it only takes a second to sign. Many more signatures are needed. The geese are set to be killed any day now.<br />
<br />
Thank you all. The link is located below. Have a wonderful day and be kind to yourselves!<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/tell-usda-and-canterbury-lake-association-that-canada-geese-deserve-compassion/">Click here to sign!</a>lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-20633720989234936282011-07-08T09:48:00.000-07:002011-07-08T09:56:28.728-07:00marry meWhile trying to secure a job teaching at the college level, I am currently working for a high-end cosmetics company. One of the most popular skincare brands we carry is Philosophy. I decided to buy a Philosophy gift set for my mother called "The Bride" which contains several of their most popular products. Since my mother is going through a divorce, I thought it wasn't the best idea to give her the original box the products came in (since it's peppered with words like, "marry me" and "the bride") so I transferred the products into a neat little gift bag for her and kept the original box for myself to store random things in. Inside the box was this nifty little "marriage certificate" which I never read until a few weeks ago. It isn't meant to be given to another person-- it's a marriage certificate for yourself. Basically, it says, "Marry yourself before you marry another." In other words, commit to loving yourself before passing that love onto someone else.<br />
<br />
I decided to tape the marriage certificate above the vanity where I get ready every morning to remind me to nurture and love myself. It may seem silly, but it's something I need to constantly remind myself. I have no problem nurturing and taking care of others, but I'm the worst person in the world when it comes to respecting my own body and its needs. I'm going to post the words to the certificate below as well as a couple of pictures. Here's what it says:<br />
<br />
<blockquote><font face="courier new"><font color="oldlace"><font size="3"><br />
<center>marry me</center><br />
<br />
Dear God, I stand before thee as I join in marriage with the most important person in my life, me. I ask for your blessings so I may <b><i>be totally conscious of my special needs always</i>.</b> I ask this so that I may be strong enough to<b> love myself as I love others</b>. I vow that from this day forward, I will care for myself by getting the proper rest. <b><i>I will consume foods that nourish my body and soul</i>.</b> I will internally cleanse my body with a large daily intake of pure drinking water. <b><i>I will exercise, not to burn calories, but to rid my body of toxins</i>.</b> I promise to take care of my skin, the largest organ of my body. I will nurture my soul with little gifts of pampering. I will celebrate my spirit with creative activities I love. I will romance my heart, by allowing intimacy into every moment of my life, but mostly, I vow to put my arms around me every day and to recite the words, “<b><i>I will never leave me no matter what</i>"</b>.</font></font></font></blockquote><br />
<img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v406/prettylush357/photo.jpg"></img><br />
<img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v406/prettylush357/photo5-1.jpg"></img><br />
<img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v406/prettylush357/photo6.jpg"></img><br />
<br />
I don't really agree with the first line (I don't think I am the most important person in my life and I never will). But I do think most of what is said in this little certificate is valuable, especially for those of us learning to love and respect ourselves.<br />
<br />
We're only given one life, one body, one shot. <br />
<br />
We have to take care of ourselves. <i>If we don't, who will?</i><br />
<br />
We have to respect ourselves. <i>If we don't, who will?</i><br />
<br />
We have to commit to ourselves, to be honest with ourselves, to do good by ourselves. <i>If we don't, who will?</i><br />
<br />
We have to love ourselves. <br />
<br />
<i>If we don't, who will?</i>lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-14855690176767021902011-06-08T20:59:00.000-07:002011-06-08T20:59:41.904-07:00Body Dysmorphia: How do you see yourself?I was well into my anorexia before I realized the way in which I saw and gauged the size of my own body differed from the way it was percieved by others. This revelation occurred when, after I'd lost 40 lbs, my mother, who had always been much smaller than me, handed me a pair of her pants to try on. It didn't make sense in my brain. How could I come even close to wearing the size that she wore? I had never been that size. Sure, I had lost weight and I knew that, but as far as I was concerned, I was still fat. I tried the pants on anyway, mostly to quieten her. Not only did I fit into the pants, they were so large on my body that they nearly fell to the ground even after I'd buttoned them. I couldn't believe it. I stood there in her bedroom, between the window and the ironing board, holding the waistband of my mother's tiny pants to keep them from falling off of me. I had never been so small in my entire life, according to the pants and every person who had ever known me. So why did I still see the same chubby, hopeless, miserable figure staring back at me from inside the mirror? <br />
<br />
I had heard as a young girl that those individuals suffering from anorexia nervosa believed themselves to be fat when in reality they were frighteningly thin. My mother explained this to me when we saw the daughter of a local restaurant owner out at the department store. She was, at that point, the thinnest person I had ever seen, not to mention the skinniest person (apart from the cancer patients) in our very small, southern town. Her knee caps were the widest part of her body. Her cheekbones were sunken in as though she was sucking air. She seemed so fragile, probably 20 years old at best, though she walked across the parking lot with the gait of an 80 year old woman. All I remembered thinking was, <br />
<font size="3" color="oldlace" face="courier new"><i>"How could she ever think she was fat?"</i></font> 10 years later, people were asking the same question about me. I still don't have the answer.<br />
<br />
Although I have made great progress in my recovery from anorexia and bulimia, I still have hang ups. Body dysmorphia is one of the biggest issues I still face. Here is the definition of Body dysmorphia as defined by the Mayo Clinic's website:<br />
<br />
<font size="3" color="oldlace" face="courier new">"Body dysmorphic disorder is a type of chronic mental illness in which you can't stop thinking about a flaw with your appearance — a flaw that is either minor or imagined. But to you, your appearance seems so shameful that you don't want to be seen by anyone. Body dysmorphic disorder has sometimes been called 'imagined ugliness.'" </font><br />
<br />
I know that I've gained weight since I entered recovery, but it's very hard for me to understand that people on the street see me as, well, "normal." I assume that people think I'm chubby, or thick, or even downright fat. The reason is because that is how I see myself. When I look in the mirror, I see wide thighs, curvy hips, a stomach that isn't as flat as it could be. But it's more than what I <b>see.</b> It is so largely dependent upon how I <b>feel. </b> It is so very difficult to explain to people how it feels to be uncomfortable and restless inside your own body. I know many people argue "fat is not a feeling." I disagree. I have felt fat. I feel fat. I'm not saying it to gain attention or sympathy or even understanding. I'm saying it because that's the only way to explain how I feel.<br />
<br />
<font size="4.5" color="oldlace" face="courier new"><br />
I feel fat.<br />
I feel like I'm too large to go out in public.<br />
I feel like I'm too large to be seen.</font><br />
<font size="3" color="oldlace" face="courier new">I feel like people would say, "Damn, she's heavy."<br />
I feel as though my pants are unusually tight.</font><br />
<font size="2" color="oldlace" face="courier new">I feel as though I don't belong.<br />
I feel like I'm unworthy.<br />
I feel as though I wish people would look the other way.</font><br />
<font size="1" color="oldlace" face="courier new">I feel like I should blend into the crowd and disappear.</font><br />
<br />
So maybe fat is not a feeling, but the feeling that fat causes me to feel is uncomfortable. It's frustrating. And it's so very real.<br />
<br />
The feeling, that is. <br />
<br />
Sometimes I'll catch a glimpse of my body in a public place, where there are other bodies nearby to compare mine to, and I won't recognize myself. In the gym where I work out, my favorite elliptical machine is located across from a wall of floor-length windows. It is in a row with dozens of other machines which are always occupied. Sometimes, in the middle of my workout, I'll turn my head to the side to wipe my forehead with the back of my hand or brush my hair out of my face and accidentally see myself in the mirror, working out there beside all the others, and I'm taken aback by how I look. For that split second I don't look fat at all. I see my familiar brown hair, but then I'll see strangely sharp cheekbones, a bony nose, an unexpectedly slim waist. And the big kicker, normal thighs. It looks familiar, only not. It looks like me, only not. But it's only seconds before the confusion fades. I look down at my thighs, working and pumping in a circular pattern, and feel ashamed of how fat they look. <br />
<br />
How fat they <i>look.</i><br />
<br />
I have realized that I am not very self-aware at all, even though I've always thought I was. I realize that I have no idea how I appear to others, what my body looks like charging around out there in the real world, how I'm viewed or judged or criticized-- or ignored. I only know how I see myself. I only know how irrational I am, how unfair I am, how unforgiving and appallingly self-scrutinizing I am. <br />
<br />
I also know that I deserve better. <br />
<br />
But how do we learn to take a step back and see ourselves as we really are? To see what I see sometimes in the mirror at the gym, or in a storefront window-- the self that somehow escapes me. Unfortunately, I don't have the answer to that either. But I do know this:<br />
<br />
I am beautiful, whether I believe it or not. <br />
I am worthy, whether I believe it or not.<br />
I am important, whether I believe it or not.<br />
I am good enough, whether I believe it or not.<br />
<br />
The hard part is believing.<br />
Isn't that what this is all about?<br />
Learning to love myself unconditionally? <br />
<br />
I guess I still have a lot of work to do.<br />
<br />
Here's to believing.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-18072359959153542982011-06-01T20:44:00.000-07:002011-06-01T20:44:45.057-07:00Celebrating Summer, Celebrating LifeI've written before that the change in seasons affects and triggers my eating disordered behavior. My anorexia first began in the dead of winter, which could explain why during the cold weather winter months, restricting and self-starvation become increasingly tempting for me. Summer, however, seems to trigger different feelings. Of course, warmer months add a lot of anxiety and negativity toward the way I feel about my body.<br />
<br />
<i>I don't want to wear a skirt. Why would I wear shorts. My legs are hideous. A swimsuit? You must be kidding...</i><br />
<br />
This is normally the sort of dialogue that occurs inside my head when summer begins to materialize. But instead of trying to starve myself, something about the warm weather makes me want to exercise, to "get healthy", to "eat more cleanly", to "lose weight the healthy way", all under the guise that I'm doing something "good for myself."<br />
<br />
But where do these feelings come from? Aren't they just eating-disordered mania in disguise?<br />
<br />
I'm afraid so. But those of us who have and are recovering from eating disorders are not the only individuals to have this inner dialogue. Quite frankly, it comes down to pressure. We are pressured to have toned, tanned legs, beach-ready bodies, swimsuit-worthy waists. During the summer, there are no extra layers of sweaters or coats or scarves to hide behind. Unless, of course, you want to sweat to death or stay indoors. I don't want to do either.<br />
<br />
But I refuse to feel guilty about my body.<br />
<br />
I refuse to feel inadequate, insubstantial, insecure, unimportant, unworthy, ugly.<br />
<br />
I refuse to waste yet another summer by holding back and not enjoying myself. <br />
<br />
(I've wasted far too many)<br />
<br />
So, I wore a skirt today, even though my legs are the one part of my body I am and always have been most afraid of. I wore a skirt without leggings. Without tights. Without self-tanner. Without worry. Or regret. Or trepidation. I wore a skirt because it was 90 degrees, unrelentingly humid, and I refused to swelter away another summer in jeans.<br />
<br />
Wait, I'm sorry, did I just do something... <i>practical?</i><br />
<br />
Maybe this doesn't seem like much of an accomplishment to most of you, but for me, that's progress. I can count the times on one hand (today included) that I wore a skirt (without tights/leggings) or shorts *in public* in the last 15 years. How unbelievably sad is that? How irrational? Even at my lowest weight, I was deranged enough to believe my legs were huge and disgusting. But that's what an eating disorder does: it lies, intimidates, and destroys. That's why I'm celebrating practicality. Celebrating summer.<br />
<br />
Celebrating this short, sweet, single shot at life we are all given.<br />
<br />
This is the only life I have. <br />
<br />
I've already wasted too much of it. <br />
<br />
That stops today.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-64703792265952573772011-05-25T20:03:00.000-07:002011-05-25T20:03:50.584-07:00Update!Hi everyone. I know it's been far too long since my last post. There is really nothing I can say about that except things have been very very very busy with my new job. I guess that's not really an excuse. I am trying to set aside time to write and update and read and comment on all of your lovely blogs much more regularly. Know that I am still thinking of you and still wishing you all the very best!<br />
<br />
So, I received some life changing news this week. It's official: in October I will be moving to.......<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<b>MICHIGAN</b>.<br />
<br />
<br />
Whoa. Didn't see that one coming! I hate moving. I don't like boxes and packing and unpacking. And I don't like feeling lost and lonely in a new city. I've never been to Michigan, but I'm hoping beautiful things await me there.<br />
<br />
As for food, all has been well lately. I pray the same thing for each and every one of you. Be good to yourselves, nurture yourselves, trust yourselves. Love yourselves.<br />
<br />
Sorry if this is random. I'll be writing again soon.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-14886773105869356582011-05-03T10:23:00.000-07:002011-05-03T10:28:07.382-07:00Defining Hate and Nurturing LoveDue to the state of our world right now, I have been thinking a lot lately about the word hate. Like love, it is a word that has become so commonplace and used so flippantly that we forget its true meaning: <br />
<br />
<i><p>I hate this shirt. <br />
<p>I hate mayonnaise. <br />
<p>I hate when someone cuts me off in traffic. <br />
<p>I hate Mondays.</i><br />
<br />
In reality, hate is not the adequate word to describe any of these circumstances. Hate is much greater, much more powerful, much more dangerous. Here is the definition via http://www.merriam-webster.com:<br />
<font size="3" face="courier new" color="oldlace"><blockquote>hate<br />
noun, often attributive \ˈhāt\<br />
Definition of HATE<br />
1<br />
a : intense hostility and aversion usually deriving from fear, anger, or sense of injury b : extreme dislike or antipathy : LOATHING</font></blockquote><br />
This definition reminds me of the similarities between <b>hate</b> and <b>fear</b>. One usually drives or supports the other. I think immediately of the way some people have responded to Bin Laden's assassination. I'm alarmed to see many of my fellow Americans rejoicing, celebrating, and cheering over his death. Though I understand and agree that he was a horrible, evil man who needed to be held accountable for the innocent lives he ended, something deep inside my soul will not let me rejoice or celebrate the death of any living creature, period. I cannot celebrate death. Many of you may have seen this next quote circling around facebook and twitter the last few days as I have, but I think it's appropriate and meaningful, not just to this situation, but to the way we live our everyday lives. Martin Luther King, Jr said this about the subject of hate:<br />
<br />
<font size="3" face="courier new" color="oldlace"><blockquote><i>"I will mourn the loss of thousands of precious lives, but I will not rejoice in the death of one, not even an enemy. Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that." </blockquote></i></font><br />
<br />
Like the words hate, love, and fear, darkness and light have also become highly desensitized. They've become a little too wishy-washy; their meaning has been stripped to the point of cliche and redundancy. But let's remember what they mean <i>really</i>. Let's remember the importance of light. Let's remember the importance of love. Not just for others, but for yourselves.<br />
<br />
How many of us hate who we are?<br />
<br />
Do you really hate yourself? <br />
<br />
Your arms, your waist, your thighs?<br />
<br />
Do you hate them enough to want to kill, to want to destroy?<br />
<br />
I used to. Not now.<br />
<br />
Next time you think you hate your body enough to punish it, remember what Dr. King said.<br />
<br />
<font size="3" face="courier new" color="oldlace"><b><blockquote>" Returning hate for hate multiplies hate</b>, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. <b>Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that. "</b></blockquote></font><br />
<br />
Hate breeds hate.<br />
<br />
Evil breeds evil.<br />
<br />
Only love breeds love. <br />
<br />
Only acceptance breeds acceptance.<br />
<br />
Love yourself.<br />
<br />
Love the light inside of you.<br />
<br />
It's there, even if it's just a spark.<br />
<br />
It's there, even if you don't see it.<br />
<br />
Don't let it burn out.<br />
<br />
Magnify it.<br />
<br />
Celebrate it.<br />
<br />
Nurture it.<br />
<br />
Let it grow.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-74089042548071483552011-04-25T09:50:00.000-07:002011-04-25T09:50:28.093-07:00Stopping Self-SabotageI spent all day Saturday at the beach. For most people, the wonder and beauty of the ocean elicit feelings of peace, tranquility, spirituality, awe. When walking along the seashore, I am no exception. I stand, arms outstretched and eyes closed, breathing in the majesty. My stress levels recede. My body is healed. (I suffer from horrendous allergies. The ocean is the only place on earth where I can, literally, breathe clearly). My soul is healed. I feel closer to God. I feel complete.<br />
<br />
Unless, of course, the beach is crowded and I am wearing a swimsuit, which I avoid like the plague. This was the case Saturday. I spent 10% of my time marveling at the wonders of creation, and 90% of my time feeling fat, wishing I was thin like the woman lying 8 feet from me on the pink and white beach towel, that my abs were more defined like the girl in the blue bikini throwing a frisbee with her friends. I spent 90% of my time feeling ashamed and strangely out of place inside my own skin. I didn't take off my sunglasses, attempting to create a barrier between myself and the rest of the world. I tried to lie very still as if I could somehow dissolve into the sand, blend in and become so commonplace that no one would notice me. <br />
<br />
After about an hour or two of lying on the crowded beach, my boyfriend unpacked the lunches we had brought with us. He had a tuna sandwich. I had a veggie sandwich with vegan mayo and spinach. He also brought along some fat free pretzels. There was no part of this meal that would have ordinarily made me feel ashamed to eat it. It was reasonably healthy. But I couldn't eat it. I felt as though the entire beach was gawking at me, counting every bite, validating my "fatness". I ate a little less than half of the sandwich and put it back inside the cooler. I felt so open and exposed, something I had not felt in a very long time. I lay on my back and watched the seagulls circle over me. I closed my eyes and listened to the sound of the tide rolling in and out again. I could no longer see the girl on the pink and white towel, the girl with the abs throwing the frisbee. I just listened and tried to forget. I became aware that I was sabotaging myself-- something I am guilty of daily. Any time there is a good opportunity or I am in a good situation, I unconsciously try to sabotage it and make myself miserable. It's not on purpose. But I always do it. I let my emotions, my eating disorder, all of the baggage that I have impose itself and manifest itself and steal all of the spotlight until I'm having a horrible time and a good situation has turned quickly into a miserable one. I realized that lying there on the sand. And I vowed to stop self-sabotaging, to enjoy my time at the beach, to enjoy my life.<br />
<br />
So I pushed my sunglasses back onto the top of my head, took off the shirt I was wearing over my swimsuit, kicked off my sandals, and walked into the water. Past the girl on the pink and white towel. Past the girl with the abs and the frisbee. I stood with my hands on my hips, the entire beach looking or not looking, and let the water rush in to meet me. Literally and metaphorically seeking renewal.<br />
<br />
My boyfriend walked out to the water to join me. We found a little deconstructed crab shell stuck in the sand, the legs broken and disjointed lying all around it. It put things in perspective for me somehow. <br />
<br />
I realized before long that I was still hungry. Instead of fighting it, I returned to my beach towel, unpacked the rest of my sandwich, and finished all of it. It was a beautiful day. I've said it before and I will say it again, every day for the rest of my life if I have to:<br />
<br />
There is no room for an eating disorder in my life.<br />
<br />
Life is too short. <br />
<br />
Life is too precious.<br />
<br />
<center><br />
<img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v406/prettylush357/crab.jpg"></img><br />
<img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v406/prettylush357/beach.jpg"></img></center>lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-35140304050559341432011-04-14T10:12:00.000-07:002011-04-14T10:18:52.280-07:00What happened to the playground? Children and Weight LossI apologize for being absent lately. Normally, when I refrain from writing for so long, it's because I haven't been eating well and I'm not making my recovery an active part of my everyday life. But that isn't the case right now. Actually, it's quite the opposite. <br />
<br />
The reason I really wanted to write today was to ask the opinion of you, my beautiful readers, regarding something that has been very puzzling to me lately. I belong to a gym in the city where I live. This gym, unlike any that I've belonged to in the past, allows children to gain membership (as part of a family plan, I'm sure) and use the equipment, most of them unsupervised. When I say children, I don't mean teenagers. I mean children. Little kids. 8, 9, 10 years old, swinging around on the elliptical like it's a toy. Not only is it unsafe, it begs the question, <b>what kind of message is being sent these children about body image?</b> <br />
<br />
Even when the children are being supervised, it's still incredibly disturbing to me. Like yesterday, a father was working out on an elliptical next to his son, who was around 10 years old. The kid was pedaling the elliptical, sweating, wiping his forehead, sipping water. He was pushing himself as hard as I was. A few rows ahead of us, a trainer from the gym was teaching a kids class. 6 children were stretching, doing sit-ups, running in place, doing squats, taking turns on the treadmill. All the adults in the gym were going about their business. No one seemed to be freaking out, except for me. So I wonder, am I too sensitive? Is it because I have an eating disorder and I understand not only the benefit, but the possible dangers associated with diet and exercise? Is it because I used to be that kid, overweight, always thinking about my body, on a diet every day of my life before I was even in high school? I understand that childhood obesity is a problem in this country. But is strapping your kid to an elliptical where he can look at the calories he's burned the solution?<br />
<br />
It made me think: what happened to the playground? What happened to playing tag, kickball, dodgeball. Red rover, red rover, send so-and-so over? <br />
<br />
Isn't there a better way to teach our children how to be healthy?<br />
<br />
In other words, can't we help them be healthy without calling so much attention to it? Can't we let them think exercise and healthy eating are just normal, not something they have to think about and be conscious of and monitor their progress with? <br />
<br />
I understand there are two sides to this issue. I am not an expert in this field. It just seems so unnatural and unsafe to me. It seems so alarming because I was that chubby, unhealthy kid. I went on my first diet when I was 8 years old. I was taking diet pills on and off from ages 14-22. I've lost 80 lbs, I've been bulimic. I've tried every diet, every trick, I've been, at one point or another, almost every size in the clothing department. The point being, I've never felt just good enough. I've never been satisfied with my weight, no matter how fat or how thin. I've never been happy being me.<br />
<br />
I just don't want anyone else to have to go through that. And when I see these kids at the gym I can't help but think of the child version of myself, struggling and sad and feeling fat and ordinary, wishing she were thin. Wishing she were pretty. Willing and sick and desperate enough to do whatever she had to do to lose weight. <br />
<br />
And then she did. And it didn't change anything.<br />
<br />
What was the point, then? What did it solve, all those years of dieting and exercise and purging and restricting and binge eating and crying and not feeling good enough and wanting to change and wanting to die? <br />
<br />
Nothing.<br />
<br />
It solved nothing.<br />
<br />
I guess the point I'm trying to arrive at is this: if you are unhappy, if you don't feel good enough, if you don't love yourself, if you aren't at peace with who you are right now, then losing weight isn't going to change any of that. Even if the diet commercials and talk shows on television tell you otherwise. Changing your outward appearance does just that: it changes you physically. If you are emotionally damaged, it's the inside of your body that needs to be changed. It's your heart that is in need of healing. Your spirit. Your mind. Your soul.<br />
<br />
No diet is going to change that.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-81325678677904890342011-03-23T12:56:00.000-07:002011-03-23T12:56:43.654-07:00Lessons from GrandmaMy grandmother, Elizabeth, is well into her eighties. She is one of the most beautiful, most humble, most wise and most spiritual women I have ever met. (She also happens to share my birthday). She has undoubtedly seen many things in her lifetime. She has birthed 9 children and buried one of them. She has lost her husband of nearly sixty years. But what about the little things? She has watched herself grow from child to woman, from woman to wife, mother, grandmother. Great-grandmother. Her hair is gray. Her body is wrinkled. And it has been for all of my life, yet I've never thought of her as anything less than beautiful. How have I never considered she might not feel the same way about herself?<br />
<br />
I learned an interesting bit of information about my grandmother yesterday that should have been obvious or expected somehow, but wasn't. She too has insecurities about her body, she, the one woman in my life I've always viewed as a pillar of strength and wisdom and faith isn't always happy with the reflection she sees in the mirror. But she, unlike many of us, sees the deeper beauty that lies beneath the wrinkles, past the gray hair, the aging body. She sees the radiant beauty inside. <br />
<br />
She says, "Sometimes I wake up and look in the mirror and think, Oh God, look at me. Look at this face." Then she sighs. "But I am a child of the King. Good morning, St. Elizabeth." And then she laughs. That long, heart-felt laugh.<br />
<br />
She is a child of the King.<br />
<br />
How beautiful is that? I share many things with my grandmother-- her hips, her thighs, her good heart, her birthday. I only wish I shared her positive outlook.<br />
<br />
Why am I at war with my body?<br />
<br />
Why?<br />
<br />
What has it ever done to me?<br />
<br />
What has it ever done but need nourishment, love?<br />
<br />
What has it ever asked for except only to be accepted--- as it is.<br />
<br />
The way it was made.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
A child of the King.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-12214682804997687652011-03-18T10:32:00.000-07:002011-03-18T10:32:41.195-07:00Another YearSince my last post (thank you all for the advice and support!) I decided to quit my job. My decision factored in many things. It wasn't just about my eating disorder. It was a bad situation and I decided it was best for me to move on. So that's what I did. And I don't regret it. In fact, I feel empowered by my ability to stand up for myself.<br />
<br />
Wednesday was my 27th birthday, though it didn't exactly feel like a day for celebration. My eating disorder ruined the entire evening. My boyfriend was taking me out for dinner after work. When he came home to pick me up I was putting on my makeup and doing my hair. I was in a good mood, a normal mood. So was he. But that all changed once it came time for me to get dressed. None of my clothes seemed to fit me correctly. I felt uncomfortable and large and everything felt tight. I became really anxious. My mood plummeted. I changed jeans three times. I kept dissecting myself in front of the mirror and mumbling to myself. My boyfriend sort of stood back in horror. It had been months since he'd seen me like this, but he knew what the problem was. He tried to tell me I looked beautiful no matter what I wore but I told him I looked humongous. He disagreed. He said, "I don't know what you see when you look in the mirror. You have nothing to compare yourself against. I know you think you're fat, but if there were an actual fat person standing next to you, you'd see that you're nowhere near it." <br />
<br />
I just blew past him into the bedroom and changed clothes again. I was so anxious I didn't even want to leave the house. My throat felt tight and I started to cry, but I held it in. I grabbed my purse and we left. The entire way to the restaurant, eating disordered thoughts ran wild. My boyfriend's mood had dropped too because I was in such a bad mood it had affected him. Neither of us spoke. I sat there thinking things like, "I'm never going to eat again. I have to lose 10 lbs. 20 lbs. I am an animal. I am disgusting. I am not eating dinner. I'm not eating anything. Not today, not tomorrow. Not ever."<br />
<br />
By the time we got to the restaurant, I decided to have a salad and a margarita. I don't normally drink, except on my birthday or other special occasions. But this occasion didn't feel special at all. We barely spoke all through dinner. I barely ate. We went to have coffee afterward and things started to look up slightly. I got a phone call from my nieces which made me feel better. But then we went home again and my boyfriend went to bed. I started crying again because I felt alone and not good enough. I don't know where all of these feelings were coming from but they overwhelmed me. I went to bed miserable, thinking it's the worst birthday I've had in years. <br />
<br />
Then I remembered, at least I'm here another year. At least I'm alive. I should be thankful for each new year spent upon God's earth, for each new day. <br />
<br />
Thankfully I've been able to come back to my senses and not act on the negative thoughts I had in the car that evening. I apologized to my boyfriend. He apologized too, though he really did nothing wrong. He said he was scared that I was going to break up with him that day which really surprised me. We've been together four years. The thought never entered my mind. In fact, we first became a couple on my birthday four years ago. So my birthday is also our anniversary. Then I started thinking about my last several birthdays. I realized, again, how far I've come:<br />
<br />
March 16th, 2010: Turning 26<br />
I still lived in Las Vegas. I worked the night of my birthday. When I came home around 9 pm, my boyfriend had prepared for me a vegan chocolate tofu cake with vegan chocolate tofu frosting and 26 candles. There is a creepy picture of me blowing the candles out. The next day we booked a hotel room at The Palms for a proper birthday celebration. We had dinner at Simon. Later (like 10 or 11 pm) we had chips and salsa and drinks at Gardunos. Then we went over to Palms Place and had drinks at Rojo Lounge. It was sort of dead and there were lots of really old men hitting on really young girls. After that we went back up to our room and drank champagne, no, Prosecco, on our balcony looking out over the city. We knew then that we would be moving in two months. It was sort of my "Goodbye, Las Vegas" moment. <center><img src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v406/prettylush357/23848_567766111641_164000933_32885021_4300126_n-1.jpg?t=1300468658"><p>My boyfriend lighting the candles on my tofu cake.</p></center><br />
<br />
March 16th, 2009: Turning 25<br />
We lived in Las Vegas, though we escaped to San Diego for my birthday celebration. We went to our usual spot, the dog beach in Del Mar (one of my favorite places on earth) and then to dinner in La Jolla at Trattoria Acqua. I wasn't throwing up anymore. After dinner we went to Seal Rock and watched the wild harbor seals diving into the ocean. We stayed at The Ivy. We went to some stupid night club inside. I hate night clubs. We didn't stay long. <img src="http://a7.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/photos-ak-snc1/v2957/251/115/164000933/n164000933_32043444_4890025.jpg"><p>Me in Del Mar</p></img> <br />
<br />
March 16th, 2008: Turning 24<br />
This birthday was also spent in San Diego. We went to Sea World. I pet a donkey. I pet a dolphin. We saw the orca whales. We were in town during the Shamrock festival in the Gaslamp district (since my birthday is the day before St. Patty's day). My eating disorder was still very out of control. I was throwing up 8 or 9 times daily. We stayed at a hotel on the waterfront. We sat at a lounge inside the hotel. I had a blueberry martini. It was way too sweet. My boyfriend had a beer. <img src="http://a4.l3-images.myspacecdn.com/images01/113/f55ce37a614588e4ed01ec270ee7e3ea/l.jpg"><p>In Del Mar again, one year younger</p></img><br />
<br />
March 16th, 2007: Turning 23<br />
I was still an undergrad. This was at the height of my eating disorder. I was so sick I'd dropped out of school for a semester, though by this date I was taking three online classes: Appalachian Literature, Introduction to Nutrition, and The Literature of John Milton. I was working full time at the hospital. My boyfriend flew in to visit me. At that point we were only friends (we've known each other since 2004). He took me to dinner at a local Italian restaurant. I didn't eat much. Afterwards I went in the bathroom to throw up, as customary, but I didn't. Something was different. I told myself, "He bought me this lovely birthday meal. How can I throw it up?" So I made the decision, possibly for the first time ever, to fight against my eating disorder. We spent the night playing Scrabble and eating popcorn. He kissed me. I guess nothing has been the same since. <img src="http://a1.l3-images.myspacecdn.com/images01/9/8f61bc1bbfd0c3091c5d6de08dd8bd37/l.jpg"><p>Can't believe my hair was ever this short. Then again, most of it had fallen out by then.</p></img><br />
<br />
<br />
Birthday Lesson: Be grateful for every year, every month, every day, every moment of life. It's too short to be miserable. It's too short to be sick, scared, unhappy. Afraid.lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4061483026736255843.post-78722443375271055972011-03-10T20:54:00.000-08:002011-03-10T20:58:09.839-08:00QuittingI think I mentioned in an earlier post that I got a new job recently. But I don't think I mentioned how bad it's been for me. The people (okay, some of them) are horrible. The pay is horrible. The hours are horrible. The job itself is horrible. Basically, there are no redeeming qualities to this position except that it is in fact a position and, not to mention, the only position that has been offered to me in response to the countless applications and resumes I've sent off out into the darkness. I know this job is only temporary. My boyfriend and I are moving again in November because of his job. This time the destination is unknown. It could be any state in the country. We won't find out where exactly until May. But even if the job is temporary, I'm not sure it's worth it. It has added so much extra stress and pressure when I already had my share of troubles to begin with. I hate complaining, but I feel like I want to quit. And I am definitely not a quitter. I'm a tolerant person. It takes a lot to push me over the edge. I've never really resigned from anything. I've always had the attitude that I can do anything. I can endure anything. Now I'm having doubts.<br />
<br />
But there is another reason why I think this job is bad for me. Since I started working there, I've stopped eating. At least I've stopped eating the amount of food that I should be eating. I know. It's wrong. But it's time to come clean. I eat breakfast everyday. And then I skip lunch everyday. There are several days (at least two per week) in which I skip dinner too. The only days I eat what I should are my days off. Even then, I've been scheming of ways to slice off unnecessary calories. Ugh. I feel so disgusting for admitting it, but it's true. At first I blamed it on my hours. Some days I leave for work around 10 am and I don't return home until after 10 pm. Those are the days I skip dinner. Because it's too late, I tell myself. <i>It's too late. The calories will sink right in. Can't go to sleep on a belly full of food.</i> Sound familiar? I'd recognize that skewed perspective anywhere. Unfortunately, I've still been listening to it.<br />
<br />
I've also been feeling very depressed lately. I understand this is all cyclical. I know it's related to not eating. When I'm sad, I don't eat. When I don't eat, I'm sad. I've also been dealing with all this family drama lately that has me heartbroken. Unfortunately, I've allowed all my negative emotions to fuel my eating disorder. And I've stood back watching my eating disorder creep back into my life without doing anything to stop it. <br />
<br />
Wednesday morning before leaving for work I sent my boyfriend a series of texts. I said:<br />
<br />
<blockquote><i>I can't force myself to go to work today.<br />
<br />
It's not worth being miserable. And depressed. And ruining my body. And my mind.<br />
<br />
Life is too short and too precious.</blockquote></i><br />
<br />
I went to work anyway but I was near tears all day. <br />
<br />
Until that point my boyfriend hadn't realized I wasn't eating and the texts caught him off guard. When I get home from work at night he's already asleep. He assumes I'm eating the leftovers in the refrigerator because, well, why wouldn't I? I'm starving. But it's not that simple. Now he's worried and he thinks I should quit. Even though me quitting would mean we're broke. Again. Which terrifies me. He will be receiving a substantial pay raise in June. If I can only hang on until then.<br />
<br />
I don't normally write posts like this. I try to be positive and uplifting. I try to see the good in everything. And I know there is good in this situation. There is a way out somehow. I'm just not sure what I'm supposed to do.<br />
<br />
Quit and be healthy but broke?<br />
<br />
Work and be sick and miserable but have extra money? <br />
<br />
I think I know what I need to do. I spelled it out for myself pretty clearly in the text I sent.<br />
<br />
So why is it so hard to quit?lifeafteranorexiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14995948227699986041noreply@blogger.com12