March 24, 2012

the control of a mess & the mess of a control

I read this post this morning from Carrie.
words I found to be an echo of my rant to my therapist yesterday.
A much more eloquently written echo.
"It was like I found a volume knob for all of the noise in my brain and to turn down that chatter, I just had to turn down my eating and turn up my exercise. I knew that the eating disorder didn't help me cope, not really, but it was how I made a crazy, anxiety-provoking world kind of cohere. It gave my world organization." -ED Bites
so much control,
one more hour and maybe I'll have something. maybe.
so predictable,
carrot sticks = good mood, brownie sundae = you feel like shit, easy as pie.
so manageable,
no, sorry I can't go out for your birthday dinner I have…ehh, homework.
so "harmless",
oh come on, it's not drugs or alcohol.
so validated,
I'm being so healthy eating spinach, it iron! I feel just great!
so dependable,
I follow these rules, I shall feel like this all the time.


also known as… feel nothing.
Life is messy. And painful. The eating disorder, while painful in its own way, is neat. It has a type of "payoff." -ED Bites

for a quite lengthy period of time,
this is how I made sense.
this is how I functioned.
this is how I lived.
well, existed at least.

it was the same everyday, so much "the same" that I can now hardly
remember a single "good day"
yes, I can remember the times I was scared out-of-my-mind
I probably didn't even feel those moments at the time
but I now remember
and as I gain more and more of me
I feel more and more of
where I have been
what I have been through
and even scarier
what I am leaving behind.
the control I am leaving behind.


there lies the question: who will I be without this?
what will I look like?
sound like?
talk like?
feel like?
dream like?
or even smell like?
the E.D. makes all those answers unimaginably clear.
it's like magic.
everyday, every hour, every minute.
it's the same. it's neat. it's not messy…messy, like life.


messes terrify me.
even recovery has its own pattern, if-you-will
though how you will feel, what emotions may come up the next hour,
and how you will react when "the sh*t hits the fan"
is far less predictable,
there is still:
Monday: Nutrition meeting
Tuesday: yoga
Wednesday: email follow-up food diary
Thursday: therapy
Friday: catch up on life, REST night
To-Do Every night: Journal: 
how food made you feel,
when you felt comfortable
and when you didn't.
During the day: notice when you are anxious
when you are happy, 
when you are feeling the best
and the worst.

everyday, every hour, every minute
it has been recovery.
my top priority.
it can be an excuse for being "tired"
(IT'S A HELL OF A LOT OF WORK!!!)
it can validate a whiny mood,
the process can provide structure
and the thoughts of controlling food are ironically similar
only this time, food = increased health.
DUH. we're learned this already.


but this week I've been wondering.
what comes next?
what will I do with this messy
wild, glorious world without
the E.D. and then… without the life of recovery?
It's like losing a job,
divorcing a husband,
moving locations,
going back to school late in life.
Who will I be now?
What kind of world am I jumping into?
When is it right to let go…
… to let go even of hiding behind recovery.

When I come out from behind the curtain
what will I look like?

sound like?
talk like?
feel like?
dream like?
or even smell like?

I hope I look like Beyonce, 
sound like Adele, 
talk like Ellen Degeneres, 
feel like a warrior, 
dream like Mother Teresa 
and smell like fresh ground coffee.
Just for kicks. 

I probably won't be any of these things.
because they are not me.
they are tangible, real-life examples for comparison.
but they are not me.
I know they are only an example of a maybe 
to give my mind and body peace of the unknown.

since I let go of the volume knob
since I threw the file folder out the window
since I took off my armor
since I decided to see
what a messy world of mistakes 
and sadness 
and imperfections looked like.
up close, without any protection or secret hideout.

but also since I let go,
I also get to see a world of
beauty
compassion
giggles
& miracles.

it's give and take.
give and take.
but seeing one miracle just
may be the thing that makes 
feeling,
eating the brownie sundae
instead of carrots for once,
chuckin' out the file folder,
and stepping out utterly vulnerable

completely worth it.

this week I hope you join me 
in fighting to let go of 
the control,
the control of a mess.
which turns into a mess of control.
this we have learned.


be encouraged.
this too shall pass,
C


March 6, 2012

this is your LAST ISSUE

a little ironic what came in the mail today.

(speaking of weight loss magazines…)



…and you know what?
That's as far as it got opened.

My last issue of Runner's World
We're parting ways my short (yet-too-long) lived friend.
Although running and I said goodbye back in June, 
the beauty of "subscriptions" are…

they keep showin' up on your doorstep
without permission

I ripped open the top of that sucker just to make sure
I read that correctly.
Indeed, This is my last issue.

It didn't even make it out of the plastic.
I didn't even need to open it.
I knew nothing in there would benefit me,
not even a pretty picture.
The old is gone the new is now.
Maybe someday it will have a place in my future,
but that someday is a distant day.
Not now.


You know the funny thing is,
aren't runners generally "fit" to begin with?
Why do they need a weight loss issue?
Isn't the key to just… run?
Do we really need to activate the active even more?
No. The editors are just smart
They know that anyone will look at that headline,
and pay four dollars thinking they bought
the key to life, 
weight loss.
Even better, they have a perfectly toned and airbrushed model 
demonstrating their "weight loss" issue.
excuse me Runner's World but her belly button has been 
drawn practically 4 inches below her boobs,
that ain't the real deal. 
i-yae-yae.
Society.

here's to now,
here's to yoga,
here's to my unaltered bellybutton,
and here's to last issues,
C 


March 5, 2012

the damn cookie diaries

there are so many things I could write about tonight.
but honestly, it would probably all come streaming out from
my hands in a jumbled disaster that I would not even be able
to put a title on, other than "shit my eating disorder says"
(let's hope no one ever makes an incredibly offensive parody on this one)

I've been wanting to write for days, but all I get is crazy little snid-bits of thoughts
that are literally now scribbled all over my planner,
my post-it note stash, grocery receipts, frequent buyer cards,
basically any form of paper I could get my hands on in the moment
when a thought hits.
Yes, I have an iPhone, but I don't believe in writing what truly matters
with your thumbs… you gotta put your whole hand into it sis-tah!
Anyway, one of them turned into a list entitled:
The (Infinite) Commandments of an Eating Disorder: Thou shalt not
That one got a little touchy though and is still in the
"let me sit here and think about this in a couple of days" phase, 
so you may get to munch on that in a few days.


Another longer spontaneous rant came as
the product of a cookie.
yes.
only in recovery world will one 
ever be compelled to journal about
a freakin cookie.
at what point does this become funny?
I'm leaving this as is: a stream of consciousness, if you will.
I only share this because I am sure that most of you
reading have been assigned to keep a "food journal" at some point
or another (or will do so in the near future)
that includes both a record of nutrition and… feelings. oh the F word.


I will warn anyone before reading this that this post does discuss
a simple "snack" (a cookie if you have not already guessed it!) and
a bit about the struggles of gaining weight. 
So please do not read any further if you think it
may be a trigger for you… I certainly do not intend to trigger anyone
by any means. Yet, I know that I had benefitted greatly from reading/hearing
raw, unedited thoughts of someone else who has struggled with
the battle before… and it made sense to me, it helped me make sense
of my own rants, it helped me know it was okay to rant, to get angry,
to write every SINGLE thing you felt and most of all it helped me realize
I was completely and utterly not alone.

...

~March 4, 2012~

After having lunch today it was like all of the "hunger" just disappeared. I knew this was reality and that it would come and go as any normal person expereinces but it just got really frustrating again, because I knew unlike any other "normal" person… I had to push through it, I still had to eat… I couldn't trust my body's hunger. This was my medicine.

It was difficult to dismiss the "oh you've really let yourself go now" thoughts that began to come : "Oh no wonder you're feeling full and a little gross right now... you've been sustaining for days... what did you expect after eating all that and cheering yourself on for doing so well?" I knew they were lies, I knew in my heart that I had done well, I had done my body a favor... but I also was reminded of the discomfort. The discomfort that will come with gaining weight. It sucks quite frankly. Absolutely sucks. Gaining weight doesn't fell good to anyone, no matter if you need to or not! It feels tight, cramped, uncontrollable, yet controllable at the same time… strange, indescribable, unpredictable… and completely against everything I have ever practiced or set out of achieve. Let's face it, never in your life have you picked up a magazine that says, "GAIN 10 LBS THIS SPRING! GET READY FOR BATHING SUIT SEASON! SHOW OFF THAT CAKE! WE'LL SHOW YOU HOW!" 

HA! No. 

And now I am sitting here waiting on a friend to get coffee knowing I will have to get a cookie or something to go with it because its right around "snack time". I want to want it. I do. But I don't want it right now... it feels forced, uncontrollable, uncomfortable, so. not. hungry... but I know I have to do it, because if I don't... I will feel guilty for giving in, I will have to write it down for my therapist to see, I will have thrown in the towel and said "YOU WIN TODAY" and I won't do that. I want to right now and it seems tempting… maybe just this once, you've earned a slack. No. I won't. 

I got the damn cookie and it was good. Yes, I was full and it took about every grain of strength I had to decide to do it, but I did. I pushed through it. Because it had already been a day of struggle I, of course thought about it for an hour… cookie, cookie, cookie, Mr. Cookie in your tummy. But it passed. Just like everything else has in the past. I feel okay at the moment... not great, I'll admit, but I'm here. 

I'm here fighting off the frustration (for the millionth time) of "why do I even have to do this, how did I get here… are you really writing about a freakin cookie right now?" And I transitioned into just being grateful. I have what I need to fight through this.... everything I need. I'm not great, but I'm okay. I ate the damn cookie and I won't go to bed feeling guilty tonight. I'd say it was damn good too... and big. Enormous, giant, with sugar on top...so what? I don't curse much, but I'm feeling particularly infuriated towards the E.D. tonight… oddly and uncharacteristically bitter, but I don't hate the feeling. Who else has to sit here and write their feelings about a damn cookie? This freakin sucks. 

And that's all I have to say about that. Humph. I will win.



next time I'm bringing him with me.
love and damn cookies,

C