Sunday, August 3, 2014

Learning to Love Myself


When I took this picture of myself a couple of weeks ago wearing my first pair of exercise clothes I was surprised that I actually liked the picture. I really felt like I had gained some positive ground when it came to self/body acceptance. For those that know me, you know I don't normally like any photos that I am in, which is I am sure why I love to be behind the camera. My only contrary reaction to the picture had nothing to do with me, it was when I realized I should have cleaned the mirror before taking my picture. In fact, I was amazed at how good I felt being in my first pair of exercise clothes, even though it took me a year to put on the clothes.

It wasn't until last year when I read Lucille Zimmerman's Book Renewed: Finding Your Inner Happy in an Overwhelmed World that I considered exercise a form of self-love. Except for swimming, I always considered most exercise as punishment for being plus-size. I think somewhere in my mind, I thought that thin people didn't have to exercise, that they were just born with skinny genes, that enabled them to wear skinny jeans. But as I read Lucille's words, I realized that I had missed something wonderful, exercise could be a form of self-love. And moving out East, I realized very quickly that I was going to have to love me, for the masses tended to disapprove with their eyes of judgment and silence laced with disdain. I would not find shelter in the world, but rather I would create it from within. In many ways, it was one of the best things that has ever happened to me, for it has forced me to look within.  Once I realized what a gift I was given, it has changed my perspective. I feel like one who is caught in the headlights of discrimination on a regular basis, I tend to shy away from the throes of the public when I can.

As a Christian woman, I have focused more on the "inward man", or woman, rather than the outer. But moving to New York City has changed how I see myself, and I see on a much larger scale how society sees obese people, and it isn't very pretty. 

Coming to terms with my body has been like living in a civil war all my life. I really don't know what it is like to have peace with my outer-shell, and to be completely honest, I haven't been at peace with my inner self for that long. As I have worked on accepting myself inwardly I have enjoyed a sense of freedom that I have not found at any other time in my life. It has been nice living with myself and not sending negative thoughts or words shaped in the form of barbed arrows designed to do the most damage.
Peaceful living is not an overrated way to live, it is a blessed way to live. However, a skirmish breaks out every now and then, when I start to doubt myself or get down on myself about a character flaw or, my health. Today was an accumulation of hearing disconcerting news from my doctor, inward turmoil, physical restraints, and society's assumptions channeled through stares of disgust and shock. 

If I could give you a picture of how I felt it would be like Jack Black playing Gulliver in Gulliver's Travels where he is tied down by all these "little things," however, all those tiny strings actually held him down. As I awoke this morning with my head in a fog and all my joints hurting, I had a feeling I was going to have a bad physical day. So I grabbed the heating pad along with my coffee hoping that the two might clear my head and ease my back by clipping those little strings. Before I could do much my doctor called me. I knew things weren't right if she was calling me on a Saturday morning. But I already knew things weren't right as I slept more and more each day. I was getting depressed by how much fatigue and pain I had been experiencing and wondered if I was ever going to recover from my surgery. She stated that my thyroid levels were way off. When I explained to her that I was walking on my treadmill consistently, doing yoga, increasing my water every day and none of it seemed to be helping. She said, “Not to be too hard on myself, for I can't fix this, only when my levels balance will it start to work.”
 I was not very happy with that response, for I have read online about people who gained thirty pounds while trying to regulate their thyroid. I don't have the capacity to carry thirty more pounds on my frame. So, I am heading to the endocrinologist on Monday and wait in standby mode while he tries to fit me in. I have to confess, I am not looking forward to stepping on the scales, even though I know I have been faithful in my lifestyle changes in the last two months. 

I keep reminding myself, that I have grace and that these changes are not solely about losing weight, but getting healthy. 
But what happens when you don't even feel healthy at all?

After a short nap, Chuck and I went to Walmart to get groceries and to search for a mat to go under my treadmill since the neighbors have been pounding on the ceiling each time I used it. My back had seized up while shopping which was causing other physical reactions that were unpleasant in public. At that moment all I wanted to do was go and hide. I try to do my best to not allow the judgmental looks to get me down when I am out in public, I realized why I was getting so many today. With my head down I somehow made it out of Walmart and to the car where Chuck was putting in groceries.
As we drove away realizing we were going to be late picking up Jonathan from work, the tears just started to flow. I just felt so overwhelmed by all my health issues and it didn't seem to matter how much I was working on them. Being out in public caused anxiety and stress which only heightened the pain I was feeling in my back and feet. Even after we picked up Jonathan I couldn't turn off the tears. I was mad and frustrated that all my hard work, my diligence, healthy choices didn't show results.

When people look at me they only saw a morbidly obese woman that they judged to be (you can fill in the blank). Today I wanted to hold up a sign that said, "Hey! I am working on this body, I know right now it doesn't show. I know presently I can't post that I lost 5lbs, or even 1lb for that matter, but it has to do with the regulation of my thyroid and all of the domino effects it was taking on the rest of my body. But of course, I couldn’t and tried to swallow all my pain.
By the time we arrived home, I was spent, both emotionally and physically. All I wanted to do was go to sleep. But like the good men that I have, they went right into the bedroom and set up the mat under my treadmill so that I could use it without bothering the neighbors below. When they finished, I went into the bedroom, put on my exercise clothes, and hopped on the treadmill and started walking. With Adele singing soulfully in my ears I increased my pace and as I did the tears started to mingle with the sweat. As my breath increased sobs started to escape. I hate to sob which means crying out loud, but these sobs rose up defiantly, just as I chose to stay on the treadmill even though my feet and back screamed for mercy. 
It is a strange thing to cry and exercise at the same time, so much energy leaving your body at one time. But I prayed that I would have the strength and fortitude to stay the course and finish my time on the treadmill, and I did. 
And a strange thing happened-peace and calm had returned.
 At that moment I realized that putting on those cute exercise clothes was really only the start of self-care and self-love at a different level. The test really came when the outside judgments of others and the inward fears and anxieties about my health and future tried to overwhelm me which didn't work today. I saw how love conquers all. 

Tonight I am stronger and braver, for I chose the path of love over the path of judgment and disdain, whether that was through the eyes of society or through my own. I don't have the physical proof right now, but I am starting to see that maybe in some ways the delay is purposeful. For in times past when I have tried to lose weight it was always about the number on the scale. All of my choices in diet or in exercise were based on that number moving down or up. I believe that I am breaking the chains that have held me down when it comes to self-care and I am choosing to take care of myself because I love me, and because I know that God loves me. If I have to go through the rest of my life never seeing that magic number appear on the scale, I am going to accept me and love me and still choose to take care of me by making healthy choices in diet and in exercise. 

This is why I am posting a before picture where I am smiling to demonstrate that there can be joy in the journey and not strictly based on the number from the scale.