Saturday, April 27, 2013

Tired of eating your feelings?

I can't take credit for this... it was passed on to me by my friend and mentor Pam (who, by the way, has quietly lost a TON of weight in the past two years).

You know what I am struggling with lately? Binge eating. Not two slices of pizza. The whole pizza. We're talking "painfully full but I want to get rid of it" eating. Progress is happening though. My body simply won't let me physically eat like I used to, even though mentally, I would love to be able to take care of a whole pizza. Salvio's Pizza, to be exact.

So if you are an emotional eater (and we know who we are), this one's for you. For her whole blog, go here.


One of the most common topics that arises in reader emails is binge eating. And I, veteran binger that I am, get it. I do. A recent letter read,
“What were the first steps you took to not giving into the binge? The first days, or even moments when you committed to your weight loss? What do you think was your rock with keeping you on your journey? I know I can do this, but I keep having these random binges that break me. I would love your advice.”
God, I wish I had the answers. For you, for me. While I rarely binge eat anymore, I do think of it now and then—and sometimes achingly.
The truth is, that split second when I’m teetering on a cliff and I can’t tell if I’m about to fall or throw myself over, is among my greatest struggles in life. And that is because…wait for it…it’s not really about the food. It’s about so, so many things—physical nourishment being the least important. The food isn’t merely food; it’s laced with all these feelings, unrequited yearnings, unmet needs, and pains. It’s meant to give me something, and the very act of bingeing—I’ve come to realize—was and is, for me, about filling a void, plugging a hole within myself. That is the deepest level of the binge. That’s the truest, basest meaning of a binge for me. Higher levels—ones closer to the surface—are much clearer for me to read. They reveal that craving within me to numb out when faced with discomfort, my tendency toward escapism.
When I was little, and my family was chaotic and broken and the trauma was too much to bear, I ate to escape. Distraction through eating served as a form of protection from the very painful reality of our lives. But it was also about food being there when no one else was. My mom was always gone, working. My dad was always gone, too—drinking. I needed something to literally fill the space, to make me feel less alone. Food did that.
As I grew up, I only continued and strengthened this process of “using” food. I had unconsciously created all of these associations between my emotions—both positive and negative—and food as the way to deal with them. And the strongest of those associations—the ones that spur salivation upon feeling—will likely remain with me for the rest of my life.
The thing that I had to learn in the process of losing weight, and even now, was and is, that I must remember all of this when I want to [ab]use food. I have to remember that wanting to binge is not due to the fact that I just reallyreallyreally crave pizza and cake and cookies and ice cream all at one meal; it’s not purely because I’m lustful for decadence. Because if it were—if I were simply in need of a break from “healthy” or “clean” eating, then a reasonable serving of pizza would be perfectly fine by me. And a bowl of ice cream afterward would be dandy. But those of us who binge eat know that we’re not always interested in a reasonable amount of anything. I want ALL THE PIZZA. ALL THE ICE CREAM. And then, I want the donuts. It’s not about indulgence; it’s about overindulgence. It’s about being so full you can’t think anymore.
Once you know this about yourself—or at least, once you admit it—it’s awfully hard to ignore.
The very second that I start to feel a tickle to binge eat, I have to think about what’s going on in my life. What’s the bigger picture? What’s triggering me? The last time I felt this way was right around the week I turned in the third draft of edits for my book. I was, well, just so down about them. Anxious about how my editor would react to the new material, I’d begun to wonder if the whole book was garbage. In my personal life, my mom and I were completely at odds. She—like me—is utterly perfectionistic, and often, that perfectionism of hers can mean that she starts picking at me about things she wishes I’d do with my life. And as someone who only wants to give their mother the moon and each and every star, that just slays me. All these things to say: I was overwhelmed in my a few areas of my life. I didn’t really know how to fix any of it. I couldn’t shake the feeling that I was a loser. I felt lost. And it translated into me wanting nothing more than to binge eat. Now, I think it would make for a great and redeeming story if I could tell you that I recognized all of my behavior patterns—especially with food—and I overcame the lowliness of losery feelings and avoided the binge. Cue trumpets and triumphant shouting. But no. Truth? I didn’t. I wallowed and I ate. Alone and ashamed for a full day. And it.was.just.awful. I cried as I swallowed the last sweet, realizing that it hadn’t done a thing to make me feel better. Binges are like that.
So I guess my advice to you must first involve me giving you a sizeable dose of understanding and compassion. Even though I’m wise to my own ways and mostly great at staying in tune with myself, I don’t always get it right. I am far from perfect. But I try, and I know you try. And we’re here—in this—together.
What I can share that might be of value is what has worked for me during much of the past seven years of maintenance. These four things have helped me to pull back and steer away when I’ve nearly committed to a binge eating episode—which, for anyone who has ever been in that very moment, is an intense challenge.
1. Know what’s going on in your life that might be making you uneasy or uncomfortable in some way. What is triggering you? This requires an incredible amount of honesty because the goal of a binge is often to ignore the very emotions that I’m asking you to consider.
2. Know that the old “I’ll start clean tomorrow” is both tired and untrue. Start today. Today is the tomorrow that you said you’d start yesterday. Bingeing has a way of making us want to pause the present and put off the future. You can’t. You’re only getting more stuck the longer you stay in the pattern of “one more day/night of treats, then I’ll be good.” Stop and think about how many times you’ve said that to yourself.
3. The way to get out of a binge cycle is to get out of the habit of bingeing. It’s imperative to interrupt the pattern of “If I’m feeling x, I’ll eat y.” For me, this meant creating new rituals, new routines. The first three weeks were almost unbearably difficult. They weren’t natural and they required a lot of sheer willpower. But over time, I developed a new way of dealing with my feelings and a lot of new nightly behaviors—things like reading, watching new TV series, etc.—that helped to ensure I didn’t turn to massive amounts of food as my go-to for comfort, fun, and reassurance. Now, the bingeing is foreign.
4. Eat in a way you’re proud of. Always.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

The scale isn't changing, but my heart is.

I have been a bad, bad blogger.

Sorry about that.

Here we are in Peru! Oh wait, you might want a better
shot of the scenery...
The past few weeks have been wild. I was blessed to take 20+ high schoolers to Peru for a week for work. Yes, for work. Wow.

I made a good decision a few weeks ago to not weigh myself in so obsessively. Of course, the downside of this decision is that cheating seems much more attractive because I am NOT weighing myself in so frequently. But right now, the benefits of not looking at the scale so much are outweighing (no pun intended) the cons, so I will stick with this plan for the next few weeks and see how things are progressing.

I wanted to quickly write a moment down so I don't forget it, and so you can have hope. Have I mentioned lately that this weight loss thing...this was never someone I thought I could be. I truly thought "God made me this size, and this is just how it has to be." I am still processing through that thought process and when I wrap my head around it, I'll let you know.

Ok, that's better.
So, last Saturday morning I was at the Y working out. I was running, and I noticed a familiar woman made eye contact with me, so I smiled at her. I don't know this woman, but I see her often, so I knew her face. I finished my workout as she was finishing hers. She said something to me, but I had my headphones in (Pearl Jam, thank you very much) so I took them out and she said to me:

"I tell my friends about you when I'm not at the Y. You are so inspiring."

I said thank you, and was taken aback because mentally, I still don't think she could be talking about me. She said "You must have so much confidence now."

Hmm.

Yes, I do. But did I before? And if not, why not?

We are living in a weight obsessed world. This I know, for sure. If I'm thin, I must be happy. If I'm overweight, I must be sad.

I am going to bed tonight thinking about this. But I wanted to share that story with you. That bittersweet moment of success. Of course that sweet lady meant well. But what lies underneath, is what I am struggling with.

-Liz

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Where's my treat?

Man oh man, one of those weeks.

I'm inside my head quite a bit these days. My weight is a topic of a lot of conversations. On some days, this makes me prouder than I can even say. On other days, I am so self-loathing that I don't want to hear any encouragement at all, because I simply think I am not losing weight fast enough. Don't worry, I know that I am my own worst critic. And knowing, as GI Joe taught me, is half the battle.

I've been thinking a lot about food. You too?

Packaged food is so beautiful to me. Processed food looks so shiny and new. Bright colors. Expensive logos. Fancy marketing campaigns. When I run out of bananas and spinach (these two items rule my household) I have to run to the grocery store. I had to make that run today.

Oh, the grocery store. What some women love about the mall, I love about grocery stores. Food is my fashion, my addiction, my shopping heaven. So that's what the grocery store now gives me a whole lot of anxiety. Imagine an alcoholic that has to go to a bar once a week to get what they need. I have to go to this beautiful mecca of candy and donuts and birthday cakes to buy...bananas and spinach.

So lame.

My friend Nat sent me this picture off of Pinterest. I have heard this saying before. I think it's how I got to be so overweight in the first place. Food has always, and I mean ALWAYS, been my reward. I haven't learned how to replace it with something else yet. Contrary to what my trainer tells me, it is not a reward to "go for a nice long walk" instead of eating ice cream at the end of a hard day. It's just not. Don't get me wrong, I am learning to love exercise, and I am learning to hate the feeling of being overstuffed and overprocessed with my food choices, but not to the point of getting past it. I don't know if I'll ever be past it. Alcoholics never STOP being alcoholics. I don't know that my addiction will ever go away. I think I can just work towards controlling it. Not eliminating it.

So here's my grocery store tip. Stay on the perimeter. Don't go down the middle aisles. Those are the aisles filled with the processed poison that we have grown to love. But if you gotta go there, you know - to get soup or condiments or Cherry Coke Zero - do it quick. Don't meander. Because even today. I stopped at the Krispy Kreme display and stared longingly at the 6 pack of jelly donuts.

Food will never just be fuel to me. For whatever reason, this is my struggle. And God is using it to make me stronger. What makes you and I different from dogs? Food is not, and can not, be our reward. We deserve more than a treat for good behavior.

We just do.

-Liz

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

The camera adds twenty pounds?


Not this time.

Today was a pretty funny day. I am doing this series of meetings with the Town of Cary, and we have different speakers, go to different locations, and get more "cultured." Lord knows I could use it.

But today's meeting was the coolest. It started off with a gauntlet. This part wasn't cool. This part was, yet again, a table filled with my old friends. Donuts, bagels, and muffins. Cut in half, but let's be honest...when was the last time a normal person ate only half a donut? Please.

I survived the gauntlet. So far, so good. Then, lunch at a Cuban restaurant in downtown Durham. I chose the least appetizing of the options: salad and a grilled chicken breast. Everyone else had tasty sandwiches, chips and salsa, black beans and rice covered with cheese. But I got the salad bar. Didn't even get ranch dressing. In fact, the people at the table even commented "oh, the YMCA girl gets a salad!" It was one of those "I'm joking but sort of judging you at the same time because you are probably looking at my deep fried monte cristo sandwich and feeling sorry for me" comments.

Still, it felt good to be the healthy one at the table. Wow, this is new.

The best part of the day, though, is that we toured a local tv station. And we got to act like a 3rd grade class and take our picture in front of the green screen and at the news anchor desk. These days, I am the first in line to take pictures. Put me front and center! I can't believe how I look. Truly. I can't. This has been a process, and I know it will last a lifetime, but this new body and face is...strange. I get excited to have my picture taken, because sometimes I don't think it's me. I lost two of my chins. Now I'm down to one. I see a waistline, I see my eyes, I see...someone else.

Back to you, Angela.
But the great thing that these pictures prove, is that I haven't lost my sense of humor. That will always, ALWAYS, be large and in charge.

Oh, thank God.

-Liz



Thursday, February 28, 2013

Dear high school me...

Ok, no reason to hide embarrassing photos on here. I wanted to share a facebook message that one of my friends sent me. She is in high school, I know her through the Y. What a reminder that my struggle is universal. I wish I had her thoughts when I was her age, her boldness when I was in high school, her confidence to step out and make changes in her heart. I wonder where I would be today if I had gotten started when she did...

So enjoy this photo of high school me. But really, enjoy this message from my bold high school friend. (and don't worry, I asked her permission to share this on the blog!)

Hey liz, i just wanted to say that you are such an inspiration to me. nobody knows but i have been struggling with food since freshman year (which doesnt seem a lot but every day seems to go by so slowly). ive tried telling my mom but i don't think she quite understands because she thinks i can control it. these past 4 years have been a complete rollercoaster ride when it came to that area of my life- i'd have good days and just horrible ones. 

Sometimes i feel like once i start i really can't stop myself because i just want more and more and no matter how many times i tell myself that i'll regret it later, i just convince myself to eat more and give into my cravings. I was always embarrassed by it, especially eating in public because i know people take notice..so i'd either eat nothing at all or everything in sight. this addiction did not help with my high school girl self esteem at all and sometimes i'd just want to die because of how much i hated myself for loving food so much. but then i saw you post a link to your blog and i started keeping up with it. it's truly helped me through times i thought i couldn't take any more of it. i have recently began eating a more healthy diet and it's comforting to know i'm not alone when it comes to worrying about food.

so basically, i just want to say thank you. thank you for sharing your story and your journey through your blog, thank you for being such a light to the world because the presence of God shines so brightly in you, and thank you for being amazing. You are truly my inspiration(:

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Alone in a crowd.

Check out this email that a friend of mine (her blog is here) just sent me. It was the answer to my question that I sent her: Why did you start losing weight in the first place? She has lost 122 pounds. Yes, you read that right. 

I was looking for inspiration from her. But what I got was a lot deeper. I got communion with a friend I've never met, and a reminder that I am not alone in my food addiction. I am hoping you see where she is coming from, too...

Sorry it took me so long to respond. I have been in a sucky place lately when it comes to eating AND exercise actually. I am not feeling either one but I am not feeling eating bad either. After I eat bad I feel like I did 122 pounds ago....the depressed girl that I once was. I started to lose weight because I was just down in the dumps, my life was a big mess and I had totally lost focus of God and his direction for my life. Lately I have almost been feeling the same way, I feel like I need a weight loss savior. I just read your blog about the cracks and the cinammon rolls also...I feel like you are writing my thoughts for me. Food is controlling me and I let it control me. I hate it, how long am I going to have to suffer this? I only lost .5lb this month and I know I can do better. I am getting closer to the 100s than I ever have before except I am slowly slipping back into my old habits. I was swimming and not doing any other exercise which didn't do much for me. I love swimming though, but I am exhuasted after I swim I don't want to do anything else! I feel like I have had to start over in the gym and I am back to 348lbs. Everytime I work out I feel like I am working out for the first time in my life. I don't enjoy that. I want progress! Right now I am so down about the entire situation and I don't know what to do. I looked at pictures from when I was in the 300s and that motivated me....for a day. Then I was at lunch and wanted ice cream along with everyone else....so I got ice cream. I was already so full how in the world did I pack ice cream in there? I don't know, I have a 5K Saturday that I am NOT ready for but I can NOT find motivation. What am I doing wrong? I guess long story short, I don't have an exact reason why I starting losing weight but I know that I feel so much better since I have. I don't want to be a failure, I don't want to gain this weight back but right now I feel like I am drowning in a huge pool of doubt with food being chained to my ankles! I am sorry this is such a depressing reply! I honestly feel like I am losing grip and it is the worst feeling ever. Maybe I need to give it to God, I don't know if I have fully given it over to him or not. I guess I haven't since I feel like I am all alone in this fight.

I don't have the answers for my friend...except to say that we are together in the wilderness. And you might be with us, too...

-Liz

Monday, February 25, 2013

Cracks in the foundation

I've been having a great few weeks. My eating has been on point, my work outs have been gettin' it, I'm back to losing weight and not going back and forth with the same 5 pounds.

Things are awesome!

Hold on, though. Can I be honest? Yesterday, my foundation got rocked. It was something small, that turned into something big, that eventually worked itself out. Except emotionally, it left me broken up.

Why so emotional? Because I was building my foundation on others, not on God. Let me explain.

My trainer told me that she couldn't train me anymore at the weekly time we always trained together and weighed in. No big deal, right? But this news put me into an emotional tailspin. For a second there, it looked like I was going to lose my weekly training sessions. We figured it out about an hour later. But what has stayed with me is this idea: "I can't do this without my trainer."

And that thought turned into this: "My trainer and those times with her are my foundation" which turned into "If  I lose her, I'm going to gain all my weight back."

So I have been sitting in these emotions for about 24 hours now. Where do these crazy thoughts come from? You see, I know the truth. I know that Jesus is my firm foundation. I know that the reason I am losing weight is to be the best version of me that I can be. I know that this is about pleasing God, and not other people. I know that I am worth it. I know that I can do it. I know that I am not defined by a number on scale.

But then again, I don't know it.

This situation last night has put some cracks in my foundation. Here I am, 18 months and 85 pounds into this, and I still feel like the fat girl that avoids rejection by being funny and loud and crazy. So when I had that momentary rejection last night, from someone that I have needed in this process with me, I went right back into that place in my head. Those lies. I have always, ALWAYS, been the biggest. In my class, in my family, in my group of friends, everywhere. It is harder than I thought to lose that persona, mentality.

How is it possible to know the truth and not believe it? How do I retrain my brain to think like the healthy person I have become?

On Christ, the solid rock, I stand. All other ground is sinking sand. All other ground is sinking sand.

Lord, help me to believe that.

-Liz