For years I suffered from an eating disorder / body dismorphic disorder known as "manorexia." Some of you will be familiar with anorexia, in which no matter how small one gets they see themselves as huge. Well, that's not me. I battled manorexia - a condition in which sufferers, no matter how huge their beer belly may become, no matter how out of shape they get, they honestly believe they are super hot and athletic.
I am unique, I would suspect, among ladies, in that most often women are overly critical of their bodies, as this is what society has conditioned us to do. But men! Men are taught to be in love with themselves, and regardless of their physical condition, they are taught they have the right to expect a physically flawless partner. I spent my teen-aged years surrounded by men, so perhaps I absorbed this way of viewing myself in the world.
This past summer I was at an all time high weight of 260-something pounds... and to be honest, I didn't realize! I FELT as though I was about 200lbs, and still fairly athletic. I am now in the 170's, and still feel pretty much the same: I feel moderately overweight, and fairly athletic... the same way I felt almost 90lbs ago.
Logically, I realize I am significantly smaller now, more flexible, and more capable physically than I was just a few short months ago. But it seems I now more closely resemble the (sadly) stereotypical female of our culture in that I see myself as bigger than the tape measurer tells me I am.
I'm actively working on this - not because I value my mental health particularly... rather, it is because I have always despised skinny women calling themselves fat! Lest I lose more and turn into an obnoxious skinny bitch with self-esteem issues, I am working on seeing ME, and not the version of me in my head.
Who's with me? Who's ready to love themselves as they truly are?!
Showing posts with label The Incredible Shrinking Val. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Incredible Shrinking Val. Show all posts
Friday, January 7, 2011
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Small Victories
Since passing through the hell that was puberty in my early teens, I have had a love/hate relationship with my body. Not just the typical "I'm soooo fat" view, as plagues so many women. I have simultaneously adored and loathed it. At just fourteen years old I fell in love with my physique; my musculature and flexibility have been a source of pride, and judo offered me an outlet to showcase all my body could do. While feeling so strongly that I was amazing, I still fell prey to the knowledge that, according to our cultural standards, I was just too big.
As an adult I have weighed anywhere from 160lbs to 260+lbs, and the one thing consistent at all of the weights in between was my firm belief that I needed to be smaller. What is hilarious to me is that my hatred of how I look in clothing has been fairly undeviating whether I was a size 12 or 22!
In my quest for the elusive thinness I desire, I have tried every fad diet, starved myself for lengths of time, and even had a brief flirtation with bulimia... though I must admit, I wasn't very good at it. I was a champion binger, but when the time came to purge I would say, "I'm so comfortable on this couch! I'll puke later." And of course, later never came. I have had small successes over the years; losing some, gaining it back and then some, losing a portion of the new weight again. And through it all I have felt like my body is the cell in which the real me is imprisoned.
Shopping for clothing has been a hassle at best and traumatic at worst for as many years as I can remember. The year before I got pregnant, I had managed to lose some weight and needed new clothes, so I hit the stores with high hopes... only to once again find myself crying in a dressing room, feeling defeated. I had resigned myself to this as my fate. Until tonight.
After McGee was born I gained all of the weight I had previously lost back, and reached my all-time heaviest weight by June. For myriad reasons, I elected to have a Roux-en-Y gastric bypass in September. For the first time in my life, I am losing weight without misery! I eat what my doctor has asked me to eat, and I am never hungry. I workout as much as I can, and I am seeing consistent results. It is amazing.
My family will be sitting for a portrait in a week, so what to wear has been on my mind of late. Most of the clothing hanging in my closet is either only appropriate for the gym, or is baggy. So off to the mall I went this evening, McGee on my back in his Ergo carrier, all too aware of the tears I would soon be crying.
I passed my favorite store, White House / Black Market, and my inner masochist urged me to stop in. I grabbed a cute shirt and a pair of velvet pants and headed to the dressing room. Even as I was buttoning them, I knew I would hate how I looked when I turned to face the mirror. But I didn't. I loved how I looked! I stood there, dumbstruck with the realization that, for the first time, I felt beautiful in a dressing room! I tried on several outfits, and experienced the same results. I cried just a little, overwhelmed with joy.
I spent hours wandering around the mall, going from store to store trying on clothes (an activity which has never held joy for me in the least). Every garment I donned brought the same giddy reaction, and I reveled in being able to shop in straight sized stores for the first time in years. I feel like a whole new world has been opened up to me - a world in which I am good enough, a world where I have a love/love relationship with my body.
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Thinking about weight loss surgery? Here are some places to start learning:
Dr. Champion, Marietta
Obesity Help information and forum
As an adult I have weighed anywhere from 160lbs to 260+lbs, and the one thing consistent at all of the weights in between was my firm belief that I needed to be smaller. What is hilarious to me is that my hatred of how I look in clothing has been fairly undeviating whether I was a size 12 or 22!
In my quest for the elusive thinness I desire, I have tried every fad diet, starved myself for lengths of time, and even had a brief flirtation with bulimia... though I must admit, I wasn't very good at it. I was a champion binger, but when the time came to purge I would say, "I'm so comfortable on this couch! I'll puke later." And of course, later never came. I have had small successes over the years; losing some, gaining it back and then some, losing a portion of the new weight again. And through it all I have felt like my body is the cell in which the real me is imprisoned.
Shopping for clothing has been a hassle at best and traumatic at worst for as many years as I can remember. The year before I got pregnant, I had managed to lose some weight and needed new clothes, so I hit the stores with high hopes... only to once again find myself crying in a dressing room, feeling defeated. I had resigned myself to this as my fate. Until tonight.
After McGee was born I gained all of the weight I had previously lost back, and reached my all-time heaviest weight by June. For myriad reasons, I elected to have a Roux-en-Y gastric bypass in September. For the first time in my life, I am losing weight without misery! I eat what my doctor has asked me to eat, and I am never hungry. I workout as much as I can, and I am seeing consistent results. It is amazing.
My family will be sitting for a portrait in a week, so what to wear has been on my mind of late. Most of the clothing hanging in my closet is either only appropriate for the gym, or is baggy. So off to the mall I went this evening, McGee on my back in his Ergo carrier, all too aware of the tears I would soon be crying.
I passed my favorite store, White House / Black Market, and my inner masochist urged me to stop in. I grabbed a cute shirt and a pair of velvet pants and headed to the dressing room. Even as I was buttoning them, I knew I would hate how I looked when I turned to face the mirror. But I didn't. I loved how I looked! I stood there, dumbstruck with the realization that, for the first time, I felt beautiful in a dressing room! I tried on several outfits, and experienced the same results. I cried just a little, overwhelmed with joy.
I spent hours wandering around the mall, going from store to store trying on clothes (an activity which has never held joy for me in the least). Every garment I donned brought the same giddy reaction, and I reveled in being able to shop in straight sized stores for the first time in years. I feel like a whole new world has been opened up to me - a world in which I am good enough, a world where I have a love/love relationship with my body.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thinking about weight loss surgery? Here are some places to start learning:
Dr. Champion, Marietta
Obesity Help information and forum
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