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To Clear Away the Cobwebs

27 Jun

I’ve been running, rather jogging.  Nothing amazing, maybe a mile and a half to two miles a day, at best.  But it’s helping me cope.  It clears away the emotional cobwebs that tend to build up in my mind.  And you know it has to bad in order to get me to run.  Because I HATE it. I would much rather do some other form of activity.  But jogging through the neighborhood is free, get’s me out of the house, and far enough away that I can’t hear Noah crying.  Which thankfully there has been a lot less of recently.

I think we are starting to see the light of day.  I knew things would get easier at that three-month mark with Noah, and it’s clear that Noah is much improved.  Not out of the woods yet, but still a far cry from non-stop screaming for five hours straight every night.  That was just a beating.

Noah’s issues combined with us in the middle of limbo land with which grad program Peter will choose has been enough to cause me to stress eat.  Yep.  I gained weight.  I was back at my pre-pregnancy weight by ten days postpartum, and then at two weeks we started having colic issues with Noah and I coped by comfort eating.  I know, it’s my old friend.  The former me, who weighed 60 pounds more, with all those bad habits likes to remind me in me weakest moments how yummy or rather, soothing food can be. You know, that thought, oh, I deserve this cookie because my son is crying so much.  I  had 18 million of those thoughts.

I could potentially be one of the only women I know who actually can gain weight while breastfeeding.  Well, two weeks ago, I put my big girl pants on and started jogging, in 102 degree Texas heat no less.  I feel like a beast afterwards, so sweaty and nasty.  But, it’s starting to pay off… I’m five pounds away from pre-pregnancy weight….again.  Sigh.

I am the type of person who, in order to maintain my weight-loss, which I have for almost 7 years, I have to step on the scale every day. I know when I don’t want to do that, step on the scale, that there’s a reason, because I haven’t been exercising regularly and I haven’t been mindful of what I’m fueling my body with.  So for a while, during the most stressful days with Noah, and money and life, I stopped stepping on the scale, because I knew…I was gaining weight, and I didn’t want the reminder.  It is truly my only preventative for undisciplined habits.

1998, near my heaviest.

That said, I’m still in a battle to love myself and I really mean LOVE me, whether or not I’m 10 pounds over my ideal weight or 3 pounds, or even at my ideal weight.  And I think when you have accomplished a dramatic weight-loss you never truly feel like, okay, we’re good, we can relax now.  You never really can get that fat girl picture out of your head, even when you have hit your goal weight or size.  At least for me, that’s the truth, at my weakest moments, I still feel like the girl who was wearing a size 22 jean.  Yeah, it’s true, I was once wearing a size 22.  Even now, there is still a struggle to think, I would be happier/prettier/more satisfied with my body if I was in a size 4 jean.  A size 8/10 pant is my normal size when I’m exercising daily and eating well (notice I didn’t say dieting).  I feel pretty content with myself at that stage.

Will I ever be thin? Hear me out, you know what I mean by “thin,” because for some of us, the idea of wearing a size 8 or 10 is thin.  Thin meaning waif-ish. NO. I won’t ever be a waif, that’s just not my body type. (I know when I was a size 22 I would just ROLL my eyes at women who were in a size 12 complaining about needing to lose weight – IN FRONT OF ME.) I’m not sure if I will ever slip on a pair of size 4 pants – I don’t know if I have EVER worn a size 4.  In 5th grade I was wearing a size 8.  I’ve always been thick, or curvy is a nicer description, I guess. Whatever.  It’s semantics anyway.  I doubt that a number on a scale, or a size on a tag will ever make me feel like I’ve arrived. And here’s why, because that was not why I started my weight-loss journey.  I get annoyed with myself when I start to think that way.  It’s not healthy, emotionally speaking, for me to get too involved with a number as a goal.

In 2007, working out 2 hours a day with a trainer

I started my weight-loss journey, back in 2004, for health reasons.  I knew I was racking up unseen medical bills later in life if I didn’t start to do something about my health right then.  It was a desire to climb stairs and not feel winded, to run a mile without a blink.  It was a desire to know that in my 50′s I could hike and go out and enjoy life, without being in pain.  It was a desire to be free from baggage - the kind on the inside too.  Sometimes the only way to get to the root of an emotional issue is to start to peel away the physical habits of one.  For me, emotional healing came through physical health.  I worked through a lot of my junk in the gym.  And that is why I need to be running daily lately.  The comfort eating comes along for me when life is difficult and stressful.  The best way for me to cope with stress is exercise (I know this is revolutionary, isn’t it).  It keeps me riding the waves of life, rather than being overwhelmed by it all. Plus, I feel more vibrant inside and out when I’m staying healthy.  Exercise is the filter for my negative thoughts.  I sweat ‘em all out, so to speak and then I don’t feel the urge to comfort eat.

Back to the point, I get in a rut as soon as I start to focus more on a number and less on my health, I lose my momentum and my love of who I am, but yet, stepping on the scale every day is what keeps me more focused on my health.  The scale isn’t about a right number, it’s about staying on target for being healthy.

What I know is this, the point is, for me, I’m happiest with myself not when I can put on a pair of size 8 pants from Old Navy, but I’m happiest with myself when I can run a mile and know that I have 2 more in front of me and not continually think about how bad I want to stop.  I’m happiest with myself when I can push my body harder and faster than before and not feel defeated.  I’m happiest with myself when the idea of hiking up the side of an honest to goodness mountain doesn’t scare me, but rather, excites me.

With every intention to encourage self-love, here is what I like about myself (no matter what size I am):  I like my hands, I think my fingers are long and pretty.  I like my feet,  they match my hands.  I like my jaw line, my neck and collar-bone.  I like the overall shape of my body.  I like my hair. I like my mouth and I like my cheek bones.  I like my small shoulders. I like my hip to waist ratio. I like my eyelashes. I like my freckles.

I like my brain.

So what do you like about yourself? It’s harder than you think, but it is good to do it.

The Importance of Hand Holding

25 Jan

 

Peter and I had a date this weekend.  We sat together in a quiet Vietnamese restaurant drinking hot Jasmine tea with our spring rolls and huge bowls of Pho soup while we held hands across the table. Phones off.  Eye contact strong. Fingers tangled together.

A date is a rare occurrence for us.  It’s been so long I can’t even remember our last one.  Well besides for our five year anniversary, when while my sister, Alysa, and my friend, Angie were visiting for Thanksgiving Peter and I went to Denton’s Golden Triangle Mall together (if you can even call it a mall or a date for that matter).  We walked around talking – and something you don’t get to do when you’re pushing a stroller – holding hands. (more…)

A Little Something About Me

31 Oct

Me, around 5 years old. I loved that dress and that puppy!

I was tagged by Nikki, over at stitch.tac.sew to respond to these “get to know your resident blogger” questions. I debated dragging my heals in response, but since I already have several blogs that I have promised to write, including how I found out I was pregnant with number two and what exactly I do as a doula, I thought that I should get ‘er done, today.  No time like the present! (more…)

Rocks in a Tin Can

5 Apr

I know I should be reading all my required reading for my doula certification with DONA.  However, I’m not in the mood to study.  I’ve had a few things tumbling through my head lately, like rocks in a tin can.   I’ve been thinking about the idea of writing a letter to my 20 year-old-self.  My older me giving advice to my younger me.  You get the idea.  And, if you do the same, post a link to your blog in a comment so we can commiserate our stupidity and greatness together. Okay, not to make too much of a fuss, here are a few things I would tell myself, in no particular order. (more…)

Scurvy-Rash-Torture-Hell

5 Jan

“I think I have scurvy,”  I tell Peter.

He looks at me sideways, not quite sure what to say.  Then asks me if I’m a pirate.

“Very funny!  You don’t understand. I have this rash that will not go away on my legs and near my collar bone.  And I think it’s because I have a vitamin C deficiency.  Probably because I haven’t been eating enough fruits and vegetables.”

“Uh, oh.”

“I blame all that cheap a** frozen pizza you’ve been making.” (more…)

2009 In Review

5 Jan

Lets, be honest, I can barely remember much here, beyond the highlights of you know, having a child, so thanks to Facebook, I’ve gone back over the past year and made note of my most interesting updates and will add, ad nauseum, any other details necessary. (more…)

25 Things About Me

28 Jan

1. I met my husband, Peter, through Eharmony. Being married has been far easier than I ever imagined.

2. I distrust those who don’t apologize well or can’t at all. I believe forgiveness is always necessary, but reconciliation is not always required

3. I had have the same set of colored pencils since I was in middle school. My Aunt lee bought them for my brother (they are a VERY nice art set of 100+ colors) and i “stole” them from him. I’ve used them ever since.

4. My freshman year I was voted most likely to be stuffed into a trash can or locker, my junior year I was student council president, and my senior year voted most likely to succeed along with Robert Fowler. (more…)

Desperate to Heal

26 Nov

It’s Thanksgiving afternoon and I’m sitting in the kitchen with a nice hot cup of coffee in one had and my laptop perched on my crossed legs.  Mom and a close friend are  peeling carrots for a very delicious carrot salad – the turkey is in the oven, smelling delicious already.  In about 3 hours our house will be buzzing with over 20 guests; friends and friends of friends who need a home to come to for Thanksgiving – and ours is always open.  Jesus knew the value of hospitality, and I’m learning about His continually open heart through having a continually open home.  It’s not always easy, but I feel I’m slowly learning what it means to “count it all joy.”

In the middle of October I started experiencing crippling pain in my jaw.  I couldn’t open my mouth to sing without feeling like a needle was twisting in the left side of my mouth.  After going to the doctor and learning that I did not have TMJ (thank-God) he informed me that I was under great stress which had allowed infection to grow near my impacted wisdom tooth and in light of that needed to be removed ASAP.  The insurance agency called me a week  later and gave me the address of a dentist to see.

A few hours later I arrive at a small dentist office.  I greet the receptionist hoping she might speak English, but I’m out of luck, no English.  So she directs me to wait, I wonder if I’ll fill out forms or what I do, or how long I’ll wait, or what they might do to my tooth, or how would I tell them what was wrong.  Just then a large Russian woman comes out to greet me.  Apparently she’s my dentist.  She directs me to a small room with seemingly dirty appliances.  I cringe, but take a deep breath, and think about God’s peace like a warm coat wrapped around me.  In very broken English she asks me where I hurt, I say, my jaw.  She takes a quick x-ray of my jaw and then tells me, “we will pull your tooth.”  “Now?” I ask with trepidation.  She nods her head and starts pulling our her dental tools for the procedure.  She tells me to relax and she holds the needles up in the air.  Is she joking? I can barely breathe, let alone relax.  But then I think about the pain I’ve been in for the last two weeks and I shut my eyes and start to breathe slowly, thinking that the momentary pain of having my tooth pulled is really small compared to what I‘ve been living with the last month.  She leaves the room and says she’ll be back in ten minutes.  I wait, I feel the Novocain tingling my mouth.  While she’s gone my imaginations starts to run amuck.  My dentist didn’t explain how she would pull my tooth, I’ve never had my tooth pulled, I’m dramatic as it is, so you can imagine the dark story that was playing out in my head. I put my hands in my pocket to keep them from noticeably shaking.  Just then my dentist came in.  At this point I shut my eyes,  after some poking and prodding, asking me if I can feel this or that, she pulls my wisdom tooth out.  I hear the most ungodly noise, it’s the tooth being ripped from the jaw bone, it’s over in about 15 seconds. My dentist informs me that I can open my eyes now.  After a very brief explanation of how to treat my mouth I’m out the door.

Outside, I giggle to myself in relief and in silly embarrassment for how childish I was.  And then I wonder how desperate we are as humans to avoid pain.  Sometimes the fear of the pain is worse than the actuality of the pain.   How long do we live with issues of often intolerable hurt in our life because the fear of dealing with the root of it is greater than the pain itself?  I asked myself these questions that day, and I continue to ask them.  God touch the root of pain in my heart, I don’t want to live with hurt in my life.  I want to be whole and healthy.  I want a heart that’s not afraid of healing.

Drug Induced Sleep

10 Feb

That’s right Bob. I slept till noon.

Well, I did get up at 5:30am grinding my teeth so I surfed the web for dental insurance options, and then I had breakfast with peter, a delicious bowl of oatmeal (that he made). He left for work around 6:30am and then I went back to bed – and slept till noon and had the most prolific dreams, such as being a spy (a normal dream for me) and a water gymnast, whatever that means.

I’m sick with something. It could be the flu but i’m not sure. I could go to the doctor, but it’s such a bother, because well, these things just go away after a while.

I had one of the busiest weeks of work ever. Working till 6-7pm most of nights this week because of several print deadlines, and being sick just wasn’t an option. So when last night came, i welcomed the chance to finally acknowledge how crappy i felt…

R and R…that’s it for me. You won’t see me this weekend cuz I look and feel horrible (see picture). And honestly, you don’t want to see me, because I might sneeze on you – eeew.

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