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Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Still The Same No Matter The Size



    


Hello, dear LC readers. It’s BLaM here. I know I don’t write or post much, but I thought sharing this with y’all might help somebody, and it might help me too.
    I’ve been a “big girl” my whole life. We won’t explore the reasons why, but there was a point in my youth where I discovered that food worked well enough to fill the emptiness and loneliness inside, and being fat made a great guy repellent. At one time, I thought that was a good thing. By the time I reached high school, the damage had been done. It didn’t matter how hard I tried, I just couldn’t seem to get “thin.” I spent several months binging and purging, and then several more months eating as little as I could and exercising as much as I could. Obviously, these were both grossly unhealthy, but so many of the girls I knew at the time did one or the other, and they all dropped weight like I used to drop donuts. I was angry that nothing I tried worked the way I wanted it to. I was angry that for some people, being thin is like breathing. I wanted to be thin. I deserved it. I worked for it. I didn’t achieve it.

    Let me take just one moment here to describe what growing up fat meant to me, because it plays an important role in what’s happening now: I remember being “teased” by my family members for being “chubby” for as long as I can remember. I have a distinct memory of one of my aunts admonishing me at a family holiday for having seconds. “You don’t need that,” she told me, “You’re already fat enough.” I was completely crushed. I had looked up to this woman my whole life. It was one of the singular most hurtful experiences of my life at that point. For me, that is saying a lot. I was also beaten and bullied badly by classmates and their siblings. When I moved and changed schools, things got better. Teasing for my weight went away, for the most part, but the damage had been done by then. I have been horribly self-conscious about my weight and general appearance since childhood. Growing up fat destroyed my self-confidence and self-worth. 

    Then, my junior year of high school, after another school change, I found some acceptance and some friends. I started feeling better about myself. Not great, but better. People didn’t seem to judge me so much on my weight, and more on who I was. I thought that I was coming to terms with my weight. By then, I knew that being a big girl was just the way I was. I convinced myself I was OK with that. I convinced myself that I was happy being fat. What I really did was become complacent. 

    I didn’t date in high school. I didn’t have an actual boyfriend until I was nearly 20. I made bad choices in men. And I stayed fat. I had kids. I got married. I got fatter. By 2011, I weighed upwards of 420 pounds. Then, the unthinkable happened, and I lost everything. Including, ironically, the weight. As I write this, I have lost over 200 pounds. You would think that this would have improved my self-image, at least, right? Wrong.

    Yes, I have lost a ton of weight. Yes, I’m healthier. Yes, I’m more socially attractive. I’m still awkward. I’m still horribly self-conscious. What’s worse is the way I see myself. I can’t look into a mirror without wincing. You see, being that big, for that long, left it’s toll on my skin. My stretched out, crepe-y, stretch marked skin, that now hangs off my body in sheets. If I even see that much. Most times I look in the mirror, I still see the fatter me. It wasn’t until a few days ago when my roommates, who are both males, told me how thin I was looking lately and I started looking back at old pictures did I realize how much I’ve lost. I still live like the fat girl I was, and not like the much thinner girl I’ve become. I still walk slowly and carefully, so I don’t fall. I still act like walking a block could kill me. At my heaviest, it probably could have. I still look at clothes that are several sizes too big. Yes, I eat better. I make better decisions about the things I put into my body. I continue to lose weight. But the mental toll it’s taking is hard to deal with sometimes. I’m literally a different person from the one who couldn’t go a single flight of stairs without having to use an inhaler, from the person I was less than three years ago. In the course of the journey, I have lost a lot more than weight and I sometimes wonder if it’s some kind of cosmic joke. That to lose the weight that I had tried so hard to accept, I had to lose everything else, too. I know that it’s not the case, but I would trade every ounce lost and then some if it meant I could get that back. In the meantime, I guess I just have to get used to the idea that I’m a thinner me. A healthier me. Hopefully, I’m becoming a better me. Hopefully one day, I can look in a mirror, I can see my body, I can see me, and not feel the disgust and horror I do now. Hopefully, one day I can be whole.