So I have been fairly open (if intermittently ) about my battle with Anxiety and OCD on the
blog here.
One of the sub-categories, as such, of my struggle with
mental illness is a hint of body dysmorphic disorder and an obsession with my
appearance and weight. This has gotten a
LOT better in the past year or so and I have found a healthy way to exercise
and eat without obsessing over every detail.
As someone who suffered from both bulimia and the propensity
to starve myself or come up with fad, controlled diets in my teens and
twenties, my thirties have started off with a bang.
I believe, as does my amazing doctor, that no woman will
ever truly be satisfied with their appearance. There will always be something I harp on. Or stress about. I am
used to that and I think, for most, this is a “normal” part of life. The fact
that I can pose for pictures and not throw up when I see myself on camera ( my
camera phobia was always bad ) is just, well, amazing. I even do a fun little
video series on my facebook now and then and can just press “publish” and go
about my merry way without criticizing everything about myself. I share this information not to brag; but to
revel in the fact that I have found balance and control and it is achievable
(even though it took me, well, well over a decade and some professional help).
My blog post today is me (as promised ) being open as much
as I can.
I try to do 4 days of intense physical activity a week ( hiking,
the gym, running steps, etc., ). We OCD people love our routines and even
though I am controlled now and in a much better mental state ( you can never completely cure mental
disorders) , there are little moments that pop up: little nudges and imps that
worm their way into my brain.
Today is a gym day for me. I brought my bag to work, I have my
workout gear, I am ready to go after work; but today I am just not feeling
great. Not ill—but not great. I feel
sluggish, tired, thirsty and hungry.
This is the way my brain works at moments:
I think: I'm Hungry? You don’t deserve to be hungry. You even had a cookie at the meeting
yesterday. You never eat treats at meetings.
You slacker. You are slacking off. You are falling down. Look in the mirror. You can see it happening.
All your hard work. You ruined it. ßI
punish myself. I berate myself. I use food as a means to determine
deservedness.
I think: I just don’t feel like going to the gym tonight. I
don’t think I have the energy. It’s 36 degrees out with the humidex and I am
just feeling weary and worn. I hiked at
least 20 K on the weekend and I think I’ve been overdoing it. My body is tired.
I don’t feel like going. Do I have to go?
This is when my brain starts to register Rachel in gold-hued tones. I
remember ( or seem to remember) weeks where I have been propelled into action
even when I didn’t feel like going. I
remember ( or seem to remember, honest I think I make this stuff up ) the times
when I saw more muscle definition, when I wasn’t ever too tired for a weekly
gym run, when I would push myself out.
Then, again, I punish ß
You are useless. Can’t you even get to the gym?
Can’t you even make the effort? If you do this once, who is to stop you
from doing it again and again until all you do is sit at home. You’re going to never fit into your clothes.
You are going to look horrible in the pics at your friend’s wedding in the
summer. You don’t deserve a night off.
I HATE WHEN MY MIND GETS THIS WAY and years of hard work and mental assistance
have trained me to combat these moments by rationalization.
What is the worst that can happen? What, logically, is the
ramification of a day missed at the gym by a very active person? Answer: nothing.
There are days that are better than others. Fortunately, the ratio of these is 7:1 as
opposed to the 2:1 I used to suffer from.
I cannot speak for the male experience; but I kill myself
over the way I look. How I think I look.
How I think people want me to look. And
I fail my own words. I’m a walking contradiction, folks. I even wrote this piece for Her Spacious Soul: knowing that I was addressing issues I struggle with but not owning up to
the fact that I need first to fix myself .
This blog post isn't fishing for “but you’re so pretty.”
I don’t need people to tell me I'm pretty. I don’t need that
type of validation. By societal
standards, I know I am not unfortunate looking.
What I need is to believe it myself.
It won’t mean ANYTHING if I hear it from a reader or a colleague or a
guy who wolf-whistles on the subway, I am determined---as I step forward and
forward --- on this ever-challenging journey to get to the place where these
moments, this degrading self-talk, this harmful and hopeless and insane way I
view myself ---- is evened out.
4 comments:
Thanks for being so open, Rachel. I'm glad you're moving your thoughts in the right direction. I used to think I was OCD, but as I read up on it, I know I'm nowhere near as obsessive as I could be. You're so right--most of our struggles are in our minds. And I'd say you are beautiful (you are!) but you don't want to hear that. Grin.
You're an amazing person and I'm so proud to know you, Rachel.
I am totally impressed with your openhearted approach to this. What a brave, brilliant and beautiful post!!
What honesty, Rachel. Until this post, I wasn't aware you struggled so in OCD. Proud of you for getting healthy this past year and being able to recognize that need. You *are* a lovely person. :)
So much of our flaws are mental just because we constantly push ourselves to "be" better. To "do" better. In my case, my focus/hobby/passion is writing and the little "tweaks" I am constantly making to my work. It can be exhausting, yet I don't ever seem to let myself off the hook! What we don't realize is all God asks is honesty and an open heart coming to Him. When we accept that, life is much more beautiful. <3
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