I think that’s what I’m doing–trying to move forward with my gearshift lever stuck solidly in neutral. And being the genius I am, I can finally see that it isn’t working. (I say that with love and a chuckle, not with self-loathing or criticism.) Now what do I do with this faulty transmission? I hold on to old behaviors (“Just a small bag of gummy whatevers” and “it’s ok to keep that in the house because I won’t eat it all right now” and “I can skip working out today cuz I’ll do it tomorrow”) and expect to make great strides in weight loss and fitness gains. No great strides will be made until my transmission is firmly in drive. I would describe that as actually doing the things I need to do to move forward–keeping the junk out of the house, working out whether I feel like it or not, realizing that what I’m doing is the definition of insanity, which is described as doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. Not gonna happen. Now how do I make some forward progress? It doesn’t have to be a huge leap forward, just a small forward motion, kind of like when I was learning to ride a motorcycle. A little throttle, and ease up on the clutch, until I found the sweet spot where I could control the speed and keep the bike upright and moving even through impossibly tight turns. You can’t always just fly full-throttle up the road. Sometimes there needs to be a bit of course-correction. And so far, my only course-correction was to slam on the brakes and revert to old behaviors. A little finesse would be good here. A light touch, surveying the road ahead for signs of trouble, and using some course-correction if needed. (Can you tell the biker in me can’t wait to get the bike out this spring? I’m itching to feel the wind in my h…ok, I wanted to say “hair” here, but let’s be honest, it’ll always be “wind in my helmet.” ;-P ) I’m taking the basic riding course again in spring. Why? Because I’m not satisfied with my progress, and I know I can’t improve if I don’t do something different. Why is it so hard to realize that doing something different is exactly what I need for other areas of my life too??
It’s doppelganger week on facebook and I’ve been reminded of my total lack of visual recall. Basically, I don’t accurately remember what anything or anyone looks like. Instead, I remember vaguely and the result is that every time I say, “Doesn’t he look like so-and-so?!”, the answer is, “No, not at all.”
That applies to myself. Beyond dark brown hair and greenish eyes, I’m not so good at describing myself.
I’m not sure that this face recognition software is any better than my warped memory. It’s first choice was Jared Padalecki! Young, sort of pretty in that mannish way – oh dear, this isn’t doing much for my self-image, though I suppose he could be my son. 
I tried three different photos and the only celebs to come up on all three were Lucy Lawless (me, Xena? I don’t think so)
and the inevitable Liza Minelli. 
On reflection, the program picked up on my small features, jawline, eyes that squint when I smile and the bangs/fringe (depending on your nationality).
Who I really wanted to show up was Isabella Rossellini. In middle age, of course. I guess she doesn’t look like me at all – see – told you I didn’t know what I looked like except in a vague way. She does have dark hair.
And how does this relate to body sanity?
Well, I’m sitting here weighing 23 pounds less than I did two years ago but I don’t see it. I want to see it. I turn 49 in less than three months and by the time I’m 50 I want to know what I look like. I want to see the difference between me at 170 and me at 140 – not just in photos but in the mirror – clothed, naked, face, body – every which way.
I can’t fix the visual memory problem – that’s part of me. But I do want to sort out the body image thing.
Edit!
I found a photo from two Christmases ago and stitched it together with one from this Christmas.
OK – I see the difference. How come I don’t see it in the mirror? And how come I don’t see the changes as I gain weight?
I truly hope to one day have the answers to those questions.
I’ve discovered the benefit of keeping online documents: it’s easy to see what you’ve done right and wrong over a period of time.
The week that I had the most encouraging weight loss:
- I ate porridge with blueberries and yoghurt for breakfast every day.
- I ate filling cauliflower and potato soup for lunch every day.
- I ate lots of different dinners but all with a bit of protein and carb and a lot of vegetables.
- I drank only one glass of wine all week. I think there might be something in that.
- I drank a bottle of mineral water while watching tv at night.
- I snacked on Ryvita and cream cheese and fruit.
- I had my usual 5-6 cups of tea and coffee – with and without caffeine.
- I stuck to cappuccinos when I was out and counted for a full fat one rather than resent a skinny one.
The surprising thing is that I didn’t get to the gym that week – which worries me a little because I don’t want to lose muscle rather than fat. However, I did walk on four days. Still – I’d rather have a lower weight loss and a better shape.
Besides daily wine, what else wasn’t on the menu?
- butter – but I had olive oil every day.
- sugar in any vast quantity
- cheese – though I did have super parmesan reggiano on a couple of meals. I don’t count light Philly as “cheese”. It’s something else altogether – a non-offensive dry cracker prevention system maybe.
- crackers other than Ryvita. To quote Donna, “I can one and two point myself to death with crackers.”
OK, I’m sitting here thinking, do I want to lose weight more than I want to drink wine? It’s a serious question. For the next week I’m going to say Yes.
Do I want to exercise more than I want to hibernate? The honest answer is No – but- I want to lose weight more than I want to hibernate so I’ll go.
Do I want to be free from journalling and measuring more than I want to lose weight? Hmmmm – Yes – but for the next week I’ll sacrifice the freedom to grab to food and eat it for the freedom to zip up my jeans.
It’s all about choosing between freedoms.
I just read over the menu again and I’m happy to say that it’s all food that I’d eat even if I weren’t trying to lose weight. It’s all tasty and filling and colourful. So my challenge isn’t so much what but how much.
I’ve been thinking about this for days but Gracie’s post from yesterday has helped me get it into words.
In order to get weight off and keep it off, I need an element of enthusiasm for some aspect of the process but, over 30 years of dieting, something has happened to mine.
Basically I see enthusiasm as running along a continuum from Crippling Ennui to Dangerous Euphoria.
I’ll start with Euphoria – the degree of enthusiasm I fear the most.
It’s the dark side of enthusiasm which involves an addictive personality. It causes things in life to become the sole focus – taking up way more energy and time than they should. It can be work or love or dieting or exercise. In my experience it always leads to great failure and deep despair.
I sometimes crave the buzz and wish I could do a happy dance when I lose weight but I simply won’t let myself. I refuse to be motivated by the feelings that losing weight and exercising give me. When that’s my motivation, I end up cranky when life gets in the way of a diet plan or a run. And it doesn’t take long for me to realise that I can’t sustain the degree of commitment required to get the same hit of euphoria. The quest for euphoria is too exhausting and too short-term.
Euphoria is the unhealthy by-product of plain old Enthusiasm. I like enthusiasm when it’s attached to action – but it’s rare to find enthusiasm that isn’t all talk.
Hmmmm – even as I write this I find that my cynical self is saying, “No you don’t. You hate enthusiasm in all its guises.” OK, it’s true, I hate enthusiasm – but I do know that this a weakness on my part. I’m sometimes jealous of enthusiastic people – I covet their energy but my inner dialogue usually involves mutterances of the “just you wait” variety.
It’s this lack of love for enthusiasm that makes WW meetings hard to bear. I really don’t want to clap for the obese woman who lost 8 pounds in her first week. I’m not being petty and jealous; I just don’t want her to get her hopes up.
Hmmm again- I understand that, no matter what positive thing is happening in my life, I see a shadow lurking around the corner. In all honesty, life itself has taught me to think like that but, even so, it’s something I would do better without. Perhaps I should embrace enthusiasm a little more. Just a bit. Clap a little harder. Mutter a little less. Let me think about it.
Sorry- nope – not going to happen…..just thinking about that makes me feel earnest and that would be deadly. Sorry. No.
Now I’m going to skip to the other end where Boredom meets Ennui.
Ennui is the flip-side of Euphoria. If Euphoria is the dangerous daughter of Enthusiasm then Ennui is Boredom’s toxic son. It goes beyond a lack of desire to do something positive and lands at a lack of desire to do anything at all which, for me, is depression. I do everything in my power to avoid this extreme even if it means not losing weight while I get sorted. When I say I fear Euphoria, it’s because this is what it leads to.
Good old fashioned Boredom, however, is just the standard place where many of us find ourselves after a lifetime of dieting. We know the drill. We know what’s going to happen in weeks 1 and 2. We know how many weeks in the gym it’s going to take to feel fitter. We know which belt hole goes with which number on the scale. Boredom is only a very bad thing when the thought of it prevents us from doing what we need to do. I’m kind of there right now. I need to get past that, shake up my routine a little and just do what needs to be done because I know that putting one foot in front of the other will take me to where I want to be.
So where do I want to be? I’m going to call it Reality. This is the stage where I can do what I need to do and truly enjoy the small rewards of eating well and liking what I see in the mirror. It also involves accepting my flaws and celebrating my real self in the context of my whole life – not just a weight loss routine.
More introspection…… I’m the child of a man who loved us all deeply but couldn’t say it. He didn’t know how to frame the words, “I’m proud of you”, whether we’d achieved a little or a lot. I’m happy to report that the last words he ever said to me were out of pride and gratitude and I’m incredibly thankful that at the very end of his life he found a way to say it – out loud, in front of others.
However, the 48 years leading up to that moment involved some pretty hard work trying to get approval where none was forthcoming and that leaves its mark. At some point in my adult life I decided that I could no longer spend my days looking for affirmation. I don’t remember it happening, but I find myself, today, not nearly so motivated by what people might say about me if I accomplish something. I write because there are an awful lot of words that I need to express. I work because I’ve got something to offer. I have friendships with people who bounce back love and laughter and caring.
That doesn’t mean I reject positive comments. I like to be affirmed. No, I love to be affirmed. But I don’t let the possibility of a compliment be the reason for getting out of bed in the morning. Usually.
So that’s where I want to be: feet on the ground, success in small steps, encouragement without euphoria. I want to celebrate real success. When I’ve been at my chosen weight for a whole year – that’s when you’ll hear the celebrations. I might even allow myself a touch of euphoria. And a small happy dance. Then I’ll get on with year two.
I’m descended, on my father’s side, from a long line of cynics. I’m pretty sure that somewhere I could find a family plaque with the motto, “Don’t get your hopes up.”
It’s not that I can’t see that the glass is half-full. I see it – I can even say it. But I’m secretly looking for the crack that going to leak out all that life-giving water. Let’s call it cynical optimism.
I truly love the research from last year that said positive thinking was bad for people with low self-esteem. However, I also know that, despite the fact hat negative is funnier, I need to concentrate on the positive a little more – not because I believe in any wacky “law of attraction” (don’t get me started) but because I know that thinking positively about your achievable goals makes you more likely to achieve them.
In this case – I will never keep the weight off if I keep thinking that I’ll never keep the weight off. period.
So I’m going to get back to some good old fashioned positive thinking – and put away the “buts” for a while.
I’ve had a tough year. I will no doubt have another one. But that doesn’t mean that I can’t be a healthy weight and continue to cultivate a good relationship with food and my body. It just means that I need to learn some new skills and to put away some old behaviours.
The positive thinking comes in here. I CAN put away old behaviours. I CAN develop new skills.
More positive: I AM putting away old behaviours. I AM developing new skills. (Not so hard…..)
OK – in reality – this kind of talk only works for me when it’s true. The above is true in a straight forward way and I don’t need to argue it out with myself. It will never work for me if I don’t believe it or if it’s too vague.
“I deserve to be happy and successful” begs WAY too many questions and theological discussions. (I lifted that from a real website called more self esteem or something.)
“A quick row will lift my mood” works just fine and it’s a great substitute for “I hate the gym”.
So here’s to a new day with my kind of positive thinking.
Later…..
OH! Wait! I’ve just found the best article on that research. And, yes, it’s the best because I agree with her.
A mildly depressive personality is the flip side of some great blessings in life. I don’t want to stop being creative or visionary. Therefore, I have to put up with the fact that sometimes my mood will dip below “fed up” and into a place that I’d rather not be.
I’m also very very lucky that the dips rarely last more than a few days and I can wake up one morning feeling absolutely fine. Today I feel almost absolutely fine. Don’t know why and I don’t want to put too much energy into figuring it out. Generally, life is exactly as it was yesterday and the day before so I’ll accept the brighter day as a gift and get on with it.
The one thing I do want to talk about is weight and depression. Many people (ie doctors) feel that weight loss is a “normal” sign of depression. Well let me tell you (and them), sometimes it’s the opposite.
As soon as I start sleeping nine hours a night and finding that simply I must feel full all the time, I know it’s time to pay attention, pull back, draw in and take the pressure off – whatever that pressure is at the time.
There was a time when I’d have said that weight gain is a symptom of depression but now I realise that it’s a result of not paying attention when things are sliding. Usually, when I start feeling low, I don’t go near a scale or give a thought to what or how much I’m eating. The result is that I am thrown way off the healthy and sane path and right onto the crazyiness of the gaining and losing pendulum. hmmmmm.
Of course, depression is only one of many many life situations that have caused that in my life. So what’s going to be different this time, now that I refuse to get on the pendulum? I guess, no matter how I’m feeling, I’ve got to figure out how to get of the house, walk to do errands, eat to full but not crazy full. I may not be able to lose weight during a darker time but I can do everything in my power not to make weight gain a “symptom of depression”.
This is different. Thinking new thoughts is like trying on a style of clothes that you’ve seen in the shops but thought could never work for you. I’ve just tired on something and I think it fits.
I’ll walk around in it for a while and see how it goes.
PS/Edit
I realised I felt brighter even before I stepped on the scale and saw the loss. So maybe there’s a connection between water retention and depression?
Well.
It turns out that feeling a bit depressed is, in fact, the same as being a bit depressed.
What a bizarre day I had yesterday.
I spent all day with my brain in two places at once. Sane brain was thinking about all the things I could be doing to take care of myself in a positive way. Crazy brain was demanding that food be stuffed down in the largest quantities and at the fastest speed possible.
Two brains – and one certainly out-shouted the other.
But why? If I don’t ask that question and come up with a good answer, I will stumble into that kind of day again.
So why?
- It was the first anniversary of my dad’s death and I was alone all day. The people I needed most were, at absolutely no fault of their own, in time zones eight hours either side of me.
- In the bigger picture of life, I am living in the wrong place. Frustratingly, I love what I do here and I love so much about living here – but my heart is somewhere else and I need to figure out how to deal with that emotionally. Being able to live on two continents is a huge privilege. But the way it works in practice means that, no matter where I am, I’m missing someone or something significant. That gaping hole is perfect for filling with food.
So….the question isn’t really “Why?” but “What am I going to do about the gaping hole?”
Answer: Trust – Love – Pray – Move – Look outward rather than inward…..maybe I’m not in the place for that one.
But what I really want to do is make plans. I’m a person who hates the unresolved. I like solutions, answers – knowing where I’m going next. This is one time in my life where every solution raises more unresolved issues and that makes me stressed in the biggest possible way.
So I’ve established that life is not what I want it to be – but every time I start thinking like that, I have a chorus of positive voices in my head singing out the good things in my life. There are so many that I can’t see how I can feel low – that’s what makes me think that “feeling depressed” may include an element of “being depressed”.
OK – I’m going to leave it there. I’m ok. Really. I live with this “edge of reason” stuff all the time and I always get through it and come out feeling just fine, thanks.
For today I’m going to eat little, drink lots and get some stuff done around the house. There is nothing in life that isn’t made a little better by having a clean and orderly house. Laundry first.
Thanks for listening.
Oh – last thought: there is nothing in life that can’t be made a little worse by eating till you feel sick. Amen and out.
I made a couple yesterday – but I also made a couple of good decisions too.
Mistake: I knew I was going out so ate only a little breakfast, thinking that would afford me a relaxing lunch. But then the lunch place didn’t have any soup I loved the look of so I decided to try miso. Turns out its a cup of watered down soy sauce with two or three pieces of seaweed on the bottom – not the nourishment my body needed after walking around for 3 hours. Rather than get something else and go through the palaver of reading all the labels or making a bad choice, I decided to wait until I got home. MISTAKE
Of course, I ended up overcompensating for all those missed calories.
What I Know: My body needs three good meals and a couple of snacks in the day.
Good decision: I grabbed a bottle of Perrier to take to friends’ for dinner.
Mistake: I helped drink a bottle of red wine when I only wanted “a taste”. Yeah right. I would have been better off asking for once good sized glass and making it last the evening. Instead, I did that, “Just a little” thing so many times and I had two good sized glasses.
Mistake: I drank my Perrier out of my wine glass. I should have got another glass so that I could ignore the wine when I wanted. Instead, I drained the wine glass before I drank water. Not smart.
Good decision: I waited until dinner was served before I had any wine.
What I know: I like wine with a meal. I like wine without a meal. One of those situations requires more self-control than the other.
And some more about freedom.
My ultimate end goal of this blogging exercise is to not have to do it any more -not have to think about food, reflect on food, be so careful about my diet. I really do want the dual freedoms of a slim healthy body and a carefree eating style.
So far it’s not happening – but maybe someday. In the meantime, I’ll keep working it out in words.
Why does it take me so long to get to the point of actually going beyond good intentions to good practice?
Why does it take weeks to go from wanting to do the right thing to actually doing it?
That’s the same question but it baffles me so much that I wanted to ask it twice.
The word that keeps flashing in my brain is FREEDOM – a concept that comes up again and again for me in this battle to gain food/body sanity. When I get my thinking twisted around, I find myself looking for freedom in all the wrong places.
I can have the freedom to eat and drink whatever and whenever I want. This includes the freedom to sit around and do nothing whenever I want.
OR
I can have the freedom to feel comfortable in my own skin, the freedom to look good in clothes, the freedom to run up stairs and not collapse at the top.
So two sets of freedoms which each cost the other.
Each cost the other – I’d never thought of it like that before. I don’t expect to be able to smoke and have healthy lungs. I don’t expect to spend all my money and have it in the bank. Everything costs – good stuff and bad stuff in my life – it all costs something.
OK – So I what will food and body sanity cost me today? This week?
Today it will cost me being thoughtful while I’m shopping in the city. It will cost me the effort to say “small” and “skinny” when ordering a coffee. It will cost me reading some labels when I order lunch. It will cost me asking if we can eat somewhere with nutritional info – which costs me my delightful freedom of eating in my favourite Italian cafe.
OR I can eat in my favourite Italian cafe and commit to a long walk later this afternoon. Or it might cost me a short walk and water rather than a g&t before dinner and carrot sticks for a snack later on.
Freedom costs – but it doesn’t have to be all or nothing. I get that for now. I wonder how long it will be before I need to write about his again?
But in the meantime – I’m going shopping.
In life in general I love the idea of new beginnings, blank slates, amnesties, jubilee years – grace and forgiveness .
When I decide to give myself one of those in my food/body struggles, it’s hard not to think of it as a whole new beginning. Over on BCB I’ve re-invented myself a few times, changing my board name and starting from scratch.
But this time I’m going to prize the accumulated wisdom of this past year. I’m going to view the next phase as just that: one leg of a long journey.
I’ve made a new daily weight page to see how long it takes to get from where I am now to where I want to go. I’m not guessing how long that’s going to be – I’m just going to set out and accept that I’ll get there when I get there. I’ll keep track of my behaviour and my weight and notice the connections. In fact, I think I might go a bit Bridget Jonesish and put my weight and other pertinent information at the top of each post. Maybe not.
My first priority is to fight my natural inclination and to plan meals ahead for a couple of days.
Oh this is boring. I feel so incredibly uninspired. And yet. And yet there is a solid core of WILL inside me that won’t rest until I have kept that promise to myself. I will give myself a chance to be slim and fit for a whole year. I will do it.
I may not feel like going through the process of getting there. I may not feel like going through the process of staying there. But I will do it with no rush of enthusiasm because I know how important it is that I do it.
Self-talk. What blogging is really all about.
Apologies to anyone else reading this today.
But if you want to join me on this leg please step in and keep me company on this enthusiasm-free, wisdom and (hopefully) humour filled process. I’ll make you a weight page of your very own if you are craving a little public accountability.



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