So, if you read back on my diaries from high school, you will see me close with exactly the same thing in every entry.
"..and if I could only be thin, then I could get a boyfriend, and then I would be happy."
Now I'm thin, and, much to my dismay...all of my problems are not solved. Who knew? There has been no magic *poof* followed directly by the appearance of a bowl of golden cherries. Nothing like that whatsoever, as a matter of fact.
Hmmm...
In fact, I had to spend $150 at VS yesterday on new bras because my boobs are deflating.
Livin' the dream, y'all. Livin' the dream.
The experience, strength, hope, musing, contemplation, consideration, reflection, occasional meditation, rumination, deliberation, and more often the impetuous rambling of an addict named Lizzie.
Thursday, January 18, 2007
Sunday, January 14, 2007
Heartache

It is amazing to me that no matter how well other areas of my life are going, a little heartache can throw everything off-kilter.
You see, there's something I want. Someone, to be more specific. Someone I have hurt. Someone I love.
My friend Rebecca recently put things into perspective for me. I have been bashing myself for my recent behavior concerning men in general, Committing to a year without a relationship, and beating myself up for not wanting to adhere to that commitment when it comes to a certain individual. Rebecca reminded me that it is human nature to want to be with someone. And my favorite poet, Hafiz, said that, "We are people who need love, because Love is the soul's life." *sigh*
I have blogged before about the relationship I have been for the last several months. That relationship ended a few weeks ago. Lots of things have happened over the last few weeks. Lots and lots. Most importantly, I have experienced a dramatic and intense period of spiritual growth rivaled only by the death of my Jimmy six years ago. On a side-note, these periods of spiritual growth are quite commonplace in recovery, usually directly preceded by an intensely painful experience. They are life-changing.
Anyway, back to my heartache...
So...how 'bout when you fall head-over-heels for someone within days of meeting them, go against your commitment not to get into a commitment, six weeks into the relationship you tell your mother that you have met the man you are going to marry, and then when hit the point where things get a little serious you decide that you are not deserving of the kind of love that you are being offered and begin to push that person away. As a result...the relationship falls apart.
Now, after the aforementioned spiritual awakening, you see clearly for the first time, and you have hurt the aforementioned person in such a way that it seems that it will be impossible for him to give you a second chance. And therein lies my dilemma.
I have told him that I want to be with him. I have told him that I can do things right this time. I have told him that I want to be the kind of girlfriend that I know I am capable of being. He just doesn't want to hear it.
And because of this, because of me, my heart aches. Badly.
Tuesday, January 09, 2007
More thoughts on weight loss surgery...
Everybody has demons. Everybody has issues. Everyone has been scarred and broken and bruised emotionally if not physically. Everyone has addictive tendencies of one kind or another. People are a mess. They just are. Thing is, usually, people's private, intimate, secret skeletons are just that.Private. Intimate. Secret.
We don't have that option. We wear our addiction on our sleeves. It is hard to be 305lbs and hide the fact that you have food issues. You can be a closet gambler, a closet drinker, a closet drugger, a closet abuser, a closet self-loather, a closet sex-addict...but it's tough to be a closet overeater.
Everybody knows. Everybody sees. Everywhere you go.
And then...when we've had enough...when we can't go on living like that anymore...we make one of the healthiest decisions we've ever made. We go to any lengths to salvage our lives. To get ourselves back. To mend our broken spirits and stop our destructive behavior.
Problem is, we can't hide that either. It is not normal to lose 160lbs in a year. It is not natural to have a scar from your sternum to your belly button. And when we go through these radical, drastic, almost unbelievable physical changes, our personal, private, intimate issues seem to be more obvious than ever.
I think it is because it is socially acceptable to comment on weight loss rather than weight gain. Nobody ever said to me, "Wow! you must have gained at least fifty pounds since the last time I saw you!" I have never heard, "My, your ass is awfully fat. Do you have trouble fitting in chairs?", or, "Boy oh boy, you are so big that you look like you could drop dead of a heart attack at any moment...how is your health?" (OK, so maybe my mother has come close to some of these comments, but with her food issues, she can be less than human at times.)
It is socially acceptable for our dramatic weight loss to be the topic of conversation at a party or a family gathering. People feel comfortable asking us personal questions about the process, about our diet and exercise, about our heath, about our clothing size.
I don't know about you, but I felt like a freak before I lost the weight. Now, on some days, I feel like a freak-show...on display for the world to gawk at.
But, you know what? Fuck 'em. All of 'em. I can crawl through the window of my house when I lock myself out today. I can walk the beach for hours. I can turn heads everywhere I go. I am not a slave to food anymore. I am not obsessed with it. Controlled by it. In love with it. I am free.
And sooner or later, people will get over it. They'll go about their daily business. They won't point or gawk or comment anymore. I'll finally be free to just be me. No more, no less. And my issues, my skeletons, my new ones, will be safely tucked away in my own closet...where they belong.
And I'll probably be thinking, "What is wrong with these people? don't they realize that I have climbed mountains? Slayed dragons? Defeated demons? I wish someone would say something."
Alone...
Ok, so I have come to the conclusion that I am utterly incapable of being alone.This is a new revelation for me, as I was never "that girl" who bounced from one relationship to the next. I was usually the single one. As a matter of fact, this past Sunday, I was asked out on a date for the very first time in my life. But I digress...
I decided to make the commitment to myself to abstain from dating for a year. I know that the healthy course of action here is for me to spend this year working my steps, gaining a better understanding of my higher power, revealing who I am; assets and liabilities, and, just overall making an effort to remove my head from my ass where intimacy is concerned.
It is not going well.
I broke off the relationship that I was in, but have not successfully stayed away from him. I am obsessed with my ex-fiance' and his new stupid girlfriend (ok, so she may not ACTUALLY be stupid, but for all intent and purposes...). I have at least five poor souls in my pocket at any given time because, as it turns out, being a hot little ticket affords me this sick-ass luxury.
*sigh*
And here's the bitch of it all....I promise you that I am NOT "THAT GIRL"! I swear to you! At least I never was.
I am educated, intelligent, fiscally responsible (much of the time), financially independent, searching, intuitive and deep.....what the fuck am I thinking? Since when have I reduced myself to existing as that woman who thinks that she cannot be without a man? Since when is my self-worth directly proportionate to the number of men who want to date me? What the fuck happened to me? How did I get here????
Alas, all I can do is continue to attempt to make healthy decisions. I suppose when the pain gets great enough...
In the mean time, I will continue focusing on my writing, my recovery, helping other addicts, my work, learning how to play my new purple guitar (which is super-rad, by the way), taking care of my babies (my animals) and enjoying life. (When I'm not obsessing about one fucking man or another.)
I am REALLY disappointed in myself. Really. I am. But, I'll keep coming back.
Monday, January 01, 2007
Serious weight loss complications...
I knew going into this thing that there would be a risk of serious complications. I was informed that this surgery could result in medical complications ranging from blockages to vitamin deficiencies to death. I knew that there were risks. Serious risks. I knew that everything would change. They told me that things would be different, better. I prepared myself for a "new life". I wasn't confused about the fact that I was entering uncharted territory. What I didn't know... What I couldn't know... What I never prepared for... Was the fact that I feel as if I am walking around in someone else's body. On a different planet, even. I didn't know that one potential complication of this surgery was that it would not only change my body, mind and spirit, but that it would change the way the girl in the check-out lane acknowledged me. I didn't know that a stranger's glance and even mannerisms would be different. That men look at me in a manner strange to me, speak to me in a way I've never been spoken to. That women would place me in a new category, and treat me in a different way. That when children who I don't even know approached me, they would have a different look in their eyes, say things I'm not used to hearing. How I'm treated by my friends, by my family, by people who knew me then and people who are just meeting me now....that none of it would be the same. None of it would be comfortable. None of it would feel safe. I didn't know what it feels like to be objectified. To be treated as a thing rather than as a human being. To be treated as a potential sex partner instead of a friend. To be looked at instead of looked around or through. I had no idea that there would be expectations. That people would expect me to say or do or act a certain way just because of what I look like on the outside. Somehow, I thought that for the first time in my life, I could be freed from the bondage of always being aware of what I "look like". I could not have been more wrong. A serious complication of my weight loss surgery has been that one minute I was morbidly obese and the next minute I am what society deems as "attractive". And everything has changed. You see, society doesn't treat the former the same as the latter. And what it seems that everyone is missing...the part that they just don't get...is that it's just me in here. And it always was.
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