Sunday, July 31, 2016

I need your help.




I am an evolving human being filled with emotion, energy and experience. I am a growing collection of good, bad, light, dark, strength and weakness. I am grateful for the time I spend in my relationships resulting in rich development and continual learning. 

Because of LOVE (for you and myself) I am reaching out to share and ask for your help. 




"Share and ask". Verbs that can be terrifying and world-changing. Both require action. Both require humility. 

Okay... deep breath... 

Share. I don't mind sharing. Especially when I know that by doing so, it may help someone who may experience something similar. God knows I have benefited many times over from dear people taking a small moment to relate with me. And then again, sometimes not. It's up to us what we give and take. 
This subject I am going to tackle has been a source of real emotional pain that I have wrestled with for decades. Thank you for spending time reviewing what I have tried to put down in words. And thank you for considering my invitation to help me.

If you know me, you know what I physically look like. If you don't, I have provided two pictures at different times in my life over the last 10 years. There's a difference.  

So, that girl you are looking at... That's me, Colleen. There were moments of happiness and sadness involved with both of those images you see. I don't look at one as "better" than the other, but I show these pictures so you may have a better understanding of what I can offer, and possibly how you might help.  

I have been, am currently, and hopefully will continue to be, active all of my life. However, when I was about 10 years old my body ballooned, and my journey of being physically overweight began. A lot of things were happening. My parents divorced, puberty approached a bit early for me, and I developed an unhealthy, emotional relationship with food. Basically, I would deal with any emotional confusion or pain by isolating and numbing said experience with food. I would also use food to celebrate, congratulate and reward myself. I was a baby, and didn't understand the orchestra I would lead for the next 20 years or so. 

I lost 100 lbs with diet and exercise over the course of about 18-24 months in my late twenties. Like I mentioned before, I am SO thankful for my relationships. I was fortunate to have the perfect storm of friendships at that particular time in my life. I was finally in an emotional "place" to challenge myself and everything I believed in. I credit a lot of the success I experienced to the priceless friendships I formed. But, it was me that did the work, my feet that hit the pavement, my body that swam the laps, my elbows that jabbed through the emotional and physical pain, and my mind that disciplined and dedicated myself daily. 

How did it happen? It seems that life comes in pairs; ups and downs, ying and yang. And, the time the beach photo was taken was really no different. This success in weight loss came directly after I had been stripped of everything that I took almost a full decade to earn. I unearthed an ugly truth: I didn't know myself. I defined who I was by external things. Success I had achieved in business, positions I held in my church, accomplishments I had accrued.  All of this and more I used as evidence to convince myself and the world of my worth. That is how I defined Colleen. And when I lost it all... I lost myself. It was a frail, raw, uncomfortable place.

But, fate it seems has something to teach from the most unlikely of teachers. True is the phrase "when you loose your life, you find it". What did I find? Well, I found myself associating with people I would have never associated with before. I discovered myself opening up in ways I hadn't before. Beliefs and thinking that I was indoctrinated with since my birth, I confronted. As my life crashed around me, I sensed it was okay to question everything, since everything was fucked anyway. And I finally accepted the "perfect" life I had accomplished was not "perfect", and accepted failure. I met new people, read new books, and tried new things. I slowly identified humility in myself, and from there.... well, I grew.

The weight has stayed off for years because of the fundamental shift I created in my daily reality. But, I have not been able to progress. I am still overweight, and I am quite literally stuck. I attributed my earlier victories to "the perfect storm of friendships at that particular time in my life". And, like I explained "It was a frail, raw, uncomfortable place". As I observe my life today, I can tearfully say I am back there again. The people I am surrounded by, the daily interactions I engage in, and my recent relationships have unearthed another, ugly truth about Colleen. I abuse food and am emotionally and chemically addicted to it.

I do NOT like to think of food addiction as a chemical addiction, but believe me - it is. When I hear "chemical addiction", I immediately think of hard drugs like cocaine, heroin or meth. The personal experiences I have had with drugs and drug addicts has been HELL. Working with this demographic for the last year and a half has exposed the gross underbelly of addiction. And the mere thought of lumping me together with that group of people has caused me severe pain.

On a chemical level - food addiction and drug addiction can be considered very similar, especially when you factor in the reasons a person "uses".   

Here's basically how it works: Our bodies chemically digest food. It all starts with our saliva and chewing. By doing this, enzymes break down the foods we put in our mouth into teeny, tiny molecules our miracle bodies can use - and a whole bunch that it really can't. So there is the "chemical" correlation.  But, I still want to deny that I have a chemical addiction... Until I learned about what defines addiction. One definition is this: "Addiction is reflected in an individual pathologically pursuing reward and/or relief by substance use and other behaviors. Addiction is characterized by inability to consistently abstain, impairment in behavioral control, craving, diminished recognition of significant problems with one's behaviors and interpersonal relationships, and a dysfunctional emotional response." I still denied it. How could food be a drug? How could my behaviors be compared to a drug addict? But, after learning about the neurobiology of addiction and how the human brain processes chemicals in reward centers of the brain, I couldn't ignore that I have a problem.
And it is a real problem. It is the problem that is damning me up and tearing me down. 

So, here I am. I know what I am capable of, and I am strong. A tangled, life-long addiction like this one is tricky, to say the least. And I need help with knowing where to go for recovery. I have started with making an appointment with a counselor. I am filled with anxiety, because I work in this profession. I honestly am looking to ground myself with this raw revelation and am searching for solid support. 

2 comments:

  1. My dear girl, I am very impressed with your self-awareness and the brutal honesty you display. I've had the same addiction since I was a child and only recently have I started to address it in myself. I wish you strength and courage as you fight this battle. Love you!

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  2. Thank you, Jo. I appreciate you sharing this with me.

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