"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our
deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is
our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask
ourselves, ‘Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented,
fabulous'? Actually, who are you not to be?.... When we let
our light shine, we unconsciously give other people
permission to do the same." – Nelson Mandela
Our attitude about recovery determines how much we learn
about our eating disorder and ourselves. Moving beyond the fear
and terror of abandoning our sole security blanket liberates our
souls to seek greater meaning in our lives. Challenging my
eating disorder and the blurred reflection of a life it created
allowed me to discover the true joys possible in existence.
When I admitted myself to Center for Change, I considered my
recovery as an opportunity to reassess my life. As I tackled my
eating-disordered thoughts and behavior, I realized I had lived a
hollow life – a life of death. Never exploring my own self-concept
left me feeling internally void. As I began my journey
of self-discovery, I found my spirit. Leaving today, I realize the
potential of life – to live in harmony and inner serenity. I
embrace the future and the beauty of the world within which I
humbly claim membership.
Eating disordered or not, I would encourage every person to
take time removed from their everyday routine to reevaluate
their existence. It is essential that we pause frequently
throughout our lives to take a critical look at our values, our
priorities, and our commitments and consider whether we are
moving in a direction that promises fulfillment or disaster.
Those who try to go at it alone end up isolated, alienated, and
prey to all forms of madness. I drank in my own misery,
wallowed in my loneliness, and in my despair. When the
madness overwhelmed me, I realized I was on a journey of self-destruction.
I learned a simple life lesson from my slow suicide:
from here on, stay in communication with each other, search for
consensus, and reflect on our common experience.
I lived for others, consumed, attempting to meet self-imposed
unrealistic goals and aspirations. I set my course for failure, and
struggled to self-destruct. The segregation of the virtues along
gender lines – men as rational, aggressive, warlike; women as
emotional, intuitive, receptive, nurturing – is integral to the
ways in which our personalities and egos are formed, informed,
and misinformed by our culture. I think women need to
explore the spiritual dimensions of aggression and men need to
practice the discipline of yielding, care-taking, and wondering. I
mastered the female virtues, and only recently stretched my self-concept
to include aggressiveness and strength. By stretching
and risking, I gained self-empowerment.
Many of my self-imposed hurdles came from my distorted
beliefs and credos. Instead of living a life of faith, I built
roadblocks by rigid rules and impossible personal expectations.
I never felt satisfied with my own successes, because my
successes did not result in increased faith. Beliefs are ideas in
the head, cognitive expressions, maps of the world, our best
conceptualizations of how things are, our credos. Faith is in the
gut and the heart; it is trust-in-action, a disposition to behave as
if something were true or valuable. Beliefs and faith may
coincide, but in modern society what we profess to believe has
very little to do with the way we conduct our lives.
My self-importance, superiority, arrogance, and habit of judging
others formed walls that kept me safe. I am not "like" them, I
told myself. I made myself the exception, I'm better, more
cultured, work harder, have better morals. I dream of conquest,
winning, vindictive triumph, being number one. Then, I
destroyed myself by trying to live up to the superhuman person
I believed I was.
The most certain mark of spirited men or women is their
willingness to view the world through the lens of their own
brokenness and to wrestle with their own tendency toward
selfishness, greed, cruelty, arrogance, apathy, and hate. Our
nearly inexhaustible capacity for self-deception may make us
closest to the truth when we remain acutely aware of our
ignorance. A large part of overcoming disordered eating and
negative body image is making a conscious effort to change
destructive habits. Sin is the drying up of the sap of life, and
eating disorders dehydrate the richness from our own. When
we are unjust and uncaring, we become cold, hard, brittle, and
dusty. Life is capricious and unfair because we make it a game
without the opportunity to win. We can only win if we allow
ourselves to. Faith in yourself and your spirit re-hydrates and
rekindles the body. The unique human capacity we call spirit
can also be called freedom. Freedom to explore your own
potential.
It is the capacity to transcend our biological, psychological,
social, and political conditioning. To live by the sign of the
spirit is to give up the illusion that life, the world, other people,
and the self can ultimately be known, predicted, controlled,
pigeonholed, and rendered secure. Tap Te Ching said, "Without
going outside, you may know the whole world. Without
looking through the window, you may see the ways of heaven."
We create our own reality, and we must see the beauty in the
everyday.
I continue to question myself, seek greater inner peace,
challenge my own recovery, and become internally and
externally congruent. "Be patient toward all that is unresolved
in your heart and try to love the questions themselves like
locked rooms and like books that are written in a foreign
tongue. Do not seek the answers.... Live the questions now," as
Rainer Maria Rilke warns in her Letters to a Young Poet. I invite
you to join me in my continuing journey of self-discovery. My
life becomes increasingly satisfying, filling the previous void, as I
discover my own identity. My recovery is more all
encompassing than simply healing my starved body, but feeds
my soul as I travel towards greater inner serenity. My life holds
value and virtue, instead of pain and self-degradation. I
embrace the future, and I invite you to join me.
Embracing the future requires that we embrace our eating
disorder. We must take ownership of what self-destructive
behaviors and addictions create our misery. People develop
eating disorders as a coping mechanism to cope with the
pressures from the external world. The toxic reality of the
eating disorder as a coping mechanism is that it poisons the
inside, and fails to confront the plagued mind-set of the victim.
In fact, it not only poisons the body, the soul, and the spirit, but
most importantly, also consumes the mind. The poisoned mind
only multiplies the problem, creating mental as well as physical
illness. Eating disorders are the manifestation of frustration and
inner turmoil. Instead of problem solving, though, they are
problem creating. Disordered eating is rarely about the food,
but instead about emotions, feelings, control, and or feelings of
inadequacy.
If we are self-aware and recognize our true emotions, feelings,
and control issues, we no longer need to turn to the food for
salvation. An old Ethiopian proverb warns us, that "She who
conceals her disease cannot expect to overcome it." Today, I
respect my weaknesses and my struggles, because I believe they
allow me to be human, to hurt, and to self-correct. Today, I can
face adversity and persevere. As I learn what truly matters in
my own life, I see the beauty in the everyday. For the first time,
I seek friendship instead of isolation. And I hope that other
women can experience the same rebirth that I have been blessed
with. Yet I recognize that each woman must discover her own
will to live before she can discover true beauty and inner
serenity. R. S Jones once said, "I've come to think that for the
person with an eating disorder, hunger becomes a tangible
feeling within the body that matches the inchoate longings of
the soul that have no other means of expression. I need, I want,
I hunger." I challenge each person to explore which patchwork
pieces create his or her own quilt of life, and to mend the torn
and tattered fabric. To discover what they truly need, want, and
hunger for. Strengthen your spirit, have faith in yourself, and
challenge your own beliefs. Enrich your lives and seek the
beauty in the days we are blessed with. Sarah Ban Breathnach
exclaimed, "Blessed am I to live in such a beautiful temple." And
blessed are those who recognize, explore, and examine their
own temple.