Thursday, December 02, 2010

let yourself run on empty.

A few months ago, one of my favourite bloggers – schmutzie, decided that she was going to embrace sobriety and give up alcohol. I thought she was brave for sharing that so publicly. I thought she was brave for giving up her crutch.

I use food as a crutch. And booze. Buying stuff too.

Yet, I am not grotesquely overweight. I do not get drunk on a regular basis. I do not have a bunch of extra money burning a hole in my pocket. Each one of these behaviours in a silo is not so bad. Mix them together and they become the perfect numbing cocktail. When I asked my therapist what she thought about my crutches, she asked me (isn’t that what a good therapist always does?) what I was trying to avoid feeling? Filling myself with food, getting a little buzz from a glass of wine and the feeling of excitement in purchasing something are all just ways to keep myself from feeling something. I think I knew that, but didn’t want to address it. Pass the cookies and yeah, of course I’ll take a top up on my vino while I peruse the Christmas flyers.

What would be so bad about letting myself feel empty, or at the very least, not full? Was drinking a glass or two of wine every night really helping me relax? Did buying myself a new pair of pinking sheers (they were on sale) give me a rush that lasted longer than the time it takes to walk to my car? I justified all of it with the thinking that “my life is damn hard – I’m just doing what I need to do to get through the day”. But that inner monologue is shortsighted. That type of thinking is keeping me stuck in a cycle where I continue repeating the same behaviours and beating myself up for never achieving a different result.

I decided to give up my crutches and let myself limp. Last week I joined Weight Watchers. I stopped drinking. I put my credit card away. I’m still here to talk about it. And I’ve shed a few pounds.

It turns out that it isn’t so bad letting yourself feel sad about the things in your life that bum you out. Going to bed with a full tummy doesn’t help you sleep better. Buying a self-help book that I probably won’t read (but sure is pretty) doesn’t make me a better person. Crying is good for you. Feeling hungry reminds you that you are alive. Denying yourself a quick fix by spending money is empowering.

Being empty provides clarity.

6 comments:

  1. I'm still finding that line for myself. Congrats on joining the WW! It helped me shed NEARLY 15 pounds since I joined 6 months ago.

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  2. Thanks Amber - I'm finding that being accountable for what I put in my mouth really makes me think differently about what I'm eating.

    Inner voice: "Do you really want to write down that you ate 6 cookies?"

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  3. Anonymous11:55 a.m.

    I'm still working on "You don't have to do everything perfectly; if you make a little slip, you don't have to make it into a big slip..."

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  4. Anonymous11:59 a.m.

    This is some deep shit Kat :-)

    JM

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  5. Anonymous12:53 p.m.

    This post has spoken to me in unimaginable ways. Thank you.:-) I'm going to re-read it again now.

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  6. Wow, do we have a lot in common. I call it "filling the hole"..gotta fill the hole with something, anything...

    I too am taking some steps, some harder than others. I lost 6 lbs this *week*... not too hard when you don't eat and drink yourself into submission for a few days.

    I cut up my CC a few months ago, but still find work arounds here and there. That in itself has to stop. It all has to stop.

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