Mother Love

motherhood + home + family

WHEN HEALTHY ISN’T, PART TWO

April 25, 2014

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I have to say thank you again. All of your responses to part one were so overwhelming and encouraging, and it helped tremendously to calm my fears about being misunderstood or being judged or being alone with this battle. Once I pushed the publish button and walked away from the computer, all I wanted to do was run back and delete it away. It felt really vulnerable and really scary…but like I said, it just felt like something I had to do. Thank you for caring and for being an encouragement!
‘
‘As I said in part one, one of the ways I was affected by my exercise and eating habits was losing my period for over four years. After I had seen a doctor and received results back that showed no real issues or problems that would affect my cycle, I felt like I was back at square one with no answers. I was forced to face the thought of possibly not being able to have babies, and it was hard for me to think of that. My dream was to be a wife to a good man and a mother to his children…that’s what I wanted to do with the rest of my life. Since I was in a relationship with the man I knew I wanted to be with forever, the idea of not being able to have his babies was devastating! I know many of you deal with infertility and can understand these thoughts and feelings so well…my heart breaks for you.
‘
‘I shared all of this with Ben after I had my doctor visit, because I felt it was important for him to know. If we got married and I wasn’t able to get pregnant, this would affect him just as much as me. He was so gracious and kind to me, and I never felt his feelings or love waver even when faced with this possibility. We prayed often that God would heal me, that He would set things right in my body. And I would wait anxiously each month to see that things were healing and that my body was normal again. But months and months passed with nothing changing.

Six months after we started dating, we got engaged, and suddenly the whole idea of starting a family was so real. It was happening! I was at the point where I really did want some answers, but also knew that to pursue anything medically would be extensive and consuming. I didn’t feel like it was something I could concentrate on during the months before our wedding…there was too many others things to think about! We decided to get married, settle in, and then form a plan.

So we did. We got married and had a great honeymoon and moved into our home together and it was wonderful. But there was always this little niggle of sadness in the corner of my mind. It had been so long since my body was normal, and I think a part of me just felt like it was hopeless. After a few weeks of married life, we started talking and praying more about seeing a doctor/specialist about my cycle. It was so unappealing to me to start on that road…it just seemed so overwhelming and tiring. But I know that many times that is the way to go for medical answers and health, and I was ok with that if that was the direction we were supposed to go. We checked into a few different options, but nothing really seemed to be right.

So I started praying, really praying, that the Lord would show me what I can do…that He would show me what I needed to be well again. I asked Him to show me the truth, and He did. It was the last thing I wanted to hear…the last thing I wanted to do. But He had been preparing me, so gently, so surely, to know the truth and to let the truth set me free.

A few days after I had began to pray in earnest asking God to show me what the problem was in my body, I was doing more research online and came across information that clicked…it connected with my spirit so strongly that I couldn’t ignore it or deny it. It was so direct and so strong that I knew immediately it was my answer from God. I found that there is a condition called hypothalamic amenorrhea, which is essentially when your body shuts down it’s ability to conceive because it believes that it is not strong or healthy enough to support another life besides the one it is already supporting in yourself. I’m no medical expert and don’t have a proper biological explanation, but it’s basically this:: by not giving your body enough energy to function properly, it will shut down your menstruation in order to conserve energy and life. This condition can be reversed and healed most times, although there are instances of women in their twenties or thirties who do actually go into menopause because of extreme dieting, over exercising, and low body weight.

I didn’t receive any type of official diagnosis from a doctor in this…but the Physician of Heaven showed me. He opened my heart, He opened my eyes. Finally…I saw it. Finally, truth was beginning to set me free.

That moment of truth was the start of a most incredible, painful, and beautiful journey.

I knew what I had to do…and that meant walking straight into the thing I feared the most. I had to gain weight. I had to give my body the energy it needed, and allow it to heal and become strong again. I had to walk out from under the stronghold that had held me in for so long. I had to somehow ignore the voices that called me “fat fat fat” and listen to the Voice that speaks kindly. I had to give up the comfort of my control that I had held onto for years.

I cannot tell you how many tears I cried those first few days and weeks. I cried because of sorrow and regret of what I done to myself and to my body. I cried because I was losing something that meant so much to me. I cried because I wanted to be beautiful and it felt like I was losing everything that made me so. I cried because I wasn’t sure I was strong enough to go through it. I cried because I saw the numbers on the scale go up and up and up. I cried because I felt like I was living in the middle of my worst nightmare. But I also cried because I caught glimpses of freedom…glimpses of a way so much better and higher than what I had known. I cried because I caught glimpses of a definition of beautiful that had nothing to do with my body or the way I looked.

I gained weight really quickly once I started trying to, which was the strangest mental shift after years of trying to lose weight! And two weeks after I actively started eating to gain, I was twenty pounds heavier. Twenty pounds. The majority of this weight was primarily due to water weight, which I explain this way:: in the same way that an ankle will swell up when you sprain it to give protection to the joint/muscle as it heals, the same thing happens when anything else in your body is trying to repair itself. The body has to get energy to stay alive, and if it’s not getting it from the food and nutrients that you eat (or don’t eat), then it has to take it from somewhere else. If you under-eat long enough, it will eventually start to take energy from internal fat and organs. Clearly this isn’t a good thing, and will eventually cause serious health problems and/or death if a person doesn’t start to take care of themselves.

It was good I was gaining weight, because that’s what I needed…but it felt awful. Horrible. Like my worst nightmare. There were many times that I was ready to give up…to ignore what I knew…to run back to where I could be in control and have what I wanted. There were many times where I hardly cared about the prison I was being delivered from, hardly cared about the promised life and freedom on the other side…all I wanted was my skinny back. There were so many times where my husband would hold me, cry with me, and fight for me in prayer and in truth.

The first two weeks of gaining weight were the hardest for me, physically. Like as in actually hard physically…my entire body ached all over and I barely had enough energy to do minimal household chores. I felt like a train with five-hundred cars had run over me, and then backed up and did it again. It was the strangest thing to be feeling so awful and sick just from eating more food, but it was also a clear sign that all those nutrients were going to work and doing some good things inside. After a few weeks, the exhaustion and nausea started to disappear and only kept improving as time went on.

Because of all the immediate water retention, I looked extremely puffy and swollen. This puffiness took months to dissipate, and seeing this every day was probably one of the hardest things to deal with mentally. Everything got swollen. I remember one day trying to find one thing that was still normal on me, one thing I wouldn’t have to feel embarrassed about…and decided that my wrists were still ok. But then the next day they too were puffed and swollen. It was like everything I had was being taken from me. I knew it needed to. I knew I needed to die to find life, but it was really, really hard. I was so embarrassed because I was never going to be that bride who lets herself go and no longer tries to be attractive or care for herself after she gets married. And here I was…two months as a new bride and twenty pounds heavier. I knew what it looked like…and I hated it. I knew it was what I had to do…but I hated it all the same.

This might all sound just shallow and carnal, and I guess you could call it that. But it was a very real thing for me…it was an identity issue. I had wrapped up my value, worth, and beauty in my body, and I had to lose that in order to find my real identity. I put it this way:: I didn’t gain weight because I didn’t care; I gained weight because I cared too much.

BUT…three weeks after this journey began, I was healed. After four years of waiting, I GOT MY PERIOD. Gaining that weight was the hardest thing I’ve ever done, but I did it…and to this day, my cycle is normal and healthy. For a lot of women who deal with this same issue, it can often take months or years before their cycle returns normally. God did it for me in three weeks. I am so grateful for that…for His touch and miracle healing for me. It gave me courage to believe in what He had showed me and to continue the fight against the lies.

Physical healing didn’t make the battle go away or even make it any easier. I still fight with the feelings of inadequacy and “fat.” I still fight against the impossible standard of perfection that our world gives us as women, a standard that I had taken up as my own. I still fight with being ok with the body and build I’ve been created with, and I still fight with being tempted to diet myself back down to where I was. Some days I want to do anything, ANYTHING, to feel skinny again…some days I can hear that familiar prison calling my name and I’m tempted to go running back to where I could use my iron will and control to get me what I want. But those days are the days when the grace of the Lord covers me. In so many moments of weakness, I feel that gentle voice of truth and kindness remind me of who I am. And He restores peace. Sometimes He does this several times a day or several times an hour…but He does it.

He’s helping me win.

I share all of this to perhaps encourage anyone else who is facing the same fight to take hope. I share all of this because I know there are other girls and women out there who face this same thing, and I want them to know that there is something better, that there is a different way that is free and full of joy. There is a way that doesn’t make you a slave to the mirror or the scale or the size of your clothes, or how much you worked out or how little you ate. Jesus really does offer a way that is better than the prison of an eating disorder. It doesn’t always feel like that…but it is the Truth.

And that Truth is what sets us free.

Thank you, friends, for reading my story, and for caring. You’ve inspired me to greater courage. If you know of anyone in your life who faces this same battle, the best thing you can do is pray for them. Pray that the eyes of their heart will be opened to understanding and to Truth, and that the true definition of beautiful will make its way from head to heart.

WHEN HEALTHY ISN’T

April 17, 2014

IMG_2419 This is the one that has been staring me down for months. I’ve sat down to write this one multiple times since I’ve started this blog, only to end up closing out the screen after staring at it for a long time with the words refusing to come. I would start a sentence, determined to get it out…and backspace it away. I’ve resolved to write it, only to resolve to never write it the very next day. This one scares me.But for some reason, I know I have to do it. I know it won’t let me go until it’s written.

I’ve talked a lot about beauty and comparison and the battles that we as women feel and face in those aspects, so maybe this will come as no surprise to anyone. I can’t decide if I want it to be shocking or if I want it to be totally unsurprising. In any case, I’m doing this because I feel I need to and because I hope that it will perhaps save someone else from going down the same path to the same prison I’ve been set free from.

I’m not trying to be melodramatic here, truly. It’s just the way I feel and it’s just the battle I’ve faced.

I have struggled with feeling beautiful for years. I have struggled, battled, and agonized over my body and how I look for what feels like forever…I can hardly remember what it felt like to not be self-conscious…to not always be judging myself or comparing myself to others.

I didn’t always struggle with that in such a vivid way. As a teenager, I was pretty ok with who I was and the way I looked, and I don’t remember ever really being overly consciously aware of my body or how I looked, besides just the average bad-hair-days and don’t-know-what-to-wear-days and it’d-be-cool-to-look-like-her-days. But it was just average, nothing debilitating to my sense of worth. I was healthy, strong, had a good appetite, and was fairly active with the normal school sports and activities.

When I was eighteen, I spent a year working at an orphanage in Ghana, Africa. It was an amazing experience, and I will never regret my time there. During that year, I gained some weight, due mostly to stress, poor diet, and little physical activity.  I wasn’t that aware of the weight gain or even that overly concerned once I did start noticing my clothes fitting tighter or people making comments about me being “oh-bell-oh,” which is the native word for “fat.” There was one day that I did step on the scale and was a little shocked at the number staring back at me, and did make a conscious effort to eat better and especially drink more water. I did lose some weight before I came home, but I was still noticeably heavier then I was when I had left one year earlier.

I cared about it, but it was just average. I wasn’t interested in dieting or extreme exercising or anything like that…I just ate normally and stayed moderately active and that was my healthy. I may have a lost a few pounds during the next few months after I got home, but I don’t remember even stepping on the scale. It just wasn’t a big deal.

During the next year, things started shifting inside of me regarding my body and looks. Life and it’s circumstances led me to believe that I had to be a certain way and reach a certain ideal in order to be found beautiful or attractive. I started to be even more careful about how I ate and started running and exercising more consistently, although at this point I would say it was still on a mostly healthy scale. I wasn’t seriously restricting my diet or over-exercising, and I did lose a little but nothing extreme. At this point, I would have been at a perfectly healthy weight for my height, and even towards the low end of the healthy weight spectrum.

But even though I was back to my normal size and weight, it wasn’t enough. I wasn’t perfect enough. During the next few years, I pushed myself into a self-imposed prison of exercise, weight loss, and diet restriction. I became obsessed with health and food and eating right, and eventually went vegetarian and then vegan for a few months. I exercised a lot…multiple times a day…as much as possible really. And while it was (and is) something I enjoy doing, it became something I had to do. I lost a lot of weight during this period, and looking back now, I see how sad I looked. I had very little energy, even though I forced myself to exercise as much as I could. At one point, I weighed just a little over a hundred pounds, which for my five-foot-eight-inches height is far too low. I remember thinking how incredible it would be to actually get down to a hundred pounds…maybe then I could be good enough.

I don’t know how much I was actually eating at this point, because I was never a rigid calorie counter. I mostly just kept my meals as small as possible. I didn’t usually skip meals, but would never-ever-ever eat enough to feel full or satisfied. Hunger was like my friend. It meant I was getting smaller.

What everyone else would call an eating disorder, I just called healthy. In my mind, eating very little and exercising as much as possible was the healthiest thing to do, even though I definitely wasn’t feeling healthy. I honestly didn’t think I had a problem, and even if someone had approached me with the idea that it was a problem, I know I would have just laughed and said that I was healthy, not starving myself. But I was, and my body wasn’t getting nearly enough of what it needed to function properly.

Besides losing my energy and mental freedom and the ability to live without being controlled by food or exercise, I also lost my period for over four years. Menstruation isn’t essential to life (another words, you won’t die from not menstruating), so it’s a process that the body can and will shut down when it doesn’t have enough energy to fully function. My cycle shut down even before I got really thin, which just goes to show that every body is different and even if someone doesn’t look unhealthy, if you’re not getting enough energy for your own personal needs, than things can get messed up inside.

I wasn’t overly concerned about not getting a period at first…it was actually pretty nice for a while! But eventually I came to see that having a regular period is a natural and healthy thing for a woman and that clearly something wasn’t working properly.

It wasn’t until I starting dating Ben and began to look seriously at getting married and starting a family one day that I felt that I needed some answers. I did visit a doctor at one point, who didn’t show too much concern actually. She didn’t feel that not having a period was that detrimental to my overall health, but also said that as far as fertility and the ability to have children goes, it was almost impossible to say how this would affect me in that aspect. Since then, I’ve learned that this is definitely something to be concerned about, and I feel that this doctor wasn’t very informed about the risks associated with not menstruating. She did mention that I was underweight, but also didn’t make a big deal of this either.

The mention of infertility scared me though. I wanted to be a mom one day, to experience the magic of carrying a child in my belly. I wanted my body to function properly and be healthy.

But I still wasn’t ready. I wasn’t ready to face myself or believe that all of this was because of my “healthy” diet and exercise. I didn’t even think I was perfect enough as it was…how could I even think about letting go of what I did have in order to be healthy again. I remember being at a service where a speaker asked the crowd to think of the thing they feared the most, and in all honesty the thing I feared more than anything was gaining weight. It was like this giant thing that I dared not entertain, something that could never-ever-ever happen to me. My thinness, my body, had become my identity. It was where I received my validation and my feeling of beauty. Because I was thin, than I could be beautiful. Than I could be good enough. If I dared to lose my thinness, the world would then see that I was fake, that I truly wasn’t beautiful enough.

It was an identity crisis. I didn’t know who I was outside of the way that I looked. The scale and the numbers defined me…I let them tell me if I was good enough or beautiful enough.

It took losing all that I had worked so hard for in order for me to see this…to see that I was receiving beauty from the wrong place. It took months of battling lies and accusations so intense that some days I could hear nothing else to see that there is more to life and more to beauty than being or looking perfect. It took God reaching down into my place of fear for me to see that He wanted me to walk in freedom.

This is my journey.
This has been my place of battle.
This has been where I have lost ground, but more importantly, where I am winning ground.

I share this with you because I know I am not alone in these experiences. I know that I am not alone in feeling the pressures from our world that tell us as women what we need to be, what we have to be in order to inhabit this thing called beauty. My idea of beauty is being redeemed, and it is glorious and full of freedom and full of life.

Read more: WHEN HEALTHY ISN’T, PART TWO
 


What about you: do you feel these pressures as a woman to fit into a certain standard? 

I’d love to hear your thoughts!

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HI THERE!

I’m Alicia + follower of Jesus + wife to my incredibly wonderful husband + mama to my girls, Ayla, Aveline, Fleurie and Adella. I love motherhood + family + finding joy in the little things. Thanks for stopping by!

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