Monday, 23 June 2014

Just in the nick of time

Yesterday a neighbour called over to our house
He was carrying a little bottle
He explained that it was holy water that he and his wife had brought back from Lourdes
'It's for you' he said
I was a bit taken a back
Why would I need holy water?
I am not in the slightest bit religious
Then I remembered that this was the same man that sent me a mass card when I was in hospital and had the whole parish praying for me
Now it made sense
He is offering me holy water because I am 'sick'
I thanked him politely
'How are you?' he asked
This is the discreet way of asking me do I still starve myself
'I'm really well, thank you' I replied
'You know you really have improved a lot' he said
Translation: You have a bit of meat on your bones now
I smiled and pretended that I didn't want to strangle him
That's me being a smart arse
It was actually really thoughtful of him to drop the holy water off
Off he went and I went inside to douse myself in the stuff (Me being a smart arse again)

So I've been getting a lot of these sort of comments recently

'You look really well'

'You look so healthy'

'Have you been away? You have a great colour'

'You have a glow about you'

Your eyes look brighter'

'You look an awful lot better'

'You seem to be in such better form'

And so on and so on

Rewind 6 months and if someone had said anything like this to me I would have smiled on the outside
But really I wanted to land my fist in their forehead
Any comment about my appearance and I just couldn't handle it
Any positive comment about my improved appearance and I immediately thought that I had gained weight
I couldn't stand the comments
And I couldn't stand myself

I remember when I was in hospital last year
One of the nurses who had seen me a few years ago in a previous admission and an incredibly low weight, commented that I looked really well
I just wanted to sign myself out there and then
If I looked well I wasn't sick
If I wasn't sick why was I in hospital?
There must be nothing wrong with me
I am an anorectic imposter
That is the way my thinking went

But as I have been getting more and more of these comments
I realise that people genuinely want to give a compliment
They want to acknowledge that I am in a better place
I can see now that back then, even though my weight had improved, my thinking hadn't
I didn't look anorexic
But I felt it
And so all these people presuming that because I looked better, I must be better, drove me bananas

The difference this time is that something in my head has shifted
My thinking
My beliefs
My thoughts
My perception of myself
8 months ago the slightest little thing triggered me
I couldn't look at a skinny girl without vowing never to eat again
I could read someone's weight without immediately comparing it to my own
Thinking about recovery made me feel guilty
I felt like if I recovered then I was a failed anorectic

But something, and I'm not entirely sure what it is, has changed
I feel different and I can't quite put my finger on what it is
It has been a gradual process
And it's an ongoing process
I am right at the start of my recovery
My body is still in the process of recovery
It will probably take months or years to recover
It could take a life time for my mind to recover
If it recovers at all

I know a huge change has been my mood
Praise the Lord my mood has lifted
I was in such a dark dark place for the longest time
A place where death seems like a good option
Where sleep is the only escape
Where nothing matters
Where you can't find anything to give a fuck about
Where time stands still
Where you spend your days marching from the kitchen to the bathroom
Where life seems like a prison sentence
You know what I'm talking about

Soon after I started taking Prozac things began to change
It was like the fog in my mind cleared and I could see for the first time in a long time
The monkey on my back let go
But it wasn't just the Prozac
I started to see my friends again
I went to meetings
I started to write and write and write
I felt like I had woken up from a deep slumber
Like I was alive again

It's like now I am seeing life through a different lens
A more positive lens
Now I see the good before I see the bad
I see the light instead of the dark
And I can't begin to tell you what a relief that is

I really believed that I was a lost cause
That there was no hope for people like me
But I am here to tell you that there is
There is always hope
Always
My old sponsor used to say to me

'Don't quit 5 minutes before the miracle'

I used to wonder what the heck she was talking about
Now I know
Now I understand

My miracle is happening
And just in the nick of time

13 comments:

  1. Tears here...
    Cause you're such an inspiration, but also, cause it's true I think, what you say.... Just as that moment arrivés when you think it can't get any worse and the world just can't get any darker, a light appears. That may be a neighbour with a thoughtfull gift, a person who you hadn't seen for long and having one of those great talks, you know, or just someone like you are to me, that blogs something that breaks trough the darkness....

    love,

    A

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    Replies
    1. Thank you fro your kind words A
      It is so true
      Just when you think you can't take any more
      Something truly amazing happens
      It makes everything a little bit more bearable

      Hope you're doing ok x

      Delete
  2. People tend to be awkward around anything related to mental issues, I've noticed. My family is terrible at giving me praise. "So you're started doing yoga? Good, maybe it will help with, you know, your problems, in that other area (no the body bit, I mean."

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    Replies
    1. It's true
      I think people find it hard to talk about
      They kind of talk around the issue
      I guess they are afraid of saying the wrong thing or upsetting us x

      Delete
  3. 'Don't quit 5 minutes before the miracle'
    Wonderful saying and I couldn't agree more.

    This is the exciting time now Ruby, you can start to think about who you are and what you want to do. What makes you tick.
    Think about you without the labels doctors apply.

    C x

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    Replies
    1. I love it too C

      Yes it is an exciting time
      I feel like anything is possible right now
      And I'm looking forward to where this could take me
      Sans labels of course

      Thanks C so much x

      Delete
  4. Proud of you love. It will take time, but never doubt that you'll break through.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I learned not to tell other eating disorder sufferers that they looked better. To me though, I really don't notice weight gain much. What I always notice (and people said this to me too) when they start looking more alive.
    I had this friend in treatment. It was this big argument with her about going inpatient (she was in partial) and getting a feeding tube. After she did, I went to visit her, and she looked so different. It wasn't weight. It was that she looked alive. She didn't look exhausted. She looked happy.
    I honestly think that's a lot of what people notice. I think they notice hope and happiness. Even in the fairly short time I've been reading your blog, I can see how you've changed. Having hope is an amazing thing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes I learned that too
      And I think you are so right
      More than the weight, it's an energy off the person
      It's a light in their eyes
      The way that they hold themselves
      Maybe that's what people are seeing in me
      Thank you for this x

      Delete
  6. generally, i think people say that because there really is a glow to someone in recovery even if they do not gain weight. i know tonnes of girls on instagram i'd describe as glowing and healthy after recovery - nourished, and that is not a synonym for fat. it is genuinely the only word i can think of. people can't tell when an underweight person gains a lot of weight. because they still fit in small sizes. even if they do gain, it is all for the better in some's perspective.
    it is like saying that a pregnant woman has a glow to her - because she is carrying a life. it is from her face. her energy. her smiles. people noticed a change in how i acted when i was in recovery versus hardcore ED. i feel like i am a part of this world. i do not feel like waiting for the night to end and going to sleep anymore. i think a lot of ED girls don't realise how their moods and attitudes and their personality and emotions change. when a girl i knew had gotten into recovery (and she did gain weight - she is still thin in my opinion - used to be around a BMI of 17.4) - she looked radiant afterwards whilst in other times, she used to look grey. another thing is that girl's emotions changed - she used to get very angry very quickly, but now, her moods are more stabilised. people are more likely to notice that than they are to notice weight gain. in fact, i am sure that they are constantly wondering when you are going to put on weight instead because to them, you do not weigh much.
    in the normal people world, some of the most normal-sized people are considered to be thin.
    i comment as i read by the way.
    "If I looked well I wasn't sick" not true. nobody really understands how you think unless they are in the same mindset. to normal people, this is just either a comment they made out of awkwardness or they say it in relative to how you looked like before. as in you are looking well from what you were like before, but you're still in pretty bad shape (a lot of nurses would feel awkward saying that. they think people want to hear that they are better because they think that they are anxious about the fact that they are not going to get any better). that's my two cents there.
    "I realise that people genuinely want to give a compliment
    They want to acknowledge that I am in a better place" they do. and they also do not know how to keep you in that place, so that's why they compliment. they want to acknowledge it and they want to preserve it. more often than not, people don't understand how a person's mind can twist these kind of things.
    "I felt like if I recovered then I was a failed anorectic" that's the thing. why is it so important for someone to be labelled as an anorectic? the disease is a horrible thing. it kills you whilst manipulating you. i think of EDs like abusive spouses. they whisper sweet nothings into your ear, and then mentally destroys you. but you cannot leave them. sometimes, you want to but you cannot, because they are your lovers. you shared good memories with them. it seems like in certain moments, they are the only thing there. i think that analogy works very well. it is like living with an abusive spouse that nobody but you can see or hear; they are imaginary but they are real. very real, and they sleep with you at night and stay with you all the time. there is no rest from them. and there is no happiness with them. but there is an idea that you will be miserable without it.

    (continue on other comment)

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  7. i won't lie. i'm not a picture perfect example of recovery. i am trying to lose weight despite being at a healthy weight BUT i do not want to be underweight. in fact, the thought of being underweight makes me feel like i have failed people just as much as being "fat" (non-existent, i'm at a healthy weight and i know this) feels like a failure to ED. it makes me sick to think about being an underweight girl when i have younger sisters that can just feed off it or take as example. somehow, things change when you put other people in the equation. somehow, when someone can be effected from what you're doing to yourself, then things change.
    'Don't quit 5 minutes before the miracle' <--i love this.

    -Sam Lupin
    PS. i love you too Ruby xxxx

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  8. So happy for you and wishing all the best Ruby!

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Thank you for leaving some love x