In the
words of Kermit the Frog, Hi-Ho! In the intro to this series, I explained that it’s time to get up close and personal. And if
Kermit thinks it’s not easy being green, he has no idea how not easy it was
being an overweight teenage girl or young woman in the United States circa the
1990s and early 2000s. (And I suspect it hasn’t gotten any easier in the
decade-plus that’s passed since then.)
So in
today’s post, I’ll continue laying the groundwork that will support the
heartfelt posts to come later—the ones about how the human body really works, and why calorie counting,
fat gram slashing, and eating less and moving more are a one-way ticket to a
black hole of frustration just waiting to suck you and your best intentions
right in and never let you out. (Okay, to be honest, watching calories,
exercising more, and all that jazz aren’t completely useless, but they’re not the end-all be-all they’ve been cracked up
to be. More on that when we get into the science. For now, I’m still spilling
my guts.)
Okay,
here we go. Lemme just open up this vein and we’ll get started…
I am a
diet and exercise veteran. Watching calories, being an exercise junkie, the
cabbage soup diet, Power Bars and marathon training—you name it, I’ve done it.
I’ve been around the block a few times; it’s not my first rodeo; been there,
done that, and all the other phrases that boil down to, I ain’t new to this.
I came
to study nutrition because after years of following advice that was supposed to
get me results did not deliver those
results, I finally stopped and questioned why.
So let’s see what those early years entailed.
Like I
said in the intro, I was a chubby kid. My
parents owned an ice cream & candy store, and boy, did I
help myself to the inventory. Couple that with me being a sedentary bookworm
and it’s no surprise that I was a pudgy—but happy—kid.
(By the way, how come when “the experts” talk about the link between overweight
and excessive TV watching, they conveniently ignore the people who spend hours
upon hours reading or studying? Unless I’m mistaken, sitting is sitting, so I
don’t think we can necessarily correlate weight gain with people’s television
habits. Talk about a serious moral judgment. [My hobby is more highbrow than
yours! We both sit for hours on end, but your
sitting causes obesity, while mine causes
higher S.A.T. scores!] But I digress…We’ll come back to the morality issue in
the future, because it’s a biggie.)
Then came this thing called puberty. I became a young lady, and I became more
concerned with how I looked in the eyes of the young gentlemen. I also became much more concerned with how I looked in
my own eyes. Chalk it up to my own
personal preference, or to being steeped in the modern Western beauty aesthetic,
but wherever my ideas of “pretty” and “thin” came from, one thing was crystal
clear: I didn’t fit either category.
So I
did what any intelligent person would do: I started eating a little differently
and doing a little more exercise. The key word here is “little.” And as could
be expected, not much changed. So let’s fast forward to high school and
college. I kicked things into high gear at this point, because if it’s no fun
being a chubby girl at 13 or 14 in our society, it is orders of magnitude less
so at 18 or 21.
Before
I get into the diet and exercise aspect of my failed attempt to remake my
younger self, I want to share why it
was so important to me to change the way I looked. But before I do that, let me say that I firmly believe
self-esteem and self-worth should not
and are not tied to body size or
shape. Plenty of larger folks feel fantastic in their own skin, love the heck
out of life, and live it to the max. And God bless ‘em. (Please put that in a
bottle so I can buy some.) However, when I was younger, I didn’t have the emotional wherewithal to
set aside my feelings about the shape of my body or the physical force of
Earth’s gravity upon it (which is what weight actually is), and have those not
dictate the level of enjoyment I did (or, more accurately, did not) get out of life. So while I
absolutely believe weight shouldn’t dictate someone’s self-esteem, for millions
of people, that’s exactly what it
does. (Hey, millions of people believe joining the Marines is extremely
freaking hardcore; doesn’t mean they’re gonna run out and do it.)
So
that being said, we can proceed by understanding that, for better or worse (mostly worse), I did let my body size rule my mind.
Fast forward to
high school. Tired of never having a date, damn near nauseated by what I saw in
the mirror, and terrified that I would never, ever feel “pretty,” I took up
jogging. I would say “running,” but my 12 to 15-minute miles were really more
of a trot. My speed and endurance increased pretty quickly, and I knew I was
becoming healthier. What did not happen,
however, were any changes in my shape. I wasn't weighing myself at the time,
but my clothes didn't fit any differently and I didn't see any changes in my
appearance.
Mmm…rabbit food!
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I got my diet
in line, too—or, at least, in line with what my misguided teenage girl mind thought was the surefire way to lose
weight: swapping out the “killers” (red meat, butter, cheese, eggs, etc.) for
skim milk, cold breakfast cereal, skinless white meat chicken, pasta, bagels,
and just about anything low-fat or fat-free you can imagine.
My running regimen continued. I was working so hard to lose weight -- harder than anyone I knew. Most of my friends seemed to be those genetically gifted freaks we all know and love to hate -- the people who don't exercise at all, eat “all the wrong things,” and yet look fantastic. I was putting forth more effort than I ever had, and I just could not wrap my head around why I wasn’t losing a single ounce. Call me a glutton for punishment; I kept on running. And I kept basing my diet on low and no-fat carbohydrates. Isn't that the definition of insanity -- doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results? If that's true, I was downright certifiable.
My running regimen continued. I was working so hard to lose weight -- harder than anyone I knew. Most of my friends seemed to be those genetically gifted freaks we all know and love to hate -- the people who don't exercise at all, eat “all the wrong things,” and yet look fantastic. I was putting forth more effort than I ever had, and I just could not wrap my head around why I wasn’t losing a single ounce. Call me a glutton for punishment; I kept on running. And I kept basing my diet on low and no-fat carbohydrates. Isn't that the definition of insanity -- doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results? If that's true, I was downright certifiable.
Damn you.
Damn you a thousand times over.
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Things
weren’t much different in college:
hours and hours spent exercising,
and turning dietary deprivation into an art form. And the results were exactly
the same—namely, no results. All that
effort for nothing. I was a little bit older, but not much about the world
seemed different. To me, thin still equaled beautiful, and I was far from thin.
I was
quite the accomplished little dork, band geek, go-getter. I was a
straight-A student, in the jazz band, editor of the literary magazine, had a
work-study job…the whole nine yards. But you know what? None of that mattered.
None of it mattered because the one thing I wanted—the only thing I wanted—being “thin”—eluded me. And it eluded me
despite incredible amounts of exercise and a low-fat diet. And it came so easily to my friends, most of whom
wouldn’t know a barbell if it landed on their chest and pinned them to the
ground, and who’d sooner cut their feet off altogether than put a pair of
running shoes on them and go hit the pavement.
I came to the
natural conclusion that I simply wasn't working hard enough. After all, if I was working hard enough, I would have
seen results, right? So I did what any sensible person would do: I spent more time on the treadmill, more time on the bike, and ate less and
less. Looking back, it’s a wonder I had enough energy to get through long days
of classes, a campus job, band rehearsals, some semblance of a social life, and then add in exercise on top of
that. I can only chalk it up to youth.
More effort, more deprivation, and still no results. Clearly, something was just plain wrong with me. There was no way that someone could be working as hard as I was and still not make any progress. I knew I was healthy. I knew I was fit. What I was not, was “thin.” This longing for something I thought I would never have came to define my adolescence and poison my 20’s.
More effort, more deprivation, and still no results. Clearly, something was just plain wrong with me. There was no way that someone could be working as hard as I was and still not make any progress. I knew I was healthy. I knew I was fit. What I was not, was “thin.” This longing for something I thought I would never have came to define my adolescence and poison my 20’s.
It made me bitter and angry toward some of my best friends. Bitter toward the people for whom it came effortlessly. And, of course, it made me bitter and hateful toward myself. So what does a person who hates herself do? Yep, you guessed it: punish herself.
A veritable feast, at the time.
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There
was a time many years ago when I was unemployed and living with my parents.
Being unemployed, I had little else to do but apply for jobs and work out. So I
did work out. A lot. Over three hours
a day, in fact. I went to the gym in the morning and again at night. And I ate
a low-fat diet. Whole wheat toast with I Can’t Believe it’s Not Butter Light. Honey
Bunches of Oats with Almonds cereal with skim milk or, when I was feeling wild,
2%. Fat-free yogurt. Low-fat cheese. Rice cakes. Granola bars. You know the
drill.
And the
weight didn’t budge. All that dietary fat avoidance, all that exercise, and nothing. Zip. Zilch. I continued to exercise and “eat right,” and yet, I
was still carrying so much more body fat than the people around me—people who
barely exercised, and lived on steady diets of fast food and heavy drinking. I
was at my wit’s end. (Can you blame me, really? When you follow the advice that all the “experts” repeat over and over,
in every source you see and hear, and you don’t
see the expected results, it’s logical to assume you are not following the advice hard enough, or well enough,
right? It’s logical to assume you are
to blame, rather than stopping to question whether there might be something
wrong with all that “expert advice.” Remember this idea. It’s gonna play
big in upcoming posts.)
So I
ruined myself. Absolutely ruined myself. Self-esteem-wise, none of my
accomplishments mattered. Not the 4.0, not the writing awards, not anything.
People who know me “in real life” know that my not-so-secret dream is to be a novelist. But for years, I couldn’t write. How could I write when all I
could think of when I sat down in front of a computer (or old-school paper notebook!) was how wide
the span of my thighs was when I sat down in the chair? (True story. Yes, it’s
pathetic, and yes, it’s sad. But yes, I actually did that to myself. My young woman’s
mind was that far off the deep end. And I suspect someone out there—maybe a lot
of someones—know just what I’m talking about. To those people, I offer {{hugs}}.) And instead of just getting
over it and writing, I would grab someone else’s
novel and go read for a while because jumping into someone else’s fictional
world distracted me from my feelings of worthlessness. Same goes for TV and
movies. Better to escape into fantasy than deal with my own reality. I’d be
embarrassed to admit how much TV I watched in those years rather than doing any writing.
Let’s just say I could probably recite a couple of Quantum Leap and JAG
episodes word for word.
This is a very, very dark
place to be.
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Aaaaanyway,
I was so used to feeling bad that feeling bad felt good. It was my
comfort zone. I knew what to do with those feelings. And when I would have one
of those rare days when I felt good, I liked it, and I enjoyed those happier
feelings, but I was kind of unnerved at the same time. Uncomfortable. Because I
didn’t know what to do with those
feelings. It was like, “Who are you and what have you done with Amy?”
I
recently read a quote…don’t remember where it came from, but I’m pretty sure it
was Robb Wolf on Twitter. He said
something like, “The
difference between a groove, a rut, and the grave is depth and duration.”
Whoa. Powerful stuff. I was in that
rut for so long that I liked it. It
was my home. It was what I was used to. And when I had a good day, I was out of
my element. My mind was so accustomed to the rut that it didn’t know how to
adjust to the new pattern, above and
outside of the rut. So, invariably, I would fall right back into it, and
usually breathe a sigh of relief when I did. Whew. This, I can deal
with. Here, I know where I am.
Sad,
huh? And it’s even more sad to me now, because I imagine there are a few people
out there who are reading this and nodding their heads, because they know exactly what I’m talking about.
City
of Pittsburgh Marathon, 2001.
Notice
how pudgy and inflamed I look.
Thanks for that,
tons of
running and carb-loading!
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I
think part of the reason I felt like such a failure is because I was one. Let me explain. I wasn’t a
failure at life. I wasn’t a failure at being a good daughter, a good friend, a
good student, or a good employee. But I had failed to accomplish the only thing
that meant anything to me (in my
misguided mind at the time). I did
eat less and move more. I exercised like crazy. I crossed the finish line of
the Pittsburgh Marathon, for cryin’ out loud. I wasn’t afraid of a hard
workout. I drank diet soda. I baked frozen potatoes instead of frying. I was
such a virtuous little calorie counter and exerciser, and yet, I was still losing
the weight loss game big time.
My poor
self-image became a prison. I'll never know if I would have had a more
enjoyable social life in my teens and twenties because my self-consciousness
and nonexistent self-esteem prevented me from even trying. I spent so many
nights alone, wondering why it seemed so
easy for other people, why I couldn't have the one thing I wanted most.
But
THEN…
The lightbulb moment.
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Then I
did finally stop and wonder about
that “expert advice.” Somewhere deep in the recesses of my broken mind, it
occurred to me that for all those years, two and two hadn’t added up to four. Eating
less and moving more had gotten me approximately nowhere, and continuing to do
more of the same would keep me there indefinitely.
Being
that I’m now a nutritionist helping others get out of that rut, it’s safe to
say I’ve gotten out of that nowhere place. Like I explained in the previous post, I still have bad days. (And I think
a few here and there are normal. We’re only human.) But they’re not
debilitating like they were way back when. Now, I recognize them for what they
are: the products of wacky hormones, poor dietary choices, insufficient sleep,
or going too long without people and activities that bring me joy. And they’re
just that: bad days. They’re not the arbiter of my worth as a human being or my
deservingness of love.
So the
big question now is, how did I get to
this place? How did I claw my way out of the hole?
I’ve
got one or two more posts to share with you about that and then we’re going to jump
into the science. Because that’s what this is all about: sharing the knowledge
with you. Because when I tell you that this former dietary fat-fearing “cardio
queen” now regularly enjoys bacon, egg yolks, coconut oil, heavy cream, and red meat, what
underlies that is an understanding of basic human physiology. (And by the time
we’re done, you’ll understand why I get so furious at those ridiculous 100-calorie packs of cookies, and get even more furious when I see recipes in Diabetes Forecast magazine that call for
raisins, whole wheat flour, and apple juice. *Sigh.*)
Until next time...
Remember:
Amy Berger, M.S., NTP, is not a physician and Tuit Nutrition, LLC, is not a
medical practice. The information contained herein and the services provided
are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any medical condition.
Thanks for sharing. Things can be no different on the guy side of the equation.
ReplyDeleteNext time.
J.