Starting From Scratch – What Might You Lose To An Eating Disorder?

Rebirth

“The real measure of your wealth is how much you’d be worth if you lost all your money.” ~Unknown [not just money - but everything - EVERYthing.]

During the course of my ED, a lot of things I once had taken for granted were lost. Looking back, I can see how it stripped me of what made me myself – at first subtly, and then, ever faster as I spiralled out of control. Every thing I lost, was also another foot of rope I lost in the tug of war against ED taking full control of me.

One of the first things to go was my cognitive ability. I still struggle with this, but I have enough of it back to enjoy sudoku, to write blogs, and to generally cope day to day. Comparing myself now to how bright I used to be though, really hurts. My TL;DR rant today has been inspired by just another of my ‘brain drains’ – when I completely forget what I was saying, or doing, or what I was reading, etc. It’s an everyday thing for me now, and it’s frustrating.

I first started seeing the effects of starvation on my brain when I was in year 10 at school – so aged about 13 – 14. I’d come from a brilliant year 9 with top marks in everything, being a part of the gifted and talented club that our school created so as to enter us in all the competitions – which was the best experience. I loved the maths and engineering ones especially – so much fun. I’d become passionate about maths and science and also was a voracious bookworm, reading three smaller or two adult-sized novels a day as well as doing extra schoolwork when I could. I was also the happiest I’ve ever been during my school years – I had some really lovely friends and the kids at the school I was then at were accepting, kind, and friendly, despite many of them being rougher kids from tough backgrounds. School was a refuge from home.

Halfway into year 10, things started to lag a bit. Looking back, I see myself gradually withdrawing from people around me. My friends did their best to keep drawing me back out again – which I’m so grateful for – but I was withdrawing into my own self as well, and you can’t physically hunt for someone and pull them back out of themselves. To their credit, they never gave up and I was never alone even in the times I retreated to help the library cover stacks of books or other work rather than hang out with them. They simply drew up chairs and started covering books too.

At first I withdrew into my beloved books, too. Blocked the real world out. But slowly, books made less and less sense too. I had to go back and start again so many times because I’d realise I’d read a few chapters but had no idea what the book was even about. It was like it had literally been seen by my eyes, then marched out of my earholes without having actually passed through my brain.

School work became a lot harder. Of course, year 10 work IS harder – preparing us for advanced maths and science options in year 11, when our senior years began back then. And I needed to know it, because I planned on taking all the science and maths options that I could. But the easiest simplest things started not making much sense to me.

Year 11 algebra was pretty much beyond me, because I didn’t manage to comprehend year 10 trigonometry, so I didn’t have the basics. I got my good marks still, and got B’s average in most year 11 subjects with some A’s, but nothing was retained, by this stage I was simply parroting the information without understanding it very well.

One of my most frightening moments, the moment I look back on and see that academically and cognitively, I lost it, was the first maths 1 class in year 11. Our teacher required us to start the class by drawing a circle on our pages. Just a simple circle, nothing fancy. I sat there, blank. I could not get my head around a circle. She drew one on the board, and I still couldn’t get my head around a circle. Something so simple, and it just did not compute at all. That day, with the maths teacher frustrated at me and me frustrated at myself, shattered my confidence and it was all downhill from there.

I was dancing full time, but the school also required us to keep up with the ‘usual’ year 11 and 12 studies in about half the time, so we went to a local high school and had our own small classes that went long past normal school hours. I had also opted to take Physics by correspondence, because I am crazy. In those days, we rarely used computers, instead sending booklets and worksheets back and forth by mail.   The stress of studying in such little time, of trying to get my brain to work when it felt like heavy, sodden porridge, plus the dancing, the travelling, what was going on at home and the bullying… I don’t know how I survived it to be honest.

As year 11 turned into year 12, I became more and more unable to cope. It was a nightmare. I seriously do not know how I pulled out pretty average to okay marks, because I was not completing so much of the work, it was beyond me. I constantly stressed and fretted, had constant nightmares when I did sleep, usually falling asleep at my desk after 3am.

I did fairly okay on paper  in the academic side of Uni too, but have retained absolutely nothing. We might have been dancing full time still, but there were subjects like Kinesiology, Anatomy, Music, Dance in Education, Dance History, Alignment, and so on. Many of them were hard, most of them were beyond me.

Finally, I got to the point where, after constantly being dizzy and ditzy in classes, actually ending up with a stress fractured big toe from falling out of a pirouette when dizzy, collapsing, and constantly being ‘not quite there’ (dissociating, but I didn’t even know there was such a word at the time let alone what was happening) – I was politely kicked out of the dance performance strand, told to go see a counsellor ‘or something’, and given the entire university to choose from in order to fill in the credits I still needed to graduate. It was the worst time of my life so far – far trumping the bullying, the abuse, the rapes, being homeless – far far more painful.

Because ballet was ALL I had left. I’d lost my mind, I was unable to retreat into my beloved books, my family had rejected me as much as I rejected them, I had no real friends, I’d lost my innocence AGAIN to Wanker, and now, I lost something I had lived, slept, breathed now for most of my life – dancing.

I was done. That was the point I tipped over the edge from having not all that critically  serious an eating disorder even though it had affected my life so badly already – to full blown, deadly, life threatening, no-turning-back GONE to it.

Because I had nothing, nothing left to fight for.

But if I had thought that the losses stopped there, I was wrong.

Since then, I’ve lost pretty much everything I ever worked hard for. Lost my degree, because despite having only half a term’s work left to do, trying hard to keep completing it while inpatient, I ended up having to defer. The ten years to complete the course in were up in 2005. I know I can probably ask for special consideration, but the course is now so far removed from anything I could do with my life now, that it’s pointless. I’m still not cognitively well enough yet to study again anyway.

I lost my ability to volunteer. I had to eventually quit the positions that were too physically taxing, like the Red Cross cafe, the soup van, and the homeless centre kitchen. One of my supervisors later told me she had lied to me about being ‘obsessive compulsive about how her floors were mopped’  and that she actually loathed mopping them, simply because she couldn’t bear to see me doing them and would rather do them herself.  I also found myself having to leave the less physical positions because I couldn’t think well enough to help a cultural arts organisation create a library from their resources, nor could I continue in a mail room when I started doing silly things like writing addresses backwards or twice or in the wrong place, or simply forgetting what I was meant to do with the envelopes. Volunteering had been amazing for my self respect and self esteem, and I felt I’d let everyone down horribly, and was now just a complete sponge on society rather than contributing in some way, however small.

I lost my rights. For over ten years, I didn’t have the basic right to decide if I even wanted to live or die. I couldn’t turn down going to hospital – if I did, or I left, the police were sent to bring me back. My treatment order forbade me from leaving the state without permission. Once I stayed too long up the coast and they cut my money off in order to force me back home.

I lost my financial independence despite having done very well after running away from home without ever before really having access to money, or any money to have access to anyway. From there, I persevered until I had an income,  I taught myself to budget, paid all my bills religiously, even saved up some savings.  I’m still having harsh reminders of the financial situation – today failing my first ever credit check, because I’m still a public trustee client, and they don’t like that. I’ve never had debt, apart from my uni fees. I’ve never had a credit card. Never had an unpaid bill or fine.  Never defaulted on my rent or anything like that – and yet I’m a credit risk, despite being able to show in detail that I CAN pay them back for the phone I was trying to purchase, we had even budgeted for it – because I need a trustee and therefore I’m different and risky.

It was SO humiliating. It reminds me again that I’m only now looking for my first ever paid job, when many of my peers are in senior positions. I’ve never driven a car – not even once. If I want to buy something or have a legitimate expense needing to be covered, I have to submit my request and three different quotes to my trustee, who blathers about and then issues a yay or a nay, very often a “nay” and “you cannot afford this”.  They put just enough money for my groceries and Shalimar in my account weekly, so that I can be driven to the supermarket, helped to buy my food, and driven home to be helped to unpack it.

And I really, really appreciate that help, it just is hard to accept that you are only 34 and being helped by people who usually help the elderly and the severely disabled.  The home and community care team help me still with shopping, housework, and sometimes with transport. Thankfully I no longer need personal care – showering, dressing, medication etc. Without them, I wouldn’t have been able to stay at home, instead ending up most likely in a nursing home for the elderly.

In hospital I lost my dignity, needing to be toileted and bathed and dressed. My body was poked and prodded and stuck like a pin cushion. I had no right to refuse what they put into me, a very violating feeling. Even my output was collected to be measured and tested. My body wasn’t my own – I was forced to carry weight I didn’t want, to save my life, but it still felt horrible to have utterly no choice about it.

Physically, I’ve lost teeth, my hair, my long term health and life expectancy, my bones are severely osteoporotic, I lost the ability at one stage to walk, stand alone, even sit up or hold my own  head up. I’ve lost my strength, my energy, my youth; my looks, my vitality, and much of my respect for myself not to mention the respect of others. And heartbreakingly, I most likely will never be able to have my own babies.

I’ve lost my confidence in many ways, and it keeps getting dented again and again. Just when I think that I might just be starting to be an acceptable human being, somebody says something cruel, or I’m reminded in some way of how ‘behind’ other people I actually am, as  happened with the phone and credit check. I know this is going to happen a lot more as I still have such a long way to go, but at the same time, I’m so very grateful now, for what I still have, and what I am clawing back little bit by little bit.

I’ve been off the involuntary treatment order for a year now. I still risk being put back on it in a split second if I don’t attend my appointments or seem to be struggling, but things are also more negotiable in that I can see my GP every three or four weeks instead of weekly, my case manager sometimes lets me go an extra week without seeing her, etc.

I can catch buses and trains again. I got to a point where I just couldn’t, my legs were too weak to get on and off the buses, and the whole transport thing was exhausting. Not to mention my pure fear of all the people and the fact that people WERE  staring, grimacing at, even spitting at me for being emaciated and therefore ‘disgusting’.

I still struggle to read my beloved books, instead spending more time reading shorter articles and doing sudoku puzzles. I’ve just started to dance again – proper ballet classes and pilates classes, after a year of physio to get myself strong enough to do it. I’ve been working with an employment agency for those who have been out of the workforce for a long time (or never been part of it!) because of illness to get a job, most likely in a library or as a vet assistant. I’ve been going to art groups and will be part of a small exhibition in a few weeks time.

I’ve built up a circle of special friends, and trusted supports, and I am fast learning that people actually do like me for me, and that I don’t have to change in order to be accepted by anyone.  That we are all human, and all have our ups and downs, our good points and our failings.

And I feel like I have more of an actual Future  than I’ve never had. A few  years ago, there was NO future for me. I WAS dying – it was simply a matter of when. So to be here, now – that’s a HUGE reprieve and I thank God, thank the universe, thank everything and everyone every single day. Because I’m so lucky, and I’m so grateful, and life is the best it’s ever been from the day I was born right up to now.

I still battle with depression despite that, which can be frustrating – how can you be the most depressed you have ever been AND the happiest ever? But that’s how depression is – non-reactive depression anyway – it has nothing to do with being happy or contented, or being positive - because I AM largely a very positive person now. It’s more a perfect storm situation – a mix of everything, chemical imbalance, hormones, life situation, stress, etc.

I still endure chronic severe pain and my future in terms of bone strength is up in the air, but I’m in a lot less pain and a lot less ‘trapped in a broken body’ than I was even a year ago – and to be this ‘free’ is simply wonderful. The hour or two that I’m dancing each week, is a time when I somehow manage to step out of this world entirely – not by dissociation – into one where I’m blissfully peacefully content, where none of this has managed to touch me. This is just the beginning for me and ballet, a new beginning.

I know there will be more new beginnings and life taken back by me, as long as I keep hanging on and keep on stepping forward. Each step is tiny, often frustratingly so – and yet essential, important, and by no means inessential.

My message with this post is that our lives are far too high a price to pay for an eating disorder. Not even for it to help us cope through something we simply cannot handle. There isn’t any point being able to cope emotionally with something if you haven’t a body or a life to return to when you have finished coping, is there?

Much of what you lose might not even seem that big a deal at the time. There have been points where I was told I was going to die, and yet my eating disorder was stronger than my will to fight it and live. I certainly didn’t care about losing most of my hair when I was lying in hospital anyway. Who needs to drive, when the furthest you are going in the next six months is in a wheelchair to another appointment in the hospital? Who needs money when there is nothing to buy? Books when you need all your remaining brains to plot how to sabotage yourself further? Friends when you loathe yourself?

Who even needs a life, when it’s not a life worth living?

I am extremely fortunate. That I am even alive today, is described by most of the professionals I’ve seen as a miracle. MOST people do NOT get miracles. Most people are NOT so lucky. I have no idea why I was given this not even second, more like second hundreth, or second thousandth, chance – but the odds of me getting yet another go if I throw this chance away are miniscule.

Thankfully, most of us do NOT die. MANY of us do – but most of us live. And there are consequences that every single one of us who makes it alive through this have to face – for the rest of our lives. What we didn’t care about in the thick of the struggle, might haunt us for the rest of our lives. I know there will be plenty of ways that I’m reminded, daily, that I sold my soul to the devil of an eating disorder in my youth.

I know it’s much easier said than done – there was NO negotiation with my own eating disorder’s demands of me when I was more unwell, and imminent death doesn’t scare something when wiping you out is it’s goal – but if reading what I’ve lost to this means that even one person out there stops and seriously considers what she’s got to lose rather than blindly following the carrot dangling in front of her, then it’s been worthwhile.

Because you may lose your life, but I can promise you, you WILL lose pretty much everything.

What have you lost? What do you stand to lose? 

(featured image source)

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33 thoughts on “Starting From Scratch – What Might You Lose To An Eating Disorder?

  1. Because of ED I was unable to have children for the first 12 years of our marriage. Even though I had recovered during the first few months, it took years for my cycle to get normal. We have three teens now and I really appreciate them. God is good.

    This is an excellent post! ED causes damage and loss. ~ Wendy

    • Fiona says:

      I am so glad you have your teens now – so glad. It really is hard when you have done the work to get healthier and your body still seems to be ‘betraying’ you by something like not having kids. I’m glad that your cycle is normal now. It might have taken years but when we think of how long we were so abusive to our bodies, it makes sense that it’s not going to get better overnight. Thank you for reading, I want people to realise the consequences are very serious and long lasting. xx

  2. Gosh Fiona, i wish i could take all your suffering away. The only thing that makes this post not completely heartbreaking is seeing how far you’ve come. Congratulations on being part of a small art exhibition! That’s fantastic, i kept forgetting to say, the art work you posted on your blog a while ago was brilliant! And you know how happy i am that you’re not dancing again. You deserve all the happiness in the world, i’m just so sorry that your ED has taken so much from you.

    I think my ED has taken away my zest for life, although like you i’m finally getting it back. Depression and anxiety have been so difficult to deal with. I’ve let people down, preferring to be on my own, passed up chances to go on holiday and have fun, dance because i’m too self-conscious, and because of the olympics i’ve realised how much i miss swimming. I haven’t been in a swimming costume in public for … at least 10 years. These are, unfortunately, just a few.

    But something has changed lately, i’m working hard on getting my life sorted out so maybe one day you’ll see me dancing in a swimsuit surrounded by friends :P But maybe not! Take care of yourself Fiona, you’re such a star you have no idea :) Love love xxxx

    • Fiona says:

      Thank you so much!!! It is really nice of you to say that about my art, I’m still very scared of it being a ‘mess’ potentially because it was so long since I had painted, and it’s hard to get there and do it too, because of the anxiety! But it’s a great feeling to have challenged it and been okay.
      I’m really sorry that you have lost so much. I relate to how hard losing your zest for life makes it. It’s hard to get up and do things, because you can’t care any more. Nothing makes you feel good. When I feel that way, I just want to die, because I’m too weary and just want it to be over. It is like a vicious cycle, depression, exhaustion, more depression… so I’m heartbroken that you live this reality.
      It’s a long time without having been swimming! But some day I hope so much you will go again and enjoy it. I’m sure you will get there. it’s hard to imagine it happening when we have been feeling bad for so long. I didn’t even imagine that I would dance again, if anyone suggested that to me I would have thought they were joking – impossible. And yet, here I am. You can totally swim again some day. And you will dance too, on the beach, in the sunshine, with your friends :)
      You are a star too – you shine so brightly I cannot help but love you :) xxx

  3. iamnotshe says:

    OMG Fiona. This is ALLLLLLL so true. The cognitive loss … the inability to concentrate, forgetting … sometimes i need people to repeat things …. and it’s not because i’m not listening. In fact, i feel as though i have to try 100 times harder to listen than the “average” person.

    The losses are HEARTBREAKING: HEARTBREAKING. You are perfect and a wonderful angel, BUT i know what a BITTER BITTER PILL it is to swallow, and SO UNFAIR, SO UNFAIR, that your ballet, your brilliance, your job and career opportunities, you wonderful volunteer jobs were all snatched because you HAD to attend to first things, first. We all ABSOLUTELY have to attend to this debilitating Beast before we can progress.

    Your experiences in hospital are humiliating. I HATE that you had to go through that. I remember the one anorexia treatment center i went to when i was 11 or 12, was called the Clinical Research Center of the Univ. of Iowa Hospitals. I was treated like a lab rat, but it was 100 times better than home. It included all the things you speak about though. Blood drawings, restricted to my room unless i gained wait, then only getting an hour out a day, etc. Just humiliating. But we are prisoners to these resources … it’s what we have to do, and it is UNFAIR.

    What a warrior princess you are and will always be! Be mad! Get mad! I can’t stand what this illness has done to you! Yet, you are a warrior and you will always be an amazing inspiration … moving through all these difficulties. Still writing. Little steps to health … and easing off ourselves. Must do! Must do lil sis. MUCHO LOVE, melis

    • Fiona says:

      It is a bitter pill to swallow. But it’s something I’ve had to swallow. The bitter has taught me to appreciate the sweetness of better things – like how much better things are now. To cherish it because too easily it can be taken from us.
      I’m sorry you had to be in that Anorexia treatment. I can understand finding it a refuge from home despite it being a harsh place to be. For me, it was that sometimes too, at least in the beginning. Being ‘alone’ with your ED is terribly frightening and even though it’s a fight and there are rules and you have to face up to it and gain weight – you don’t feel alone and powerless any more. It’s a bit of a time out from what is going on at home, too. But ultimately – we have to come home again. It’s horrible though, that when we do feel that is a refuge, it’s a hell, hell is a refuge from life? Says a lot about our lives at that time.
      I hate that patients are so often treated like prisoners and punished for having an illness that leads them to already punishing themselves. It really doesn’t help at all.
      I’m glad you are still here today. You have your ups and down, but you are a survivor.
      Yes, we both need to get mad and stay mad. Because this illness is the PITS and it STEALS LIVES.
      Love you so much xoxox

      • iamnotshe says:

        Fiona, speaking of anger … i may post an email i just wrote to my brother, who had insinuated that our family dysfunction was rooted in ME and MY MOM! I SOOOO let him have it. I know this is terrible timing, but I WILL NOT BE BLAMED FOR being the “messed up one”. I was a product of my environment, and i have fought too long to STILL be considered the pariah. HELL NO!

        • Fiona says:

          Fight for what is right, Mel. It’s not terrible timing – I believe that everything happens for a reason. Maybe this is your chance to fight the last of the negativity hanging round from those who really were the messed up ones – who created that environment and so badly damaged you. Hang on to your truth. It’s time for them to realise that you aren’t going to be the scapegoat any more xxx

        • iamnotshe says:

          OK, these “reply” thingys show up above where i want them to actually post! Anyway, thank you for the support as usual. Believe it or not, he responded positively to my, erm, “LET ‘ER RIP” email. He agreed with everything I said, and APOLOGISED for not being there. I wrote as part of my rant, “was i the only person with a brain in that house? I wanted to starve myself to death because i could not stand to live with freaks!” He said he hadn’t realized how effed up our upbringing was until he moved out. I still don’t get it.

          Anyway … just another reminder about ED’s. As i was walking to the pool yesterday (going to get my happy hormones) ;-) … i saw a woman probably a bit older than me who i KNEW something about. No, i didn’t know her personally, but she was losing her hair … she had that frantic look on her gaunt, spotty face. I just wanted to hug her when she passed by. I just looked down and said (in essence) a prayer. Please, God, don’t let another one “go” from this disease. How can doctors NOT see that this is a direct route to death!? GRRR! I’m getting my anger up these days! Sorry to ramble.

          Love you to pieces my lil sis xoxoxo melis

        • Fiona says:

          Every time I see another person who is also suffering from this – it breaks my heart all over again. I think more than if I didn’t know the hell that living with an ED is. Love you so so so so much! xoxoxoxoxo

  4. Katie says:

    Eating disorders take away so much :( . I’ve lost my friends, my happiness and drive, hair, my teeth are rotting… I don’t know about grades or memory, grades dipped when my ED started but then again that is also when things got harder anyway (moving from GCSE to A Level to Uni). My memory seems poor, but I am unsure whether that’s just the monotony of day to day job hunting. I’ve lost way more socially and mentally than physically, I never even lost that much weight, eating disorders take away your life in more ways than one I guess. And the non-physical effects are sometimes worse than the physical… at least for me. *shrug*

    Like others have said, you are AMAZING. Keep fighting. You will beat this, there is no way you won’t with the determination and strength you have,

    • Fiona says:

      They are huge huge things you have lost, and I’m really sad to hear this. I hope so much you get them back – you can to some extent, and it’s worth fighting hard to reclaim them. I believe in you – you wouldn’t be here commenting if you weren’t a survivor and a fighter yourself xx

  5. Fiona, I can only imagine the years of struggle you have endured.To be reminded as today and the credit report….must be very difficult for you. You are so strong in your will to not only survive but begin to thrive. There are many positive things going on in your life right now…with your ballet, and the possibility of a job and your health getting better and better. Your attitude towards life is the best thing that has happened. The fact that you are so honest with your past I’m sure will help others, even if you never know they read your blog…I’m sure somebody will have. You are an inspiration to many even if we’ve never experienced Eating Disorders. I pray that each and every day is better than the one before and that you gain the independence you have earned….Diane

    • Fiona says:

      Thank you for reminding me of the positives, Diane – there are so many. You, to me, are a survivor too, and you face so much every single day with grace and courage and not an ounce of self pity, so you inspire me and help me. there are difficulties in life that we have to face sadly – but we CAN face them :) Thank you for always being so kind and wise xx

  6. You are beyond amazing Fi….you have lost so much to this evil disorder, but WHAT YOU HAVE RETAINED is beyond words – to be the person you are today despite all that has been taken over the course of the Ed, is so miraculous and I doubt that many people would ever have come through so much and still be a complete human being, a beautiful one at that.
    You inspire me every single day. YOU do.

    • Fiona says:

      YOU inspire me, Jenn. I know you too have fought this disease to the brink of death and back, many times, for many years, and lost so much yourself – and yet you stay positive, kind, generous, a fighter. I consider myself blessed to be your friend and I’m always praying that every single day is a better one for you too xxx

  7. Greta says:

    OMFG! Sorry for cursing but your post is shocking (yet again). It’s really heartbreaking – you lost so much.
    Stories like some of your terrifying posts used to read to me as fictional. Like, neah – that won’t ever happen to me. No way! Yeah – All Way! I can’t believe I let so much things slide. The health, the senses, the brains… as well as you, sweetie, I regret my past, but at the same time I’m happy just to be alive, just to enjoy what’s left .
    I’m so happy to have you as my inspirational Phoenix. You’ve risen from your ashes ,now I’m praying for you to fly.
    xoxo

    • iamnotshe says:

      YEP! Flying is awesome … i’m getting up! It’s gets slightly easier to get up when you’ve had some “straight time”. YOu are on your way. You are ON YOUR WAY!!! Looking at the damage, and rubbish that ED’s has left behind is a big step to saying, “THIS IS NOT TOLERABLE ANYMORE”! You are exactly where you should be at any given moment … but i’m just sayin’ I can’t wait for the next steps my friend. Your life can be resumed. You are YOUNG YOUNG YOUNG. Your body WILL heal. Maybe not to the prowess of a young, 17 year old dancing body … these hard facts are true. BUT, you can regain your health and regain your concentration skills. Even in the last few days, my sweet friend, the depression has lifted, and i am able to think more clearly, and feel love and HOPE again. Just GRATEFUL that i have crawled through my MINI-BLIP in life (which i will have to do again — hopefully not too soonly ;-) ) and i will come back, strong and full again.

      YOU have that in you!!! Try not to be scared that you will be too great! I know that sounds weird. You may think you don’t deserve to be a really talented, athletic person. You do. YOu have got the Love, The Heart, the Faith, Compassion, Empathy … all the things that make humans GRAND (the stuff we don’t see) ….

      SO

      DON’T BE AFRAID TO SHINE YOUR TALENTS!!! We love you to bits!!!!!! Your friend and silly sis, Mel xoxox

      • Fiona says:

        I knew you had it in you to get through this blip, Mel! You always have been my warrior sister. I’m so grateful to have you, all my internet friends, so grateful to be here today writing about the ED rather than being a statistic. You are right – most of the things I’ve lost, I can get them back again. I CAN. And I’m young – I don’t feel it any more, but I am. I’m glad I’m waking up to that it’s not tolerable or worth it now. And I’m glad that the gifts include friends and sisters like YOU.
        Love you so dearly! xxx

    • Fiona says:

      I’m glad to be alive too, and I’m so glad you are too, Greta. I used to think “It will never ever happen to me!” all the time. The girls that I saw on tv and in the magazines in the 90′s who were dying, those girls I cried over, I never ever thought I’d end up being friends with them and when they did die, missing them terribly. I couldn’t accept that I had the same thing they did. It was so bizarre. It still is bizarre. But every single day I’m so thankful to be alive. So thankful for these chances. I really do think I’m rising from the ashes sometimes :)
      If only I could get this through to those who haven’t been there yet but are fast following us. If only I could use what I’ve been through, to help them not lose so much themselves!
      Love you xoxoxo

      • Greta says:

        You’re doing so much by sharing yourself with me and others. Do you have any clue how much? I’m sorry as I sometimes take it for granted to have you in my life – I got used to you. Hihihi. But truly you are a blessing in my life.

        • Fiona says:

          I’m so so so so so so so blessed to have YOU in my life, Greta, I really am <3 xx

        • iamnotshe says:

          I’m just chiming in where Greta left off. I am blessed to have you in my life Fiona. (Greta too)! I read a post the other day that pretty much said, “if you aren’t “happy” you’re not doing something right”.

          I blew my stack. I’m trying to sort out this reaction. I’ve heard this statement, but not outside 12-step walls, per se. Maybe that same sentiment, but not in such an self-righteous way. First, people cannot judge other peoples’ lives, journeys, temperments ANYTHING unless they’ve walked a mile or even a few steps in their shoes.

          Mainly, Fiona, i question this “arrival at happiness”; this constant peace of mind; or this blissful, mind game … and i think “look at Fiona”.

          i see you! You have a certain peace of mind. No doubt you have a HUGE, SMART mind … but you are also one of the most grateful people i know. You really are. You encourage people, you have love just bursting out of your heart for everyone … and you are in the struggle of your life. Is that happy?

          The journey, not the destination, is what life is about. I think you have embraced that in every fiber of your being.

          I believe that is one of the reasons we all love you so much! You speak quietly, wisely, yet directly and with lots of smarts and heart.

          I am bloody happy to know you! I am blessed indeed. If God did this form me … he IS great! xoxoxo Love you lil sis! MELIS

          P.S. I hope this makes sense … i’m sort of penning out a post at iamnot she here … but also counting my blessings that i know you!

        • Fiona says:

          Mel!!! This made perfect sense! In fact you hit the nail on the head, this is very very important. It deserves a post of it’s own and I wish I wasn’t about to lose my computer today for 2 days to be serviced!!

          This is one of those things I knew, but hadn’t yet thought of this way, you know what I mean? And you have made it clear to me in your comment.

          You are so right. It really IS the JOURNEY that is important. And it’s the journey in which we have the potential to find the most happiness. Happiness isn’t something you can ‘have’, it’s something you do, be, are. The most rewards we find along the way, perfect example, the people we are blessed to meet – like you, my friends. There may or may not be a pot of gold at the end of your rainbow, and you may or may not ever even find the end of your rainbow, but when the journey is important to you, the end of your rainbow and what is there doesn’t even really matter any more. I guess it’s also another way of making the most of what you have right now instead of waiting for some ‘maybe’ ‘if’ or ‘when’. Because all we have is right now!

          I can understand you being mad at that post saying if you aren’t happy you are doing something wrong! I wonder if the writer was happy themselves? Probably they never had been through real hardship in their lives. It does tend to be people who have had a fairly easy run of it who think of it that way. But then again, that’s me being judgemental myself. Maybe that is what works for that person – I don’t know where they are coming from and that’s the point, nobody knows where anyone else is coming from 100%.

          What is happiness? It’s different for us all, and can be different for US from moment to moment. I could write forever pondering this :) What I DO believe is that our ability to be happy grows proportionately with our experience of sadness, heartbreak, adversity – because to know something intimately, you need to know it’s opposite. Which is why it’s often those who seem to have the least who find the most happiness. They appreciate it more deeply, and they can see that what they do have isn’t ‘little’ but as great as the world – those they love, and who love them, for example :)

          Now I”m the one hoping this makes sense – it’s too early in the morning for me :) Love you sis, thank you so much for sparking off this train of thought in me, I shall be pondering it all day xoxox

  8. iamnotshe says:

    and it’s GETTING, not get … MAN, i still can’t spell … in time …

    • iamnotshe says:

      Yeah, right? I’ve been pondering this a LOT! I HAVE cut down on therapy, and my nutritionist, and i’m not one to have a lot of close friends. Don is my rock, and Angela and Becky are great at their “jobs”. But i am someone who knows a bunch of people, but there aren’t loads of them that i can tell my heart to. Nor do i want to. I don’t trust too easily. Anyway, who’s to say i’d have this “centeredness” if i had loads of close friends.

      I guess the point is … i’ve been spending too much time in my head, and it makes me a little uneasy. Luckily NOT regarding food … but learning to appreciate life, and “go easy”.

      I know you KNOW this, and LIVE this … it’s hard to be easy on ourselves. I think ED folks tend to be very harsh with themselves, and that comes up a lot when there are no more “cover-ups”, addictions, etc. Oh my … now it’s time for me to get ready to go to sleep! Love you lots. xo oxoxoxox melssss

      • Fiona says:

        I think any time we spend too much time in our heads it can get very uncomfortable. I think perhaps the best way to try and live is to just BE, and thinking doesn’t help that too much.
        There are very few people I can lay my heart bare too, either. But people that close to us, only really come along once or twice in a lifetime. Like you, I’m not an overly social person, I can’t hack being surrounded by people, but my friends that I do make, they are precious.
        We ARE too harsh with ourselves. Way too harsh.
        Love you, hope you are feeling better xx

        • iamnotshe says:

          Dearest sweetie. I think there’s a lot going on that is sucky. Teeth, shyster doctors/dentists, brother screwed me over, i’m pouring money into dental work that isn’t getting done. Dad is in dementia … blah blah. Yes, poor me. BUT, at least i’m not in a Clinical Depression. So i should count my blessings! This is life!

          Maybe i should practice a little more “go with the flow” and/or ignore hysteria ;-) . HA, not my strong-point, ignoring poo poo. Choices … choices.

          OK, this is the deal. So far, so good this morning. Nothing to worry about. God is going to take care of me today … and i am going to repeat that as OFTEN as i need to everyday. Soon all things will work themselves out. Karma will take care of things.

          Just ramblin’. Thanks for the advice about staying out of my head. Love you much! I hope you’re hanging in there too. We will get through our blips … that’s what friends do. HUGS KISSES and PEACE. LOVE MEL

        • Fiona says:

          *hugs* *hugs* there aren’t enough *hugs* in the world! xxx

        • iamnotshe says:

          Fiona, i think i’m headed for a cry! Thanks for the hugs!!!! You are precious! xo melis

        • Fiona says:

          You are just as precious, sis. Love and hugs xxxx

  9. Great Post and got me thinking. I would lose the healthy lifestyle that I have been working so hard on.

I'd love to hear what you think :)

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