Tuesday, December 3, 2013

real men have curves.

Many Young Americans Blame Colleges For Rising Student Debt

Okay, as much as it hurts my Hawkeye-loving soul to defend Iowa State like this, it's gotta be said. This article pisses me off because BACK OFF THE GYMS, MMKAY?! The University of Iowa built a brand new recreational complex a few years back to much criticism. Yes, sure the lazy river was a bit superfluous, and maybe the intentions of the facility were less than honorable, but there's an important thing that always gets forgotten:

Along with this new rec center, UIowa also extended gym membership to all enrolled students where previously the gyms were a paid service. Full disclosure: it's not free, it just gets billed with tuition. Now, there are many people (including my fiancé) who are upset about having to pay for something they'll never use, but that's public goods for you (on the same note, I don't appreciate my tuition paying for a new College of Pharmacy building when I'm definitely never going to receive direct benefit from it, but you don't hear me bitching). When I was living on campus, I wanted access to the campus gyms but the out-of-pocket expense was too much and so I promised myself that I would get really good about saving money and join the gym next month.

Hahahaha yeah right.

Now the facilities charges get billed with my tuition each semester, it's such a small amount in comparison to everything else that I hardly notice. And major upside: it gets covered by financial aid.

So yeah, rock climbing walls = ridiculous. I can see how outsiders can get angry about the millions of dollars spent on building such facilities, but as someone whose life changed thanks to the now-free university gym memberships, I approve.


'Plus-Size' Model Leah Kelley: We Need More Size 8 Models

"I have naturally thin friends, and they’re people too; they're beautiful on their own."

YES, YES, OMG YESSSS.

I'm sitting at an awkward size 12 right now, there aren't many people in any form of media representing me right now.

That being said... I LOVE ALESSANDRA AMBROSIO. And Behati Prinsloo. And Karlie Kloss.

I'm beautiful, they're beautiful. There's no conflict there.

It's somewhat disappointing that in the modeling world you go from the extreme size 0/2/4 to the other end at 14/16/18. What about 6-12?

Honestly, I don't expect this to change anytime soon (or ever). The point I want to drive home is that it doesn't threaten me to see skinny models, because they're real women as much as plus size models are as much as any other woman off the street is. We as women need to stop attacking each other on the merits of our "womanness" just because we look different.

She's not a real woman and she needs to eat a sandwich and comments about curves and tits and booty need to stop because WHO CARES.

Friday, November 15, 2013

blinded by the light.

I set out on what should have been a 5 mile run, got to the end and decided, I'm not done.

So I kept going.

7 miles later, my ankles are a bit achy, but it should be celebrated (today and every day) that I can walk, or run, or jump, or stand. All of it is incredible and it should not be taken for granted.

Today was a good day with good news and lots of relief.

But life is still fragile.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

tell me this is not the end.

I've learned a huge life lesson today. HUGE. It makes my stomach turn just thinking about it.

I've never prayed so hard in my life.

Shit happens, and life is unfair.

But, it's not the worst thing that could happen.

Because I know I'll forget... because I have forgotten from my own experiences...

Life is fragile.


For Julia.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

the wait is over.

I've been busy. Deal.

Big things happening this week, BIG THINGS.

Lots of things have brought me to tears over the last few days (uhh, let's extend that to weeks, it's been eventful) but I return to posting for something huge. Something unexpected.

I got engaged and in all the excitement I lost 7 pounds.

I have left the "obese" category and now officially classify as "overweight." OVERWEIGHT. I never thought I'd be so happy to be overweight, but hot damn this is something special!

I am 3 pounds away from Onederland, and 10 pounds away from having lost 100 total.

AND I'M GETTING MARRIED.

Thursday, August 29, 2013

back to life.

It's been a long week, and I'm going in for my fourth straight day at the gym (#stressfracture say whaaa?) and I could really use some new tunes. Particularly this.

NOW.

(Seriously, wtf is with this Tuesday bullshit?)

Monday, August 26, 2013

cracked the code.

If you aren't already rocking to this song, you need to hop on the train. NOW.

Today was the first day of the fall semester. I'm going to try to keep this short.

I have a lot of anxiety. A LOT. I've gotten really good at hiding it, but it's a problem that's always there and coping isn't always easy. New classes, new schedule, new routine, new everything... all of it sent me into a tizzy. Not quite full-blown panic attack, but definitely the kind that keeps you up at night and makes it hard to breathe. This used to rule my life but thankfully I've gotten much better at talking myself down before I'm completely incapacitated. Being prepared, visualizing scenarios, and always having a back-up plan are ways I help myself through it and it helps!

I woke up early, ate breakfast, took the bus to campus, then had my first class. I met a kid named Nick who is from my hometown. I gotta admit, as an older student it's comforting to be able to connect with anyone over anything, sometimes I just feel so out of place. I had an hour break between classes, I found an empty table in a commons area and had my lunch (tomato and avocado on a wheat tortilla, water, almonds) and did some reading. I headed to my next class, Spanish, which was a primary source of my anxiety and I survived! It was a big deal when I realized how much time had elapsed without my noticing, I love that I was able to get past my anxiety and enjoy being in the moment rather than obsessing about the clock.

After class I went to the campus rec center and familiarized myself with the locker rooms. My dependence on public transportation now means that I get to carry a ton of crap with me everywhere and I just don't trust my wallet, laptop, and iPad to sit defenseless in open cubbies while my back is turned on the treadmill. I ran 2 miles on the treadmill, it would have been more but my heart rate was way up and my foot wasn't taking it well, and then I lifted weights and stretched.

I parked myself under a tree on a patch of sprawling green grass to enjoy the breeze while I waited for my bus to take me home.

I had some leftovers for dinner, then I napped in bed still wearing my gym clothes covered in sweat. I was so tired you couldn't even convince me that sweaty gym clothes in bed was a bad idea, although in hindsight... eff.

It was pretty much the perfect day. And I get to do it tomorrow.


OH OH OH. Not entirely sure what is going on, but I weighed in at 208.5 this morning. TOTAL SHOCK.

Friday, August 23, 2013

summertime sadness.

1. As of Sunday, summer is officially coming to an end. Sadness.
2. Had my regular appointment with my neurologist yesterday... I was so tired that I may have glossed over some potentially good news? I was under a serious haze of sleepiness so maybe it didn't happen exactly as I remember. She said she thinks there's still some swelling in my left eye but she wasn't definitive. And then she started talking about monitoring me over the next 6 months and then coming off the meds. But like I said, I was sleep deprived. I don't want to get prematurely excited.
3. There's a new outreach lab at the hospital where I have my appointments, which I don't entirely understand since the main laboratory where I have my blood drawn is convenient enough. I was told to go to the outreach lab yesterday... I'll be nice because I understand that it's new, but it was very badly managed. Very badly. I waited as long as my nerves were still controllable before I gave up and went to the main lab... like I should have just done in the first place. Smh.
4. My gym membership is officially reinstated on Monday. Can't. Handle. Excitement.
5. I think I'm ready to declare that my foot is good to go. It's been over four months since the initial incident and I have been kind to my body. It's time to hit it hard.


6. I had... a scare. I was embarrassed to admit it so I've been sitting on the information for a few days, but deep down I knew I wasn't doing myself any favors. I started with baby steps... saying it out loud to myself, saying it out loud to my boyfriend, saying it out loud to my BFF. And now I'm going to share it here.

I've run and/or exercised this summer fewer times than I have fingers and I let myself off the hook for the sake of my foot's health. The exercise wasn't a huge issue minus missing my favorite stress relieving activity, but what I did with the rest of my time what downright shameful. I ate... and ate... and ate. I kept making excuses for myself... Chicago is one of the best food cities in the world and I spent many, many weekends eating my way through the suburbs. And my parents... BEST COOKS EVER. And the Iowa State Fair... one of the top fairs in the country. I guess I had food #FOMO. I was eating like shit, not keeping a routine, and not exercising.

I wasn't surprised when I stepped on the scale last weekend and saw 218.0 between my toes. Not surprised, but deeply disappointed. Most of the summer my weight was hovering at or around where it was pre-stress fracture and I think I started to believe that I could eat anything. But 218? I worked so hard to break through that plateau earlier this year and seeing those numbers again damn near broke my heart.

I took the news with the seriousness it deserved and immediately changed my habits. A week later, I am beyond relieved to see the scale read 212.5.

So the goal for this weekend is to get my shit together. To remember how awful it felt to see that I had gained weight. To get back into a routine. To become the rock star that I know I am.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

dancing through the fire.

17 Heart-Stopping foods at the Iowa State Fair

Hi. I've been gone. Deal with it.

Guess where I've been? Guess.

The Iowa State Fair.

So, first... story: I grew up in Texas, and I'm pretty sure the Texas State Fair is in Dallas, and I lived nowhere close to Dallas. State Fairs never used to be my "thing." And then we moved to Iowa and we knew nothing about our new city/state other than where to find the grocery store and the closest park. Iowa is... kinda boring. I love me some Iowa, but seriously... you have to know where to find entertainment here; it's not like living in a large city where opportunities smack you in the face as soon as you walk out the door. We moved to Des Moines in June 2000, spent the first few weeks unpacking and finding our new favorite places, and once that was finished we took to occupying our time with lots and lots of TV (because, like I said, there's nothing to do here). By July, advertising for the State Fair was on full blast and we figured what the hell. Sprung for a family pack of tickets and made a day of it.

Thirteen years have since passed and... I FUCKIN LOVE THE IOWA STATE FAIR. I can't tell you how much of my good feelings-ness towards the fair is because we had nothing else to do that first summer or how much of it is legitimate love, all I know is that I have good memories and I can always count on the fairgrounds to serve as my happy place.

So that's my story.

The point is... I went to the fair. Thank God I saw that BuzzFeed page after I had already gone. We're not going to discuss how many of the foods I ate from that list, suffice it to say that it was several and I am not ashamed.

I don't know how to explain it, but having Iowa-made honey lemonade and deep fried oreos and looking at GIANT farm animals (a 3200 pound bull, and a pig with nuts bigger than my head) makes me so, so, so happy. Corn-fed and proud of it.

My skinny jeans still fit, so that's good at least.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

hear me.

Do you ever hear a song and it moves you (whatever that means)? Like, for a few minutes the world stops and your heart beats faster and you're just so relieved to hear that someone put your feelings to music?

Okay, well, mostly I think Katy Perry music is shit (and by that what I really mean is that I'm a massive fan and I have no shame), but this song. THIS SONG. It got me.

I'm not going to argue about the depth of the lyrics (in fact I think it's overall pretty shallow), but I can't deny that this song makes me wanna get up.


Made me throw on my new running tights.

Made me slip on my favorite Five Fingers.

Made me tie my hair back, dig up my RoadID,

and head out the door.

In the dark. At 1am.

With absolutely no one in the world knowing my intentions.

Pressed play on my iPod

... and ran.

No direction in mind, no distance planned. Just, running.

The first thing to hit me was a 60 degree breeze to remind me why I absolutely love this.

And then the panic sunk in:

I haven't had a proper run in months.

And my muscle tone has seriously suffered.

And my lungs... not what I remembered.

I hit the first hill just as the chorus started.

'Cause I am a champion, and you're gonna hear me roar.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

thoughts on bullying.

It seems as if a lot of attention has been paid to bullying as of late. Stories of kids hurting themselves, court cases, even celebrities getting in on the action by admitting they were bullied as kids, too. I don't know if it's my perception of disproportionate media attention, but I feel like maybe it's the norm to be bullied? I don't really know because I grew up in the 90s when bullying wasn't really a thing. If a kid made fun of you in school and you told a teacher it was "tattling," or if you told your parents they would just tell you not to pay any attention and get the fuck over it [or at least that's what my parents did]. Whatever the case, I can tell you that I'm in the minority when it comes to bullying.

I was fat, awkward, and weird looking. That trifecta of social ostracism should have held me back in school but it never bothered me that I only ever had two or three friends. I was always picked last in gym class, I hated "Wellness Wednesdays" (30 minutes of continuous running), and the rare rainy days that we spent doing gymnastics indoors would set me off into cold sweats. But I persisted. I never felt the need to be apologetic or ashamed of my body. I was unusually tall for my age and everyone in my family was fat; it made perfect sense to me that I was meant to be that way. I knew that things were said about me, but I miraculously grew up with a strong sense of self-esteem and any person who was bold enough to criticize me to my face was likely to feel my rage ten-fold. True story: a kid who made fun of me for being fat in 4th grade never did it again after I put him in his place. I won't repeat what I said to him because it was absolutely brutal, but even at 9 years old I had a vigorous sense of justice and I felt like the only way to stop this kid from hurting me was to hurt him back. To this day I feel awful about the words I spewed at him but my experiment proved successful and he never said a mean thing to me again.

Sure, it sucked going to the stores and not being able to shop in the girls' section, I had matured into juniors' and women's sizes way too early but that wasn't entirely due to my weight. You see, I was almost 5 feet tall by the time I reached elementary school and I measured a whopping 5'7" when I was 11 years old. Pants never fit me, not at the waist and definitely not in the leg. In 6th grade a popular skinny girl once laughed at me for having high-water pants in front of everyone at recess. So I called her an immigrant... in front of everyone at recess. Of course I knew my pants were too short and of course I was embarrassed by it, but we were poor and I was abnormally tall and there was nothing my 12 year old self could do about that, so I made peace early on with the factors that were beyond my control. I'll never forget the look on that girl's face as she laughed at my pants, but I also will never forget the look on that girl's face as I taught her what it feels like to be publicly shamed.

News flash: I can buy new pants, you will always be an asshole.

Looking back on it, I know beyond a doubt that I am in the minority group when it comes to bullying. I wasn't bullied because I was the bully. If I could go back and apologize to all the people I hurt it would be a half-apology along the lines of, "I'm sorry for hurting you but you hurt me first." I hit below the belt, hard and often, but I never threw the first punch. I've spent a lot of time pondering my defensive reflexes and you don't have to dig very deep to find the source: I, the bully, had a bully too. If you follow the trail of pain you'll find that people only act this way... people only hurt other people because they're being hurt themselves. It's not that I wanted to cause permanent emotional scars to my peers but I think this was my psyche's way of dealing with my own pain from the bullying I suffered at home. And if you follow that path, you'll find that my personal bully was being hurt by someone too.

It took years before I ever found out why my bully, my sister, acted the way she did, and it's certainly not a topic to be discussed here (or anywhere. ever.) but it provided powerful insights into the trajectory of pain and gave me control over my own healing process.

The thing that has baffled me about bullying in general is how people choose to criticize things that cannot be controlled. And the cycle never stops and it serves no purpose. I had a shocking exchange with my brother a few weeks ago; he's young but he's very well aware of the struggles my entire family has had with weight, and he's been witnessing my personal transformation over the last couple of years which is why this scene struck me as so poignant. My family and I were playing games around the dining room table (a common occurrence at my parents' house) when I won a round of cards. I joyfully fist-pumped into the air, being merciless in my taunting (LOSERS, LOOOOOSERS) when my brother brought my arm fat to my attention.

Yes, I have arm fat, I said to him. What do you want me to do about it?

He stared at me blankly for a few seconds, and then mimicked with his left arm and his right hand what was happening with my chicken wings. I was patient, I let him finish before I asked, Are you done? I don't think he was expecting that reaction and everyone in the room got uncomfortably quiet. He tried to rouse up some laughter, hoping that he wasn't alone in the criticism of my wobbly arms but no one else was laughing. I gave him a chance to backpedal but nothing came of it.

"I work out more than everyone in this room. I eat well, I run, I lift weights," I said. "So what's your point? What do you want me to do about my arms? Right in this moment, what do you want me to do?"

He sheepishly said, "I was just pointing it out."

Yes, buy why? You think I didn't know? You think this is the first time I've noticed?

It was as if all the room had been sucked out of the air, everyone was struggling to find breath but finding nothing available. My brother reacted violently, he threw his cards on the table, said "fuck this" and went to his room. I honestly don't know what point he was trying to make or what he expected to happen, but worse, I think it made everyone uncomfortable that I chose to defend myself. I can't tell you what happened in my development that I was instilled/blessed/gifted with this unwavering confidence, but it's nearly heartbreaking to know that people are okay to stand by and watch bullying in all its forms but are uncomfortable when the persecuted fight back. All I know is that right now in this very moment, I am the way I am. Deal with it.

So next time someone is being mean to you, know that their pain is coming from a real place. I've learned in my life not to hate these people but to pity them... because at the end of the day, I am beautiful and no one can change that. No one can change you but you.

Monday, August 5, 2013

really just the same.

Couldn't even have an afternoon of shopping (holla at TJ Maxx!) without my foot get in the way. It's true, I've been pretty active this weekend, but nothing strenuous.

And then, I fell in love with a pair of Steve Madden wedge heels in my size and they fit like a dream. Well, minus that broken foot of mine.

Can't even stand up in a pair of damn heels.


I'm kind of over this shit.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

a long reflection.

I remember the day my friend came rushing into my dorm room blabbing about something called The Facebook. She had heard about it from a friend at another school (Illinois Urbana-Champaign, I think?) and it was all the rage. You had to know someone who was already on the site to get an invite, because back in the fall of 2004 it was still that exclusive. My friend got invited and she wanted to join but not before she had guaranteed a friend to join with her.

I declined the invitation.

It took about a month of badgering between the time she first brought it up and the day I joined: November 11, 2004. I'll never forget because I had to be pulled away from completing my profile to call my dad for his birthday.

The Facebook in its early days was sparse, to say the least. The exclusivity of the invite-only system coupled with the fact that you had to have a matching .edu address to identify your college and the super short list of schools included in the beginning made it a novelty. Oh you're on The Facebook? Can I get an invite?! I don't know why we were all in a fluster to join because it had such limited functionality: a single profile picture, a couple of blank spots to enter favorite quotations and a blurb about yourself, and the "wall" which at that point was nothing more than a text box that was open to everyone to add, edit, or erase. At first we patiently waited for more schools to be added so that our friends on other campuses could join in our online stalking frenzy; after a while the patience turned into furied requests to the developers to add U of [insert school here] or [blank] State. At U Iowa, we happily taunted Iowa State for being overlooked in the nation-wide race to be acknowledged by the mysterious Mark Zuckerburg (I can still hear it, Who's Mark Zuckerberg? Is he like Tom or something? as we all waited for Mark Zuckerberg to request to be our friend. Still waiting, by the way).

I have been around for every new incarnation of Facebook, from the dropping of "The", to the inclusion of all universities and colleges, to the confusingly separated inclusion of high schools, to the merger, to the addition of business and celebrity pages, the news feed, the live updates, and most recently, timeline and graph search.

Aside from the URL and the color scheme, little has stayed the same.

As much as I hate what this monster has turned into, how it's eaten the world and consumed (devoured?) our social lives and changed the way we Internet forever, the truth remains: I have never lived a moment of my adult life sans Facebook.

Theories of how Facebook impacts our self-esteem have been flying rampant for years, studies have been conducted, books have been written, and movements have started to boycott the site. Coming up on nine years of uninterrupted Facebook activity, I can say I understand it all. What I've found most interesting about what people have to say about the site isn't in the details, it's in the weight it carries in almost every aspect of socialization. Because on Facebook, everything is real regardless of the actual truth.

So they say social media is a person's highlight reel, not the whole story of their lives. But do we ever get the whole story? Do we? If we could imagine a world entirely devoid of any social media, is there a complete story to tell? My answer is a definitive no. Social media is simply a digitized versions of the stories we might tell around the water cooler, only enriched with photos and videos and user-generated text that give a less flattened account of what really happened last Friday night. As far as self-esteem goes, that has more to do with the users than it does with the site.

Back in 2004, The Facebook was barebones. It was a rare opportunity to publicly (and yet somehow privately) broadcast key details about one's self en masse. You were given two blank boxes in which to share things about yourself, begging the question "what do you want your neighbors to know about you?" because in those days you were sharing your online self with your literal neighbors: the girls on your dorm floor that you were too intimidated to talk to in person; the guy a few floors down you were too shy to talk to... but because November 2004 Facebook was just a few hundred people at your school, you knew that if you wrote "I like to watch horror movies" he would inevitably find out that you liked to watch horror movies. [Serious interjection: that is the true story of two friends who met over Facebook and subsequently married and subsequently divorced, but that last part is neither here nor there.] Without realizing it, our 18 and 19-year-old selves were faced with a serious question that would come to define the next decade of our lives: who is the Internet you?

Outwardly, we wanted to show the best of ourselves. The (literal and figurative) girl next door who quoted Audrey Hepburn and Coco Chanel, my freshman dorm neighbor whom I am still friends with to this day. Or, in my case, raunchy quotes from Happy Bunny merchandise and things repeated from keg parties because I was trying oh-so-hard to be a party girl. The first year of having The Facebook was the most exhilarating because we had to literally spell out who or what we wanted to be perceived as because our online personas were nothing more than a photo, some quotations, and a character-limited paragraph of our own writing. Nowadays the thousands of photos (both edited and unflattering), the pages we like, the companies we follow, the religious and political affiliations we identify, and the things posted on our behalf tell your story without you ever having to type a word.

In the early days it was understood among users that you don't act like a dick on The Facebook, not that we got much use out of our limited profiles anyway. When we gained the photo function there was a girl-group pact among my friends agreeing to not post unflattering pictures or pictures where we could be seen holding or drinking alcohol. Later with the tagging ability we agreed not to tag anyone without their permission (because Facebook hadn't quite gotten to the stage where you could un-tag yourself). Even in the beginning there was the heightened realization that someone, a nameless faceless important someone, was watching and our behavior online would be scrutinized as much as it would be offline. I firmly believe that my joining The Facebook at its inception has completely formed the way I approach my sense of self both on and off the website.

They say Facebook is your highlight reel, and so for me it was. It was a godsend when we could update our statuses through text messages lest we forget that super funny thing so-and-so said drunkenly at 3am. Facebook had become the living, breathing, constantly updated journal that chronicled our lives allowing us to piece together the happenings of last night's party, or more appropriately once we grew up, it allowed us to keep in touch across town or across the globe. Instant photos from summer abroad, or regular status updates about that internship in the city; whatever it was, if we took the time to click "share" it would be there forever. It certainly wasn't an immediate realization, but Facebook for me and my friends became the external hard drive to our brains to fill in where our memories would fail us. Even in our 20s were were already forgetting the details of freshman, sophomore, junior, senior years in college, but our trusty friend Facebook was there to capture the highlight reel of the things we wished to remember forever. So many times we quipped "We should have a reality show" because everything we did was so important that it needed to be shared, but little did we know we were already broadcasting live.

It certainly hasn't been all good and fun, there are things in my Facebook archive I would rather not remember, there are even things (and people) I have taken the trouble to delete from digital history and from my life. With the benefit of hindsight I wish I had been a little less callous, that I had exercised more tact, that I could have been sage enough to recognize my bad decisions before they were recorded online. With that being said, I could never say "I wish I had done less." My Facebook profile (the original, never deleted, never merged, never suspended) stands as a testament to the life I have lived and I would take back none of it. It's the scrapbook we all wish we had in old age and thankfully (hopefully?) many of us will. It's the stories of our lives for which we were the photographers, the writers, the editors, and the publishers, Facebook acting as the distributors and the audience is none of our choosing. What is interesting about our highlight reel isn't what we choose to share, but how that changes over time. It can be simplified to say that we choose the best of ourselves in our own portrayal, whether it breeds narcissism is up for debate, and it is endlessly fascinating to have an actual record of the way time changes us.

I had an idea a few years back, let's call it 2008 after a nasty ending to a years-long friendship, that my Facebook wasn't my online Dear Diary to share personal-yet-irrelevant details publicly; rather, my profile would become an actual digital scrapbook. Photographs, notes sharing "I love you"s and "I miss you"s, and years of reciprocated birthday wishes that otherwise might not be sent if left relegated to Hallmark and the US Postal Service. From time to time I might update my status to share a funny story or mark an important milestone, but ultimately all the content would be for my future use that I was graciously allowing my 200+ friends to share for the time being.

I was writing a long, rich, multimedia letter to my future self in case I ever forgot the beautiful life I lived.

I honestly did think (assuming Facebook still exits decades from now) that I would look back on my account in my old age and my heart would skip a beat getting to indulge in all my youthful indiscretions. I believed that I was intimately familiar with my own story and I wouldn't need this reminder for many, many years to come. Oh, how quickly I forgot. In a recent moment of weakness or vanity or whatever you choose to call it, I began flipping through my own photos, my heart skipping a beat indulging my youthful indiscretions. Things that happened not long ago: last month, last fall, a year ago, two years ago. I had barely reached double digit photos when my heart stopped completely, only for a second but long enough to rip the air from my lungs and the color from my face.

Photos dating back only a year and already I could see things I didn't like, photos dating back two years and I hardly recognized my own face staring back at me.

I like to believe that I've been rather forthcoming about my [potential] body dysmorphic disorder: 80-something pounds lost and I often feel the same, I think that I look the same, and if affects my mood but mostly these feelings sway like a pendulum with less predictability. My feelings have intensified as my ability to engage in my favorite exercises has been impeded by my foot injury and these days it's undeniable that I've crossed the line from brooding to depressed. I have no idea what took hold of me that caused me to take that trip down memory lane but I'm happy I did. More staggeringly: I'm happy.

It's taken a great deal of reflection but I've finally come to the realization that my problem with my own perception has been backwards all along: it's not that I can't picture 210-pound-me, it's that I couldn't picture 290-pound-me; I don't feel different now because I never saw myself as different then. Call it a miracle or denial or whatever have you, but I was never able to fully comprehend how bad it had gotten even at its worst. I was functionally fat but "just a little overweight." My thoughts were constantly peppered with "That's normal" or "Everyone looks this way" or "It's not that bad." I built walls and walls of protection around my psyche to trick myself into believing that my behavior was, at worst, benign neglect. It was in those Facebook photos that the truth finally found me.

I saw a girl whose calves were thicker than healthy waists, a girl who was constantly uncomfortable in clothes that cinched and shoes that cut, a girl who couldn't wrap her arms around her boyfriend because both his and her guts were too big to complete the circumference. That girl couldn't walk half a mile, that girl couldn't sit comfortably, that girl couldn't catch her breath, and worst, that girl couldn't see herself.

Whatever force kept me from seeing that in that moment, I say thanks. Whatever force made me sick and forced me to see a doctor, I say thanks. Whatever force lit the fire in my gut that got me to change my ways, I say thanks. And most painfully yet most importantly, I say thanks to my younger self and to Facebook, the former for having the foresight to be kind to my online person, and the latter for providing a place where I can store the memories I hope to never forget.

All it took was two years, two years to come this far and two years to forget where I started.

Part of the curse of Facebook is believing that you can delete something out of existence, and maybe sometimes it's therapeutic or cathartic to click "delete" and feel the release of emotions even knowing once online always online. I have debated whether I should alter my own highlight reel to gloss over the less-than-happy times of my life, to skip the part where I gained and then lost 80 pounds, not because I'm ashamed but because the ghost of that makes me sad. I've proven already how quickly my memory has failed me and it would be easy to bury that part of myself, at least as it is incarnated online, but for now I'm going to let it stay at least as a reminder of who I hope to never be again.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

je ne connais pas.

1. Why the fuck are there so many food blogs? Straight up, I love food and I enjoy cooking but I choose to spend my time (uh, how to put this delicately...?) NOT IN THE KITCHEN. It's never going to be my life's joy to feed my family because food turns into shit and maybe my future hubby needs to know how to feed himself. Yeah, I'm kind of a feminist like that. I guess what I'm saying is... surely food can't be that important? It seems like it's become an over-emphasized art form which is great as a novelty, but food is so common that I cannot see the value in 3-course meals and dessert from scratch EVERY NIGHT. Once in a while, sure. For me it's pretty common during vacations but I hold no value to this culinary emphasis in my personal lifestyle, and maybe that's reflected in my perception of food blogs.

2. Normally I don't share opinions on how other people spend their time because (a) it's rude to judge, (b) it's none of my fucking business, and (3) I have my own life to live. So please forgive my momentary blip, but I really had to get this off my chest.

3. It's perfect running conditions: 60 degrees, low humidity, clear skies, after midnight AND I HAVE NO DESIRE TO RUN. Not only am I exhausted but my joints are kind of angry at me today from my constant movement at work, so even though the earth is screaming at me to run I have to say no. Plus I didn't eat enough earlier and it feels much better to sit at my desk eating warmed-up leftovers of the dinner that I didn't finish.

4. I COOKED TODAY. WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK. Boyfriend has been away for a few weeks now and I've been reliving my single days and I have to admit, that guy just makes me better. Better at personal hygiene (eeww... you needed to know that), better at eating right, better at shopping and cooking, better at keeping house. I guess when there's another person to share your space with, you put more effort into it; now with him temporarily gone, I stopped giving a shit. Most notably, I stopped cooking meals. When it's just me, I feed myself for energy and that's about all the thought that goes into it. You could say that my hating on food bloggers in point #1 is totally wrapped up in this, but when I'm feeding myself for fuel I don't give a shit about side dishes or having a "theme" or following trends like quinoa or chia seeds. That shit is gross. I digress. Last week, I made boxed mac and cheese, but I knew that pasta carbs and neon orange powder wasn't enough to satisfy my physiological needs. I substituted the suggested margarine and milk for Greek yogurt and BOOM... less fat plus protein. It wasn't my proudest culinary moment, but I ate the suggested serving size and felt perfectly satiated, and in addition that box of mac and cheese lasted DAYS because I'm a boss like that. Tonight's meal consisted of a sort of Mexican pasta (I think? I have no idea how to describe it), black beans, and green salsa BECAUSE THAT TOTALLY COUNTS AS FRUIT. I'm not wild about the amount of pasta I've been having lately, but it's panty-friendly and I hate having to go to the grocery store more than absolutely necessary.

5. Blog lovin:
http://wtfplus.tumblr.com/
Okay so... everyone is beautiful and we shouldn't judge body types and blah blah blah but I fundamentally disagree with the editor of this blog, because my personal experience being overweight obese has taught me that compromising your health to make a statement to society about self-esteem is not worth it. I loved myself then, I love myself now, and now I'm skinnier AND healthier so I'm going to call that a win. And I am genuinely happy to know that the editor appears to have accepted herself, so I can live agreeing to disagree on the subject and taking this blog at face-value. Because as a still plus-size person, OMG ALL OF IT IS SO TRUE. At a current size 12 I have relatively few problems dressing myself but it wasn't that long ago that I was scraping at the bottom of the barrel trying to find ANYTHING that would fit and my style definitely suffered for it. I love that someone has cared enough to devote the time to share her comedic talents on the subject.

http://xoxonettap.com
HOLY HONESTY BATMAN. It's refreshing. I had intermittently followed this blog a few years back but the "styles I love" pattern of the posts were boring and I didn't keep up with it. I don't know what made me go to the site today but I was stopped dead in my tracks to see that the nature of the posts had changed dramatically and all of a sudden someone who once bored me could be my food sister (that's a thing... starting now). Sometimes you just need to know that someone else feels the same way.

6. I went back to the mall today to get more colors of the skinny corduroy pants and found that they were marked down from $3.97 to $1.97. Yeah, okay, I love America. I don't know what happened over the weekend that they felt it necessary to slash the price a ridiculous 50%, but I scored so whatever. I also had a feeling that there was something special waiting for me at Target so I headed there next and found a cocktail dress originally $70 marked down to $5.25. It was the only one I could find like it anywhere in the ladies' section... it came in a slate gray color in a size 14 and fit me perfectly. I must have done something awesome to have pleased the mall gods like this. #lucky

7. I took some mental notes as I was trying on other items that I didn't end up buying. First up: empire waists wtf? I am a textbook hourglass shape and I'm so proud of that fact that I don't mind you hating on me for it, I understand your envy. ANYWAY. Empire waists look... just bad. I tried different dresses with the empire waist and nothing worked so if you can rock the empire I secretly hate you. Second, I so desperately want a maxi dress and I finally found one I loved but again... not hourglass friendly. And peplum is not my friend. I was really upset until I remembered that I got pants for $1.97 and I look banging in clingy dresses, so I'm still winning at life.

8. CONFESSION TIME. At one point recently my weight had reached 216.5. It was a combination of things that lead to this and I wasn't entirely surprised by the news but it was still disappointing. I have made some corrections in my diet and I'm super super happy to report that I weighed in today at 209.5 so... progress.

Monday, July 22, 2013

mexican monkey.

I don't remember my last run but I know that it wasn't good. I'm not talking about the pace or the distance, but the soreness in my foot that followed for more than a day after. I put running on the back burner for a little bit thinking that I could always re-train myself, that I could re-condition later once my foot was fully healed. A few weeks passed, then a chance to do touristy things in downtown Chicago had me feeling like superwoman: over 4 miles walking in leather sandals and I damn near had to be carried back home from the swelling and throbbing in my foot. The pain comes in a slow creep, a gradual wave that starts as a flicker and grows to such intensity that it's undeniable when I'm in trouble. At that stage my foot looks puffy, my toes are hard to flex, and don't even think about asking me to bear the weight of my own body.

My healthy leg has taken a serious beating lately.

I've been generally happy to be taking the summer off from running (or... exercising in general) since I am currently without a gym membership and I am vehemently opposed to running functioning in this weather. But the truth is, the extra pounds and the lack of routine are really weighing on me (no pun intended).

And then, out of nowhere, a guest at work who I know very well stopped in for the first time in ages and I guess she hadn't seen my [overall] weight loss. So today, feeling down in the dumps that my foot still hurts and I want to run but I can't and worrying about the potential damage I did eating all that fried food on Friday night, a random compliment reminded me that standing still is still better than going backwards.

At least there's that.


In some other long-overdue news, NON SCALE VICTORIES:

I bought a belt. In fact, I bought four belts. It was horrifying in the store having to search for the largest size of belt in the rack and subsequently worrying that even the biggest belt wouldn't buckle. I did encounter a few belts that didn't fit (screw you, child-bearing hips) and I was absolutely panicked that people were secretly judging me in the store, but eventually I figured out that there's no standard to belt sizes and some are just smaller than others. I was looking for a chunky brown leather belt with a simple buckle and I found some that were either too small or too expensive, so for the mean time I settled on a a 3 pack of Steve Madden skinny belts in white, coral, and gold, and a braided brown leather beauty from H&M. They have instantly spruced up my wardrobe and I'm happy to report that belts and I are actually friends now.

White shorts. "White" anything will always be a victory, but these white shorts were a double whammy. I walked into the store directly towards the display of white shorts (on sale, score!) and picked up a size smaller than what I've been wearing. I was thinking maybe I should size up because white can be unforgiving, but I persisted and I won. So I am a proud owner of white shorts that not only zip but fit comfortably. If my foot was in better condition I would have gone down even one more size but that kind of wishful thinking is seriously unrealistic at this point in the summer. I want to buy things I can actually wear this season.

Skinny corduroy pants and size M shirts, for obvious reasons. It's still a total mindfuck when I pick up my number/size from the rack thinking this won't fit this won't fit and then it fits. I've come to really appreciate dressing rooms because if I bought based off what my mind thinks I fit into I'd be swimming in all my clothes. Before, my options were to squeeze into the biggest size or buy nothing at all. I am very much in the habit of taking clothes home without trying them on and forcing them to work, because nothing's sadder than being stuck inside a dressing room with a pile of clothes that don't fit being reminded that you're too fat for everything; at least buying it and taking it home to make that discovery later affords you some privacy in your disappointment. To be honest, that's exactly what I did with the corduroy pants: I grabbed my size, looked at them on the hanger and thought my ass is WAY bigger than that and put them in my pile anyway with the idea that they would fit someday. When I got home, I started to regret the purchase and then I remember I only paid $4 and I talked myself into trying them on. Even if they don't fit, it's only four dollars so who cares? They're not going to fit but it was only four dollars. Just see how bad it is first, you can always wear them later. My heart was panicked as I slipped my ankles through expecting for the fabric to stop at my calves, then at my thighs, then at my hips. It wasn't until I had them buttoned, zipped, and standing in front of the mirror that I actually believed that those tiny, skinny, impossibly tight pants were not only on my frame, but they looked good.

Everyone deserves to feel this good.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

i was waiting for so long.

MY BODY HURTS.

I FUCKING MISSED THIS.

OMG OMG OMG OMG OMG.

THIS IS AWESOME.

I WANT MORE.

I need to take it easy.

My podiatrist cleared me to run again beginning Tuesday June 18, so naturally I dressed for a run shortly after midnight last night. I had made promises that I would only run 1 or 2 km, come back home, sleep, and re-assess my situation in the morning after my foot had a chance to respond to all the new trauma, but let's be real. I started running and I didn't want to stop. I didn't set out with a route in mind which was problem #1, and I never really gave myself rules about when to walk, when to stop, and when to call an ambulance (problem #2). I found myself with a stress fracture by running through the pain and that's a habit I need to break starting yesterday.

It's been over a month since I've had a proper run and my lungs felt the burn. Within the first half-kilometer, I contemplated walking because I thought my heart was going to burst out of my chest, and it took a long time before I stopped thinking those thoughts. At 2.5 km I was committed to running a full 5 km and THANKFULLY my brain set up some red flags. That's how this all started: reach the goal at any cost.

I think running for the next few weeks, if not months, will be spent thinking through the entire process. At one point I had to remove my earbuds so I could focus on my foot. I had to be mindful of my speed, cracks in the road, hills, and how I land on my left foot, the entire time asking myself does that hurt? should that hurt? is this normal? how does the other foot feel? are you just making this up? OMG I'M PANICKING.

The greatest thing I learned last night is that while my one foot is still healing, my other foot is fine which gives me a great reference point. It feels good to be back :)

Side note (MAJOR NEWS): I tried on a pair of New Balance running shoes this weekend (they were for my dad, his and my feet are roughly the same size) and I spent days thinking about getting a pair for myself. It's been such a long time since I've worn traditional athletic shoes that I've missed so much of the new technology and I have to admit... these NB shoes were light as air and cute-cute-cute. And then I put on my Vibrams. HAHAHAHA Traditional shoes are whack. Delusion over.


Finally, stats:

I ran 5.36 km in 40:20
My foot doesn't hurt and it's not sore today
I really should lift weights more
I gained 2 pounds throughout this ordeal. 6/18/2013 weigh in: 209.0

Monday, June 17, 2013

trying to fight the in between.

I have two suitcases that have become the center of my world lately: a small one for weekends in Des Moines, and a larger one for weekends in Chicago. All the same stuff gets shuffled back and forth between the two so much that I never bother to unpack anymore; rather, I follow a re-pack process that basically transfers the essentials from one bag to the other.

The problem I that I never know what I have. Is my contact solution in this bag or that bag? When's the last time I washed that dress? Where do I keep my bathing suit? And how many pairs of shoes do I need this weekend?

It's understandably frustrating.

But none of that matters. None of it. Not the fact that I might be wearing dirty clothes right at this second. Not the fact that there's sand in my suitcase from the flip flops I wore to the lake yesterday. Not the fact that I'm pretty sure I lost my deodorant either in my car or behind some furniture.

It doesn't matter because I'm going running tonight.

#pleaseletitbehealed

Saturday, June 8, 2013

for good fun.

Iowa's way behind when it comes to new music but I was eating this shit up in Chicago last weekend... I couldn't change the station without hearing this song. After the sixth or seventh time hearing it (in a row) I think I'm ready to declare this the song of the summer. Also, I kind of love it, but I haven't heard it on the radio at home yet which means there's still plenty of time for my love to turn into hate. But it still stands as the song of the summer. I declared it.

I want to run so bad. SO BAD. I've been having dreams about running, on Tuesday night I dreamed I ran a half marathon and I woke up feeling so accomplished, I almost have a hard time believe that it didn't happen. It was so incredibly real that I can't shake the feeling. Also incredibly real was last night's nightmare that I went for my first run and found that I couldn't run. I got about six hours of sleep before the panic of that dream woke me in a cold sweat.

I have been complaining to those who will listen that weight loss was so much easier in the beginning. I'm so disappointed that I've stalled AGAIN, especially so close to such a big goal, and I started to long for the days fifty, sixty, seventy pounds ago when I knew that every morning on the scale would be a victory.

Maybe I'm reminiscing too much and glossing over the shitty parts (oh it was definitely shitty back then) but being unable to exercise isn't helping any. Thankfully, I woke up this morning with this dedication, this fire, that wasn't going to keep me down. I woke, I dressed, and I got to it. Just like that. There was no thought involved, just action.

Twenty minutes on the elliptical, three rounds of my weight lifting routine, and 30 minutes spent with Hilary Burnett doing her intermediate routine.

I have felt so calm today. So calm, and so NOT HUNGRY. I know tomorrow my body's going to be angry for my sudden enthusiasm but I miss this.

I can't run. I want to run, but I can't. There's no boot holding me back now but I was advised to take it easy and I had a shaky experience on the elliptical, so my internal sensors are screaming NO every time my heart starts to ache for the pavement.

I need to learn to be happy with what I have. I could be happy. I could be.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

up all night to get some.

As of 11:15 this morning I am officially out of the boot!... kinda.

My podiatrist opted against additional x-rays since my progress has been so stellar but I do have some tenderness and sensitivity in the region of my fracture which leads him to believe that it's healed but still in the process of healing? Confusing, I know. The takeaway from today's meeting is that I served myself well by being patient with the boot, wearing it consistently, and taking a load off (literally).

The bad news is that I am still banned from running for the next two weeks, and the boot returning is always a threat if I start to feel pain of any sorts. So my goal for the next two weeks is to be kind to my feet! I'll need to build up strength in my foot again, starting out slowly I'll reintroduce weight-bearing activities like walking and ellipticalling and I'm getting back to Pilates and weight lifting, which I should have been doing all along but screw you for judging.

I know I was griping about my home gym before, but now I'm actually kind of glad. Is still haven't busted out my new weights set and you know how much I love having new toys to play with.

I'm just happy that through all of this I've had insurance and the resources necessary to take care of my health properly. Not everyone is so lucky.


PS - a side note to gripe about something my doctor said today: he told me I need to be wearing the athletic shoes I run in because they have "proper arch support" to help my foot heal faster. I never told him what kind of shoes I run in so he must have assumed that I use standard trainers. I understand why some scientists believe that you need cushioning to support the foot, but the science isn't 100% there. My doc specifically said that if I don't wear proper shoes my high arch would collapse and I know for a fact that his statement is a lie. 1) I have unusually high arches and 2) I have spent most of my LIFE barefoot (no exaggeration there)... my body has adjusted. My foot naturally supports its arch without the use of shoes or cushioning or orthotics... I have very strong foot muscles if you care to test me on this. I agree that flip-flops are not proper shoes to be wearing short of communal showers and swimming pools (poor choice on wearing flip flops to my appointment this morning) but I will not have anyone tell me that I need orthotics to "support my arch" TO HEAL A FRACTURED METATARSAL. Plus, omg the hypocrisy kills me, the boot which he prescribed to me for TWO WEEKS had zero arch support, zero toe support, zero heel support, came in a standard unisex size L without differentiating between right foot and left foot... you cannot tell me that mass produced shoes sold for profit are optimized for my body's mechanics. Science aside, the shoe industry is a BUSINESS that operates in a way meant to make money off the greatest number of people possible. I am pro-science, and I pro-research, I believe my doctor is a smart guy who really is trying to help me, but I'm an expert on my body and I know beyond any doubt that my arches are not about to collapse anytime soon. And I certainly don't need anyone selling me $50 shoe inserts along with stories intended to instill me with the fear of my feet imploding. Thanks but no thanks, I know how medical product sponsorships work.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

and I feel...


Note: not my foot.

Between my foot fracture and my constant traveling, there has been exactly nothing on the exercise front. No Pilates, no swimming, no weight lifting. I had good intentions, but other things became more important and now I'm more than halfway through my boot experience and all I can say is that I've spent a lot of time sitting.

I've been eating like shit and sitting. Bad news.

When I saw my neurologist last week, she weighed me. I had a good idea of what my weight was but color me surprised when that scale read 218.0. I knew it was wrong (between the boot, my clothes, the fact that I hadn't pooped, and the meal I ate before I came into the office) but for that moment in time that's what my weight was. It's down in my medical records now which makes me sad, but then I realized... what if I was wrong? What if I really gained all that weight?

My last weigh-in was in April 30, I logged in at 207.0. Today, May 29, almost a month later, I'm at 207.5 I'm sure my weight has gone through a roller coaster course since then, but I'm pleased that after all this time the damage has been minimal. What a load off!

My foot still isn't feeling that great, and that's just WALKING. I can't even imagine running right now so I'm preparing myself for more time in the boot, although maybe that'll change by my follow-up appointment next Tuesday. Fingers crossed!

Since I've been spending so much time out of town and now with my foot being fractured, I suspended my gym membership. Obviously I can't do cardio but I should be keeping up with weight lifting... my bad. I just can't justify a gym membership to lift weights when my best routine only lasts 20 minutes... it takes longer to dress and drive to the gym. So I'm meeting someone in town tomorrow to buy a used set of adjustable dumbbells! I'm pretty excited.

I'm not thrilled that I'm [unintentionally] building a home gym here, but I need something and a $30 Craigslist score is too good to pass up.

Monday, May 20, 2013

feel the day today.

This. This shit. It finally happened.

And by "it" I mean the almost unavoidable running injury. I spend a lot of time talking about the wonders of Vibram Five Fingers, but the truth is that running is a tough sport and eventually your body will need a break.

Or in my case, your body will break.

In the last three weeks, I have run exactly three times. The first was a late night 10km run in the rain, the second was 5km mid-afternoon also in the rain, and the third was just shy of 9km running about the Abbott campus north of Chicago. Each time, my foot was uncomfortable during the run, sore immediately after, and extremely tender the following morning. It's hard to tell if my extremities swell because of my Diamox/Lasix regimen, I just don't have enough free fluid in my body for it to collect noticeably in any one area, but I could tell that something was off. I asked friends, I consulted Dr Google, I rested 10 days between runs and the intensity of my discomfort only grew.

At work this morning, I grew a pair and called a podiatrists' office recommended to me through my insurance and they squeezed me in later in the afternoon. I left work early, drove to the office, and within minutes I was having x-rays taken and was sitting in an exam chair waiting to be seen. Doc asked some questions, pushed on various parts of my upper foot, and dropped the news:

Likely stress fracture, 3rd metatarsal on the left foot.

Everything I had read on the Internet gave me the advance warning to expect this, but it's still disappointing nonetheless. But the nagging feeling that drove me to make the appointment this morning is also the voice of reason: I could take care of this now while it's still minor, or I could roll the dice and run the risk of developing serious problems down the road.

The good news is that I was expecting 6-8 weeks of avoiding weight-bearing activities and the doctor prescribed two weeks for now. In two weeks, I'll have a follow-up at which point he will reassess the situation. I have every intention of being smart for the next two weeks, I feel like that's a pretty small price to pay for a good outcome. I've been cleared for low-impact activities such as normal walking (nothing crazy), swimming, and weight lifting (sitting down, of course) which is great because it's practically summer and my apartment's pool is opening soon.

The down side is that it's practically summer, and I tan incredibly easy. Awkward summer tan lines FTW? Nope.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

going down swinging.

I took a package of these monstrosities home from the grocery store on Saturday with the idea that I would follow the serving size (two cookies, 140 calories) and I would have a treat to last me weeks. Yeah... that didn't happen. By Sunday I had already cleaned out close to half of the package. #NoSelfRestraint

I ate the last two cookies before heading out for a run today. Normally a banana is my pre-run nom of choice, but I opted for the cookies to be done with them. GET THEM OUT OF MY FACE. I think it goes without saying that I can't have treats in large quantities like that because the simple fact of knowing it's in the pantry will drive me to think about it constantly. I have been thinking about cookies all week, not necessarily because I wanted cookies but because I knew they were there. The lesson to learn from this is that I still have trust issues with myself, and for now it's safer for my mental and physical health if I stick to single serving packages to prevent myself from going off the deep end.

Sure, it's not as economical to go the single-serving route (bulk saves!) but... you know how people will say things like "I would do anything..." or "I would pay anything..."? Yeah. That. I would do anything, I would pay anything, to be healthy (and skinny). So there. Here's my cost: I gotta pay more for less economical portions of food, especially when it comes to treats.

Because I'm a normal person not on a diet, and I get to have cookies too. Don't judge.


Anyway... HUGE non scale victories happening today.

1. White pants. Okay, they're capri pants, details ugh. The last time I wore these last August, I was about 15-20 pounds heavier (fighting with the scale right now so I don't exactly know my numbers) and I remember thinking "ugh, these would be so perfect 10 pounds from now." At 15-20 ish pounds, I can verify that my thoughts were true. These, in fact, might be a little too big now but my weight doesn't always cooperate with my seasonally inappropriate wardrobe so I'm going to wear the shit out of these pants until they fall off my hips.

2. That brings me to my next victory... belts. If you don't already know, fat people can't wear belts. Normally our pants dig into our skin so bad that we already suffer from red welts banded around our midsection without also adding the torture of restricted leather and a metal buckle. Belts and fat people do not get along. Plus, maybe this is a personal thing, but I was always very conscious to buy extra long shirts to cover the waist band of my pants so you couldn't even see a belt if I bothered to wear one. I was so concerned about hiding my lumps of fat that wearing a belt never served a fashion purpose, and I certainly didn't need a belt since my pants usually were snug on their own. But but but... I need a belt. And my midsection is flat enough that I want to show off a belt. I think I'm gonna go to the store and buy a belt... for the first time ever (seriously). Umm, where does one procure a belt? Are there belt stores or something? Seriously. I need help.

3. My panties don't fit. At first I thought I was imagining it, then I convinced myself it was one pair of panties in particular, then I thought that all the fabric on every piece of lingerie I own was simultaneously becoming too stretchy. No, it's confirmed: I'm definitely a smaller size now. I have tried every cut, every color, different types of fabric (cotton, lace, silk...), same results. All my panties come from VS and in my entire history of shopping there I've never bought anything besides an XL but I can proudly say I am L now. My ass is still big, whatever. My Mexican roots and Velveeta have made damn sure that it will always stay that way and I'm okay with that. #curvyissexy


Badonkadonk courtesy of Velveeta.

Monday, May 6, 2013

is everything really meant to change?

Numbered list Monday! (Shush, that's a thing now).

1. I am definitely an inclement-weather runner. 70 degrees and sunny... all of Iowa City is hitting the pavement, and you can usually find me napping. I don't like sunny runs! You won't convince me to wear a hat (that would involve buying a hat) and running with sunglasses is just awful. No sunny runs. 46 and raining, now THAT'S where it's at. I don't mind being wet when I run (not that it happens between my water resistant pants and a windbreaker over my shirt) and Vibrams have a super-special-awesome power of not holding onto water. It's my idea of perfection.

2. Not that I've been to the gym in a while but... my speed training treadmill experiment may have paid off? I've brought my 5k time to 32-ish minutes (give or take) and I'm learning how to kick. I'm not in the habit of ending runs with kicks, usually because I'm beat towards the end, but I managed to run an 8:50 mile the other day and it was exhilarating. My body felt like it was dying but I survived to brag. Good times!

3. I've only gone on short runs as of late, but it seems like my average pace has increased. I want to believe it's because of the speed torture experiments I was doing at the gym, but it could just be that I have less weight to carry around. I guess it doesn't really matter. The fact that my natural pace is at 10:30/mile is AWESOME and I'm proud and if you're judging then you suck. The first time I ran a full uninterrupted mile, it was almost 17 minutes and I spent the entire time praying for it to end. Now my tempo is 10:30, my PR is 8:50... that is undeniable progress.

4. Yesterday was Cinco de Mayo and as a Mexican in denial, I have some things to say about this. First, I love celebrating pretend holidays, but this one in particular barely even registers on the radar in Mexico. Valentine's Day, Son's Day (that's a real thing)... basically everything is bigger than Cinco. I'm pretty sure Bud Light or Jose Cuervo or some other awful company hijacked this holiday for PR purposes and it was a smart play. Way to go. But for serious, white people, LAY OFF THE AVOCADOS. I swear it's absolutely impossible finding avocados this time of year because they've all been picked over by the hoards of douchebags who equate May 5 with guacamole and margaritas. Tomorrow, the grocery stores will be full of avocados. Today, the grocery stores are probably already full of avocados. But yesterday and Saturday... no dice. And that really pisses me off. It's not uncommon for me to eat an avocado as an entire meal, in fact most of the time that's what I do with avocados. It's not a side, it's not a garnish. It's a fruit just like an apple or an orange and you should treat it as such. So yeah... my feathers are all ruffled because a pretend holiday has motivated tons of people to clean out all the avocados from the grocery stores on the weekend that I went shopping for food. I NEED AVOCADOS, I'M DYINGGG. For serious. That shit's not a commodity in my house, it's a staple.

5. In case you're wondering, I did find avocados. But they were super super super green and I'll probably have to wait a week for them to ripen, and once that happens I'll have to eat 4 avocados in a day or else they'll start to turn. I have so much anger. #mexicanproblems. Speaking of which... I had to drive an hour out of town to find my favorite tortillas. Normally we pick them up from Sam's Club when we visit my family in Des Moines but trips to the 515 have been sparse lately. We tried the Sam's Club in Cedar Rapids and they don't stock that product there which really broke my heart. I had to make the drive to the QC for a Craigslist thing anyhow so I convinced boyfriend to come with me under the guise of hunting for these tortillas at the Davenport Sam's Club. [Side note, I love Craigslist, but it's really pissing me off that they've added the LOCAL RESULTS feature at the bottom of the page because I always seem to find the PERFECT item 50 miles away. It's always 50 miles.] The Quad Cities delivered and we walked away with SIX BOXES of tortillas. Thank goodness we happened to go shopping on Cinco de Mayo or else people might have thought I was Mexican or something. HAHAHAHAHA ethnic denial aside, why do I have to drive an hour to find the perfect tortilla? I'm not exactly sure if that's #mexicanproblems or #ruraliowaproblems.

6. Surprising fact: IIH will get you permanently deferred from donating plasma (and depending on the state in which you reside, your name might be added to a D0-NOT-ACCEPT registry) but donating blood and blood products is perfectly okay. The only reason this bothers me is because donating blood is a voluntary activity and donating plasma pays you for your time. So... you're healthy enough to do things for free but not healthy enough to get paid? I call bullshit. As it was explained to me, plasma cannot be collected because the idiopathic nature of the condition makes it impossible to tell the effects of the plasmapheresis and it's "for our safety." Except... they're perfectly happy to collect platelets which is the same effing process (down to the same machines) they use for collecting plasma. Now, I hope I'm not giving off the wrong vibe here. I wholly support the blood DONATION industry, I think it's a marvelous thing to do and if you're healthy you should consider doing it as often as you can (I am a proud O negative and no stranger to the UI DeGowin Blood Center). They have worked with me for years navigating the details of my condition and they've been happy to take my whole blood (double units, sometimes) and platelets on many occasions, and I would never complain about sitting in those chairs (SAVE A LIFE, FOLKS). But places like BioLife... suck it. Greedy bastards.

7. Two weeks and a day until my next neuro appointment. I don't know if I should hopeful for news or just prepare myself for the same routine? Things feel different, but I'm not sure if I'm just reading into it more than I should.

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

standing by through good and through trying times.

Fun fact of the day: ten gallons of milk weigh roughly 85 pounds.
Second fun fact of the day: I have lost the weight equivalent of 10 gallons of milk.

I'm not going to lie, I would describe my eating as of late with the word "sloppy," and I have been avoiding the gym like mad. Actually, avoiding all exercise. Just don't feel like it these days. But the truth behind my distorted perception is that I really do eat very little, and the "bad" choices I make are usually small and measured, and the days when I throw all my rules out the window I'm still in the habit of thinking healthier.

Like, Sundays are always a bad day for me. It starts with boyfriend's famous breakfast burritos which are basically carb bombs. I always go for two servings, but as of the last few months the definition of "two servings" has changed. In the past it meant two giant burritos; now our burritos are limited by the size of the tortillas we use (Santa Fe Tortilla Company whole grain tortillas, 8 inches at 100 calories each) and if I insist on seconds, then I skip the second tortilla and make a sort of scrambled hash instead. Also, skip the cheese. Always skip the cheese.

I guess the benefit to my "bad" weekends is that I never feel deprived, and I go about the rest of the week making super good choices knowing that I need to offset things like Sunday's breakfast burritos and last night's bad choices at Red Lobster. It's sort of equivalent to the Zig Zag concept since I calorie load on varying days, maybe my recent success has something to do with the change in my eating patterns (gotta admit, it's super weird and I'd be hard pressed to define any regularity in how/when I decide to indulge)?

Who knows. It's working though.

I told boyfriend last night I think I might have BDD. When I look down at my body, I see pretty much exactly the same thing from a year, two years ago. In my head I haven't changed, but every once in a while I get a glimpse of myself in the mirror and it startles me. I saw the reflection of a pair of legs walking in a pane of glass and I was thinking "damn, those are nice stems." It took a while to register that those were my legs, and even then... I looked down at my legs and decided that the glass was lying to me. I'm convinced every mirror in my life is a trick mirror. Is there a lite version of BDD? I'm not making jokes here. I don't obsess about my appearance, there's just... a disconnect. When I close my eyes and try to imagine what I look like, I can't visualize a thing. I have no idea. I haven't the slightest clue about how much space I occupy, I can look at a chair and think "there's no way I can sit there" and then I find that there are spare inches of space on either size of my bum. I've had that problem with clothes, I'm still in the habit of picking up the size L or XL from the rack and finding that it doesn't fit. I am not a Medium. But apparently I am? Tell my brain that.

I chose today's banner picture because I needed a strong visualization for what 85 pounds represents. I have lived the life and still have no idea what losing 85 pounds means. Despite my almost year of weight lifting, there's no way in the seven levels of hell that I could carry 10 gallons of milk on my body, and for that I am extremely grateful and proud of my accomplishment. But there's still 37 to go and that's what I'm focused on.

Monday, April 22, 2013

la nuit a été longue.

Late night 10.52km in the rain. Empty thoughts and good music. Pure joy.

209.0 and a renewed sense of confidence. I am awesome.

Monday, April 15, 2013

go on and on.

SO... I've been avoiding this. THISSSS.

I ate like shit last week/over the weekend. And I skipped the gym... several times. And when I did make it to the gym, it was pretty much disaster after disaster.

I feel like my arm muscles are getting softer.

For some reason I couldn't buckle down and get my training in order. I couldn't make it through ten minutes of a run, I couldn't lift without thinking "quit now, quit now, quit now," everywhere I tried it felt like my best was only half as good. As if that wasn't bad enough, I went nut balls on half of a Pizza Hut $10 big box (HALF... in one sitting! who does that?), another day I had 2 cherry cokes and a Happy Meal, another day was my favorite 7 Seas Burrito (and I licked the plate clean). That's just what I had from restaurants, I can't even keep track of my at-home indulgences.

Hot mess, to put it lightly.

I kept telling myself "something is better than nothing" but I'm not sure I believed it. I felt bad that I didn't try harder. But I knew eventually I would have to make peace with the scale and accept the consequences because that's the only way to move forward.

Bad choices happen, but I have to keep going.

210.0! Hot diggity damn I did not see that coming. TEN. TEN. TENNNNN!!! So, half a pound. Half a pound, and then ten to go. And then wonderland. I'm so very humbled.

ps - today's banner pic is a total shout-out to iTunes, without which I probably would not have been so successful in my get-healthy endeavor. no one should have to suffer the gym in silence.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

ready to go.


Don't ask me why, but this picture cracks me up.

Because I haven't done this in a while...
09 April 2013
current weight: 210.5

# 1/25/2011 3/05/2012 7/18/2012 1/10/2013 4/09/2013 Difference
Bust 47.5 45.0 43.75 43.0 42.0
-5.5
Chest 44.5 39.0 37.5 37.5 36.25
-8.25
Waist 44.0 40.0 38.5 38.5 38.0
-6.0
Hips 54.5 51.0 47.5 47.5 46.25
-8.25
Thighs, L/R 30.5/30.0 28.5/28.5 27.75/27.75 27.5/27.5 26.5/26.5
-4.0
Calves, L/R 20.0/20.5 20.5/20.0 18.0/18.0 17.25/17.5 16.75/17.0
-3.0
Upper Arms, L/R 17.5/17.5 16.5/16.5 15.0/15.75 15.5/16.0 15.5/15.75
-2.0
Forearms, L/R 12.5/13.0 11.5/12.5 11.75/11.5 /11.5/11.5 11.5/11.5
-1.0

Monday, April 8, 2013

when you're lying down on the floor.

I made a lot of poor choices over the last few days. It started with bread and salt on Thursday and it snowballed from there.


Stupid Jimmy John's and their stupid delicious bread.

I know better, but my stupid fat kid tendencies sometimes get the best of me. And that stupid high schooler who came around selling fundraiser chocolates when I was breaking down, yeah... fuck that kid.


They were PEANUT BUTTER BEARS. I couldn't say no.

And two of the most sacred words on the planet:


Not my restaurant, but I bet it's still dirty cheap and filthy delicious.

That's just the tip of the iceberg. I made bad decisions for days, but above it all I knew that no matter what I had to go to the gym. And gym I did.

Even when the clock failed me on Thursday, I made time for the elliptical at home.

Even when I had better more enticing plans on Friday, I woke up early to run.

Even when my legs quit on me on Saturday, I forced myself into a power walk.

Because every little bit counts, and something is always better than nothing.

As if the guilt wasn't eating away at me enough, my intestines decided to punish me too. So thanks, biology, for your not-so-subtle reminder to not treat my body this way. I'd like to say that I won't do it again, but I definitely haven't learned my lesson. But fuck you anyway, I won.

210.5

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

always come back for more.

I didn't even realize earlier when I posted that I reached another milestone today. 80 pounds lost so far!

Today's banner pic is in honor of Interstate 80 which cuts across the length of the great state of Iowa. Living in Iowa City, I-80 is a pretty big deal because we don't have our own freeway (just the Interstate) and it's pretty much the only road that'll take you anywhere out of town. 120 miles on 80 headed west will take you to my family in Des Moines, and 80 east for 12 hours will land you in Pittsburgh. Two of my favorite places. So yeah, mad love for 80.

To be honest, I thought I would look different after 80 pounds lost, but continuing in the theme of being honest, that was based on nothing. No facts, no previous experiences with weighing 212 pounds. It was plain wishful thinking. I had always hoped I would see myself at a weight this low but I really have been struggling with visualization lately. It all seems so... surreal.

I had taken great care at the beginning of my weight loss journey to not focus on the end result, mostly because the thought of having to lose 100+ pounds made me want to quit before I even started. I had never intentionally lost more than 5 pounds, so losing 20 or 50 or 100 was just out of the picture. Little by little, day by day, I've been slowly chipping away at the excess weight on my body, trusting in the process and having faith in myself. It hasn't been fast or easy, but I can tell you with every ounce of enthusiasm in my body that it was worth it.

The excitement that I feel today is not from realizing that I've lost 80 pounds, it's from realizing that I only have 42 more to go. After much thought and consideration, I have come to the conclusion that my final weight should be around 170 pounds. This is the first time in my adult life that 170 pounds is reasonable AND attainable. I don't know when it'll happen for me, but I can tell you how: eating less, moving more, and making better choices.

Moving forward from here is exhilarating. After all this time I finally have a goal and there is a light at the end of the tunnel. I get to count down to the end rather than counting up all the pounds. Of course health is still my main priority but I know that if I focus on achieving a healthy weight, biology will work out the rest of the details for me.

My short-short-short term goal is to lose 3 pounds. It would be the first time in too long that I will see my weight start 20X... even at 209 that's a sight worth fighting for.

The next goal after that is an obvious one: wonderland. 13 to go.

And after that... the final thirty. My next appointment with my lovely neurologist is towards the end of May, so for now I want to focus all my attention on getting as close to 199 as possible. I have exactly 7 weeks to go and I'm ready to do this.

j'aurais voulu être un artiste.

Because I forgot yesterday... GREEN DAY IN CONCERT WAS AMAZING. I had my concerns with Billy Joe having been in rehab recently, but they definitely had their mojo. I was a teen in college when American Idiot came out and even ten years later it's one of my favorite albums of all time. They rocked my face off. I can't even.

Anyhow.

I did my best to eat well (ha.. joke) over the weekend, but there was no fruits or veggies and I didn't exercise. And then alcohol and Doritos happened. And lots of eggs. And beef. Basically everything that I wouldn't normally do, I did. I was expecting a hit on the scale, but after 2 days of being back home I sitting pretty at 212.0. Yep, that's a 0.5 pound LOSS.

Awesome.

Monday, April 1, 2013

lightyears away.

LOTS OF THINGS TO DISCUSS TODAY (no worries, you won't find any April Fool's shit here).

First up, because I forgot to mention this on Saturday... a very happy, happy, happy birthday to my favorite, Miss Celine. I cried a little tear when I realized she turned 45 because I remember her in her 20s! I have magazine clippings from her 30th birthday and by then my Celine mania was in full effect, so to give you an idea it's been a LONG time. Most of the clips in the video above are from the A New Day... DVD but it's pretty representative of the Celine experience (she really is batshit crazy). But, if you're looking for a good Celine concert I suggest the Taking Chances World Tour DVD (I prefer the Montreal show but I've been rocking the Boston show at the gym lately) orrrrr you could always catch her in Las Vegas (Céline is wayyyy superior to A New Day..., hands down). Okay, shameless plug is over.

I visited my parents over the weekend and I am happy to report that I ate absolutely no Easter candy! Or pie, or ice cream, or anything sweet. I did have a Mike's Hard Strawberry Margarita, at 220 calories and 33g of carbs I did feel kind of bad for my indulgence but fuck it. I work hard.

In order to overcome my weight issues over the last couple of years, I've spent a lot of time trying to figure out where my problems come from. I know that I'm not an emotional eater (I'm an emotional starver! I like the feeling of control and deprivation) but beyond that it's been rather difficult to pinpoint my issues. The more time I dedicate to eating right and exercising regularly, the more it becomes apparent to me, most notably during my trips home. Here's a quick rundown:

  • I had to pack fruits in my overnight bag because I was almost certain there wouldn't be any when I got home. I was absolutely right. Except for a pair of really old, wrinkled, dried out oranges, there was literally nothing in the house in terms of fresh fruits and vegetables. I had always told myself that it's because my parents are extremely busy people (that part is true) and I only visit at the end of the week before they've gone grocery shopping, but the truth is that I don't really ever remember having fresh fruits and veggies in our house. Ever. Onions and potatoes, sure. But having a basket of a variety of fruits was never a thing for us.
  • My sister is on the Atkins diet. Wait, let me back up a bit. I've never been on a "diet," the best categorization for what I'm doing now is a (oh god, super cliché) lifestyle change. Having never tried an actual diet plan, I try to keep my criticisms to myself but from what I understand about food and nutrition and the body... you can't cut any food group out. They all exist for a reason. But what I do with MY body is MY business, and what other people do with theirs... just, don't rub it in my face okay? With that, here's my beef (HAHAHAHA Atkins pun): my sister (and her partner, who is also on the plan) were downing Bacardi and Diet Cokes like nobody's business because the drink has zero carbs. Sooo... she can't have fruit, she needs to be picky with her vegetables, but bottomless Bacardi-and-Cokes are okay because it's carb free? I don't believe in that one bit. Now, I've already admitted that I drank this weekend (one Mike's Margarita) because I'm a fucking adult and drinking is allowed, but for fucking serious? I will sit on my high horse because my 80 pound weight loss (and counting!) was not achieved with endless meat and Bacardi. My biggest issue with diet trends in general is that they're predicated on these rules which don't make sense. I don't believe that the Atkins diet was created with the intention of abusing the no-carb loophole to include Bacardi (and other such items), but these diets give people the impression that, as long as they follow the "rules," they're doing something healthy for themselves. No. Drop the meat, have an apple, for fuck's sake.
  • It came up in an unrelated conversation that my mom had had a consultation for weight loss surgery. Even at my heaviest (292 pounds, which was WAY heavier than my mom has ever been) I never considered it. Not only do I think of surgery as the cheap way out, it will never solve the emotional issues tied to why you gain the weight in the first place. I've been taking care of my head and my [figurative] heart as much as I've been caring for my body during this process and I know for a fact that surgery cannot offer the same. Plus, (and I wish more people would talk about this) there is something to be said about clawing your way out of your predicament. I can tell you that I'm a better person since I've begun dedicating myself to a healthier life, because a "healthier life" really includes EVERYTHING. Better health, better mind and body, better sleep, better self esteem... this has bled into every aspect of everything I do every minute of every day. I'm a better student because of the mental strength I have developed from running; I'm better at Pilates because I lift weights; I wear smaller clothes, I have more confidence, I rock the shit out of every day because I feel like a rock star because my yogurt and bananas for breakfast and the awesome 7 hours of sleep I got last night have me pumped for my return to the gym tonight. It's all so interconnected that I cannot even imagine taking the surgery route. When I asked my mom why she was considering the surgery she didn't answer; instead my sister piped in. "Because she's lazy." I wish my sister hadn't said that, I wish she hadn't robbed my mom of the opportunity to explain her choice, but the words were spoken and now I can't get it out of my head.
  • I was analyzing the food that we eat while at my parents' and it's always a variation of meat-and-starch or meat-and-grains. By my suggestion, we had a salad at dinner last night, but it was lettuce with WAY too many calorie-dense toppings and a really heavy dressing. I'm an adult now which means I get to make my own choices (and I really do trust my choices these days) so it wasn't a huge issue that I deviated from the norm this weekend (it was only two days, after all). But, so help me, I hope to never do that to my children. I don't even care about the organic versus pesticide, free range, cruelty free, hormone/antibiotic, blah blah blah blah nonsense. I don't want to live a life where all we eat is meat and potatoes. There's a lot to be said about a simple tomato/cucumber/fill-in-the-blank, you know?
  • I'm so stopped up from this weekend's dietary choices that I'm seriously happy that I don't live that way anymore.

Finally, we had a girl's shopping extravaganza on Saturday and I walked out with some cute scores from Target. I tried on several things but I only purchased two (a faux-leather jacket size L, and a black dress size L) but the real excitement came from the things that didn't go home with me. I tried on a Prabal Gurung dress in a size 14 (it was the only size available) and it zipped and it was ROOMY. I almost cried a happy tear. It didn't go home with me because I really needed a 12, and also because the silhouette was weird on my body (small details). There was also a super cute printed pencil skirt (bright flowers on a black background) that I could only find in a size 10. I couldn't get it to zip all the way but I did get it over my hips and bum. It's mind blowing to think that my normally large ass is almost a size 10. I'm not even upset that it didn't fit because this is the first time ever in my life that I could get a size 10 up past my knees. Yeah... I was a hefty kid. Deal with it.

I have a wild guess that I gained two pounds at home over the weekend and I'll probably spend all week dealing with the aftermath, but I'm surprisingly okay with that. It was a good weekend and I feel fabulous.

Friday, March 29, 2013

what a world, what a life.

212.5!

Holy shit.

I made a promise to myself that there would be no Easter candy eaten this weekend.

Gym time... and Green Day in concert tonight!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

the feeling that you can't go on.

213.5 on this beautiful Tuesday morning! Don't mind my good mood... I'm thrilled because I'm pretty sure we saw our last snow of the season yesterday. SPRINGGGGG!

I am 14 pounds away from wonderland (one-derland?). But also, I'm four pounds away from my weight starting 20_. I'm so excited my head is spinning.

Getting the elliptical this weekend was 100% for boyfriend; in fact, there were bits (okay, ALL) of me that thought this was a bad idea. I didn't want to lose my gym buddy (selfish, I know) and I had concerns that boyfriend's gym routine would not translate to a "home routine." But, I remembered how our individual weight loss journeys started and I came to a great conclusion (really, I knew the answer all along): I can't worry about him, I can only worry about me. So there you have it, I'm focused on me. That being said, I had a kickass workout at the gym after work yesterday and later in the night I spent another 30 minutes on the elliptical. Just because I could. And if I can be totally honest, it felt hella good.

Two days in and I can already telly you that it's absolutely amazing hopping on at any moment. It seems like such a waste to prep for the gym just to do 30 minutes, but it's not a big deal at all when it's inside your own home. There will be many more 30 minute elliptical sessions in my future... which is good, cuz I have 14 pounds to lose.

FOURTEEN OMG.

Monday, March 25, 2013

i can't believe.

WEEKEND ROUNDUP! Kinda. (There are a lot of words today and I sorta apologize for that. Not really)

  • There's soooo much politicking on TBL Season 11. It seems like things were so friendly and harmonious on Season 14 (except for Gina omg) that the strife between the S11 contestants really gives me hypertension. Also, I was dreaming about the show and I realized how absolutely ridiculous the show's premise is. I know these are real people doing real things in real gym, but they're also characters on a show. Important things to keep in mind.
  • WE GOT AN ELLIPTICAL! It's a Precor 546 commercial grade elliptical. I don't know if it's more awesome or dangerous that it's sitting in my living room, calling my name every minute of every day. Awesome because: I spent 90 minutes working out yesterday and the time flew by like nothing; dangerous because: I pay a lot for a gym membership, and I really should be running and lifting weights too. MODERATION BRO, MODERATION.
  • Lifting a 200+ pound of machinery up into a car, down from said car, up a flight of stairs, up another flight of stairs, through three rooms and a hallway, and then realizing it won't fit through the doorway and having to turn the piece of machinery back through the hallway into another room... yeah. ALL THAT. That's a great fucking workout. It's been two days, I cleaned out way too much Tylenol, and I'm still body-tired (body-tired is a thing, okay?).
  • I saw some Lauren Conrad style video this weekend and I learned how to do a fishtail braid. This is probably the third or fourth practical thing I've learned from the internet IN MY ENTIRE LIFE. I've been internetting since... 7 or 8 years old. I'm 26. That's pretty effing sad. And don't tell me about some shit recipe, or shit craft project, or shit whatever you found on Pinterest. PRACTICAL SKILLS, not gimmicks. If you don't do it every day, I'm judging your source material. PRACTICAL SKILLS. I learned how to braid, suck it.
  • In addition to our very awesome elliptical, UI Surplus had a stock of $10 Nike sports bras and $5 Dri Fit shirts. For some reason, wearing black and gold at the gym puts me in a bitching good mood. PLUSSS... (I'm totally eating my words on this here) I am a Dri Fit convert. For serious, that material will change your life workout. For the longest time I was trying to convince myself that cotton was okay under certain circumstances. No. Just... no. I have enough to worry about when I'm doing sprints on the treadmill, I don't need to be thinking about sweating through my shirt on top of it all. DRI FIT FOR THE WIN.
  • Oh yeah. Also. YES. THAT. Sweating through your shirt. Here's how I feel about sweat at the gym: I don't trust you if you're not sweating. My theory is, if you're not sweating you're not working hard enough. Unless you're one of those freaks with freaky non-functioning sweat glands, then you're okay (but you should probably wear a name tag or else I WILL judge you). Full disclosure: I sweat like crazy. I dress minimally at all times (year-round shorts or capri leggings, almost always tanks sometimes short sleeve shirts) and even STILL I sweat like mad. I have no shame about my under-boob sweat, it's just more proof that I had an awesome workout and you look like a dick flexing your muscles in the mirror. DO SOME CARDIO, or at least lift enough weights to break a sweat. Dick bag.
  • These days, I wear really small clothing sizes (okay, that's a lie... but the numbers feel small to ME and I don't care if you're judging because you're probably a whore) but it wasn't that long ago that I seriously struggled with dressing myself. This tumblr had me on the floor crying in hysterics. If you aren't/weren't an overweight female you probably won't understand, in which case skip this bullet point and move on with your life. But if you find yourself qualifying under the parameters of "overweight" and "female" and "broke" (or, maybe just "not wealthy") you'll understand what a bitch it is to find cute stuff that isn't stupid expensive. Because clothing manufacturers seem to think that fat = ugly, and... well, fuck them.
  • Lately I've been giving a lot of thought about my possible hypocrisy on the subject of weight loss. I only say "hypocrisy" because I think I might unintentionally be giving off that vibe? I certainly don't mean to do it on purpose. Here's the thing: I love myself. I've loved myself since... forever. This girl doesn't have self-esteem issues. Not at 292 pounds, not now, and definitely not anything in between. I know that my weight isn't my worth, but. Here's a big but here (HAHAHAH pun): there were times I felt bad about myself AND I'M ALLOWED TO FEEL THAT WAY. There were times I was desperate to be skinny, there were times I did desperate things, there were times that I just didn't give a fuck, and there were times when I was completely at peace with the state of things. No one ever said that feelings were consistent. The media has played into my issues in ways I cannot even begin to fathom, but it's pretty obvious that we have a prevalent anti-fat culture that is shaming overweight people without offering solutions, instructions, guidance, or support. It's awful. That being said, I have Victoria's Secret catalogs stacked in my bathroom. My lingerie drawers are stocked exclusively with VS products (and my Nike unmentionables)... not because I want to be a VS model, not because I aspire to look like them, but because I like their shit. There, I said it. I LIKE VICTORIA'S SECRET. That doesn't make me a bad woman or an anti-feminist. Plus, Alessandra Ambrosio has no right to criticize my body any more than I have a right to criticize hers. She's a beautiful girl, I'm a beautiful girl. It's called coexisting. If you have a problem with how small she is, get the fuck over it. When it comes to judging and expressing opinions about other women, here's a tip to ladies everywhere: GET THE FUCK OVER IT. Worry about yourself, I promise there's enough shit there to occupy your time forever. The skinny-girl-of-the-day, whether it be a famous person, or your neighbor, or yourself, she's no more or less a woman than the girl with "curves." PS - what the fuck is with this obsession with curves anyway? Some girls have boobs, some don't. Some girls have hips, some don't. Some girls have butts, some don't. Some are lucky and have it all, and others are perfect in their own way. I can like the Biggest Loser (even though I kinda don't, cuz I have serious issues with their methods) and I can like skinny models and pretty lingerie and I can be a size 12 with full hips and a nice bust, and if you're judging... you have too much time on your hands and I feel sorry for you. Take your shit elsewhere cuz I've got other things to worry about.
  • This weekend was pretty awesome. The pizza I had for dinner last night was pretty awesome. I'm pretty awesome. Deal with it.