Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Somebody has to say it

1. Noisy kids and their parents.
If you are in a public space, watch and discipline your kids.  I love kids but I can't stand the obnoxious, inconsiderate ones especially in a mall, restaurant, or a grocery store.  Yea, screaming and bawling is their way of expressing themselves but have some manners, you little fucks. And parents, have some consideration and manners yourselves, before I snatch your little "big guy" or "princess" away and shove them into oncoming traffic.
2. Baggy pants.
The purpose of pants is to cover you from the waste down, not from the bottom of your ass down.  They buy pants that are 5 sizes too small, they look like blind paraplegics who tried to dress themselves, and they waddle like they've just been gang-raped.  They're a shame to the supposed "civilized" human beings.
3. Mustache.
What's the deal with mustaches lately?  Hipster or not, it's ridiculous.  First it was the high-rising 80's pants that girls brought back, now you see mustaches on everything, even the fuzzy, pink ones on car grills.  What's next? Overalls?  Platform shoes?
4.  People who say "bless you" after someone sneezes.
Who is blessing whom?  Unless you are the one and only "chosen one", you do not have the power to bless anyone or anything.  What are you blessing them for?  And why do people get offended when someone doesn't say "bless you" after they sneeze?  Do they really need an ethereal affirmation after a natural bodily function?  If you believe in that kind of stuff and have the power to bless others, bless yourself and get on with it.  
5. "I like your outfit".
First of all, it's not "their" outfit.  They didn't design it.  Second, if you say "I like your outfit", don't get offended when the person doesn't say "thank you".  Because they didn't design it.  If the person does say "thank you", both of you are stupid.  Third, if you want to say something positive about someone's outfit and expect a "thank you", say something like, "I like your taste".  Fourth, don't be so vain.
6. Talking loudly on the phone.
The person you're talking with can hear you just fine.  In fact, the person might be holding his phone away from his face because you're so damn loud.  Not only can the person on the other line hear you clearly, but so can everyone around you in a 40-foot radius.
7. Women who wear too much perfume or smell like makeup.
8. It's "caramel", not "carmel".
Is it so hard to pronounce that extra vowel?  Who started saying "carmel" anyway?  It's caramelized butternut squash, it's caramelized onions, NOT carmelized.  

Thursday, May 23, 2013

5 years in recovery

In 5 years, I'll be 29: young enough to travel, old enough to know how to file my own taxes.  What will my life look like? 5 years in recovery seems like nothing compared to 10 years in my addictions.  Ideally, I would be in school studying a foreign language (maybe German), education, and cooking.  I would work in a music library, as a piano teacher, or in an animal shelter, and on the weekends, I would either stay home with my husband (?) and kids (?) in our pajamas, or take all of us to the zoo or a theme park.  I would have already traveled to Greece, Germany, and Ireland, and I would be an amazing cook.  During spring/winter/summer breaks, my kids and I would not be in school, so we would spend a lot of time in the kitchen baking things like peanut butter cookies and blueberry muffins that my husband would enjoy after a long day at work.  I would be able to have just one drink and be satisfied, and I would know how to swim and ride a bike. I would be able to read scary stories to my kids in the dark with just a flashlight.  I would teach my kids to be open-minded and know right from wrong.  I would be able to sit with happiness, sadness, and anger without isolating or acting out.  I would be accepting of my body, and be fully present during sex.  I would have quit smoking cigarettes and I would be recycling responsibly, not littering, and flossing every day.  I would take yoga classes and go on runs/walks every morning with my dog, not to maintain or lose weight but to be physically healthy.  I would appropriately let go of grudges and forgive myself for mistakes.  I would not have much material possessions, but my heart will be full of joy and contentment. Now that I think about it, I won't be able to do much after I have kids..unless I get a nanny.




Monday, May 20, 2013

News flash

It's all real.  I sometimes forget how real this is.  I was in so much pain for the last decade.  I deprived myself and abused myself so much, so violently.  I isolated and separated myself from my own potential.  I put guards up and used my sharp edges to keep people out.  I've not allowed myself to make deep, real connections with people and only roamed the earth making casual acquaintances.  And for that, I'm friendless and detached.  I forget how much damage I've done to myself and it feels unreal.  I'm surprised I didn't have a heart attack from all the purging and from my body having to constantly be in over drive to compensate for my starving.  I'm grateful for having started treatment before it was "too late".  Treatment just seems like repetitive, monotonous social skills-learning, but taking a step back, I realize, "I have an eating disorder.  I got myself here.  I can't have a "normal" life without going through intense psychological repair, and I will probably be  forever enslaved to food."  I've put myself through a 10-year suicide and it's come down to treatment, or death.
FYI: Eating disorders are the most fatal forms of mental illnesses, and it's a shame that its research is the least funded among all others'.



Thursday, May 16, 2013

If I were a soul without a body

I've been in treatment since the beginning of the year, and I've come to the point where I have to make plans for what to do once I'm out.  My insurance has bumped me down to 4 days a week, by my request.  I feel ready for discharge and I never thought I'd be able to say that.  Being in treatment has provided a safe, valid excuse for avoiding "real world responsibilities."  "I can't pay bills because I don't have a job"..."I can't get a job because I'm in treatment"..."I'm in treatment because I'm not mentally stable".  I think I'm almost ready to join the rest of society, but only in terms of eating like a normal person.  When I'm out of treatment, I want to allow myself to live life.  I want to travel and take a break and get out of my head.  I've been trapped in my addictions, I've been trapped in my destructiveness for so long.  I want to take healthy risks, I want to just get away.  It doesn't sound very realistic.  In order to be stable and successful in today's society, I know I'll need to find a job and all that stuff, but realistically, I want a break.  I want to go camping and roast marshmallows for the first time.  I want to go to the airport and get a one-way ticket to Bali and immerse myself in their culture, go to Italy and visit vineyards, go to Greece and lay on the beaches.  I want to travel the country in a Winnebago with my boyfriend and a dog.  I want to give healthy attention to my body and I want to nourish my soul.  When I'm out of treatment, I don't want to find a job right away.  I don't want a 9-5 lifestyle.  My whole life has been structured chaos.  I want to break free from rules, obligations, and the societal chains that restrict me from being a free spirit.  I feel like I've wasted so much of my life isolating and self-destructing.  I feel like the characters in "Dogtooth": aware of nothing outside of the home, indulging and making best of what is known, completely wasting away the preciousness of exploring the outside.


Monday, May 13, 2013

Dear Body,

You have been my vessel for nearly 24 years.  I'm sorry for letting you be violated and abused for so long.  I'm sorry for neglecting you for many years and causing irreversible damage.  I feel so disconnected to you.  I always have.  Ever since I was a child, especially since "those particular incidences", I thought of you as a target of pain, something that never goes away and is an unwanted reminder of something horrible, like bedbugs or herpes. I marvel at others' bodies and others' abilities to accept and show off their bodies.  How can some people carry themselves so elegantly through this world and place themselves in social situations so gracefully.  I see you as the product of 2 people who, I would like to believe, loved each other, but I don't want to fool myself.  You are a physical, tangible representation of the ugliness of my parents' relationship.  You're nothing but a shameful object to me.  But you have protected me from diseases and cold weathers, although poorly.  Slowly but surely, I'm entertaining the idea of your physical fluidity.. your malleability.  And I'm starting to take better care of you.  I'm nourishing you with food - something I have deprived you of for nearly half my life.  I've taken away harmful substances and I'm not hurting you as much.  I feel like I'm just getting to know you, the real you, without the misinformation my malnourished brain has been giving me.  My eyes, which I consider distorted, conniving lenses, are not kind to me.  I wish I could replace them with those who tell me, "I wish you could see what I see in you."  I'm stuck with you.  Unless I do some morbid limb/boob/skin/eyeball transplant.  But that's highly unlikely.  I need to be comfortable in you, or at least be comfortable in my dissatisfaction with you.  This is as good as it's gonna get.

Sincerely,
Me