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Body grief can bring body peace

The same God who made the world made you. Your body is a gift! When was the last time you saw yourself through Their eyes?

 

I’ve changed. A lot.

My body has gotten bigger, and softer. But so has my heart.

When I stopped worrying about my health, my health improved. After all those years chasing after chronic fatigue, turns out I just needed to eat. To some that might look like I eat more or “worse” than I used to. And I don’t care.

Because I trust my body. Sure, there are days where I don’t like that my clothes don’t fit. But I refuse to live a smaller life just so I can wear smaller pants. I do NOT want to go back to judging every.single.thing that I put in my mouth as healthy or junk.

My relationship with food hasn’t always been healthy, but it is now. And while my own food/body struggles didn’t necessarily stem from a fear of fat they did affect my weight. Not eating out of fear of eating something bad, wasn’t healthy. Worrying that eating a donut or a bag of chips would kill me, wasn’t healthy.

I know now that cutting out entire food groups isn’t healthy. I know now that when I limited what I ate I accidentally limited how much I ate. I know now that eating “good” food doesn’t make me a better person.

Listen, I know how to lose weight. I know how to maintain weight. I also know that those thoughts and strategies no longer serve me. I know they keep me small, in more ways than one.

I never really knew how hungry, or how unhealthy, I was. But now I know that my physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health are far more important than my size. So I‘ll keep eating.

So there.

 

Give yourself permission to grieve your younger/ideal body. And when you’re ready, start a body gratitude journal. Keep it simple, like “just for today, I’m grateful I have hands because I could wave to my neighbor” — focus on what your body can do more than how it looks.

 

Social distancing

Today’s list of feelings included: jealousy, gratitude, overwhelm, joy, frustration, peace, exhaustion, confusion, contentment, comfort, and the list goes on and on and on and on.

It may seem like your emotions (and eating habits) are on a wild and crazy rollercoaster. That’s ok. Actually, it’s pretty dang normal considering everything that’s happened/happening… Which is why I want you to stop scrolling and read this carefully: you are doing better than you think.

During a crisis, it’s fairly common for our food & body issues to increase or decrease. How are YOU feeling? How has this pandemic affected your relationship with food/body?

While physical distancing may be a current requirement, we don’t need to be socially distant! Please, reach out. You’re not alone.

You may also find yourself distancing from your Self. Get out of your head and into your heart. Practice self-compassion for what you’re going through and find supportive ways to reconnect to yourself. I would LOVE to hear what you’re doing to stay close to your Truth.

One more thing! Please, for the love of all that is holy, eat something. Now is not the time to restrict your calories or cut out food groups. All bodies are good bodies, even quarantined ones. And YOUR body is on YOUR side. It’s hecka smart, and it’s got your back. It will take care of you, so let it. Listen to it. Nourish it. Trust it.

Sending you soooooooo much love and light that it’s borderline annoying!

Why you shouldn’t worry about the “Quarantine 15”

Stop it.

 

Stop joking about all the weight you’re gaining with your suddenly sedentary lifestyle.

 

Stop making hurtful comments at the expense of your fat friends.

 

Look, I love a good quarantine meme as much as the next person! But some of them aren’t funny, they’re fat-phobic.

 

I get that this current crisis is scary. What’s even scarier is that more people are afraid of getting fat than they are of getting themselves & others sick (killed).

 

Read that again.

 

Start being more compassionate toward the body you have, regardless of how it changes in the next few months.

 

Start challenging weight stigma by supporting and celebrating larger bodies.

 

Start now.