Friday, August 17, 2018

Making Amends

Some people enter into recovery with a definitive line in the sand, drawn often, with the pen of despair, defeat and a decided lack of hope, over which they walk, run, or crawl to the other side, never forgetting the circumstances which lead them to that vivid and cathartic place in their journey.

My pen, if you have read my blog thus far, was cruelly filled by Olivia, with disappearing ink, representing her hold over my very (sometimes) certain desire to mark indelibly, the depth of my "rock bottom".

I drew a few lines.

Then I drew a few more.

Then finally, on August 1,2016, after waking from an evening of dousing the flames of hunger from lack of food and guilt/loneliness from a lack of my own integrity, I felt the now too familiar burn, as I looked at mysterious messages on my phone, reflecting the desperation and hopelessness of friends, trying to understand what I needed and some, silently exiting my chaotic life.

Though I didn't know it at the time, that day was the beginning of the real and lasting recovery I have today.  It was not marked by a proclamation that I would never restrict my calorie intake or drink alcohol in order to cope with the mess I had made of my life ever again.  There were no declarations to my friends and family that that day was the day I would start to pay attention to my therapist, who had been recommending AA and Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) to me (both I had only thus far given a passing glance). 

It was just the first day that I didn't drink or restrict/over exercise/ purge.  It was also the first day that I got honest with myself and looked at my life and how I had lost some of the relationships I treasured most, and knew that I needed more than just "forgiveness", but that I couldn't passively let time go without rigorous effort and enlisting the help of others who recovered before me. 

I started to get serious about AA. 

I listened to the "Promises" and heard how if I did the work that was laid out for me, I could lose the feeling of uselessness and self-pity, how I could know peace and leave self-seeking behind, how I could lose my fear of people, etc.  and know intuitively how to handle situations that used to baffle me. 

This is what I wanted so desperately.

I got a sponsor and got serious about working through the steps.

The AA program is humbling and challenging and frustrating at times. 

The brilliance of the program is in its design, which offers balance for these things that are common threads for those of us abusing substances (and likewise, using anorexic behaviors) by exposing newcomers to "long timers", who speak our familiar language of fear and insecurity and pain, but who now live their lives out with principle, as in the Promises, and speak of their faith, hope and strength as a result of working the steps.

It's a club I never knew I wanted to belong to.  It's a club of acceptance in that, no matter how many times you fall, if you keep "coming back" its members will keep loving you and cheering you on and showing you the way.  These are my people.  I was home.

One of the reasons that AA has taken such a strong-hold in my life, is my desire to address some of the wrongs that I regret and that have caused resentments in my life towards people I care about.  AA has helped me to understand that these resentments I hold are caused in large part, by my own character flaws, and that unless I examine them fully and honestly, I will be doomed to continue to act in the same self-destructive patterns that trigger new resentments until I am alone with my disease, who wants just that.

This requires a written, multi-step self-inventory of resentments (people, places and things) along with a list of those whom we have harmed.  When I first started this process, I was ecstatic at the prospect of writing down exactly how all of the people, places and things in my life had let me down, and caused me resentments.  My list was long and I wrote furiously, of all of the reasons I deserved to restrict calories, over exercise and abuse alcohol. 

My sponsor soon explained, that I was then to write, in another series of steps, what I had done (WTF!?) to cause each resentment. 

It took the better part of the year before I was done.

Resentments, I am told, are "re-feelings" of unresolved issues. 

Once one has completed a self-examination of character flaws which lead to resentments, AA encourages us, with a thoughtful approach, to make amends to those we have harmed. 

I reached out to my ex-husband first, unsure whether he would be willing to afford me an opportunity to make amends, after some pretty half-assed (drunken) attempts I had made before (with the goal to assuage my own guilt, rather than take honest responsibility for what I had done to cause him harm). 
I was careful to explain that there was no required action on his part.  That the goal of "amends" was not for him to forgive me, as that puts all of the onus upon him to do something, but rather to admit to him, the harms I had caused him and to express to him what my intentions are, moving forward in recovery, to make amends, when possible, for the harm I caused him.

He agreed to meet with me.

When my stomach became sick with worry and anxiety over the possible outcomes of this meeting, my sponsor lovingly reminded me to "...get down from the cross, Doreen! Jesus needs the wood" and that this meeting was not about me, but my ex-husband to have a chance for healing, in hearing me admit to the things I did to him. 

Not being in control of the outcome, is a lesson from DBT and AA that has allowed me to do many things in recovery, that I wouldn't have had the courage to do before understanding that I don't have that kind of power or control over others.  Nor does the want for it, lead me to peace.

So I took my list of harms, and I met my ex-husband in the Mall food-court, because it was pouring out that day, and I plowed through them, not once wanting to soften the words or hide the really ugly things I had done from him. 

I was determined to honor both my ex-husband's willingness to hear my amends, and the process itself, by forcing myself not to hide the shameful parts (he knew them anyway) so that I could possibly take a step towards the promises of leaving self-pity behind, and honestly account for my responsibility in causing harm.

I did some pretty ugly things.  I said some really ugly things, both to my ex-husband and to others about him.  I said them in private and I wrote some ugly things in this blog about him as well.    I even said some ugly things to our children about my ex-husband.  I even told ugly un-truths about him, to gain a posse of support and sympathy.

I told him all of them.

The process includes some time for the person you are making amends to, to share anything you might have missed or glossed over. 

I listened carefully to what he had to say. 

I learned how my actions were harmful not only to my ex-husband, our mutual friends, our girls, but how they also impacted his wife. 

Part of the process includes bringing ideas for how to make amends for the wrongs, after one has admitted them all honestly.  It also includes a chance for the person one is making amends to, to have input about what they believe would be helpful to their own healing (from the harms caused by me).

In addition to my own stated and determined commitment to him, going forward, to live out my amends of  speaking only kindly to him and of him to others, especially our daughters,   It was my ex-husband's suggestion, that since I had spoken badly of him publicly, that I also publicly admit and own up to the harms I had caused by my actions. 

He was honest with me, that the damage done was so deep, that even if I decided to take his suggestion, it really wouldn't change the state of our relationship.

My initial honest, internal reaction was to never say a word to anyone (especially my sponsor) about this part of the amends.  It would be too humiliating...too shameful, and since there would be no benefit to our relationship, why would I expose myself in this way?

My immediate second response, upon walking to my car, was to remember that AA only requires a willingness to consider making amends to those we have harmed.  I figured I could just stop here.

My sponsor put it another way, reminding me that I had the wrong perspective of this request by my ex-husband. 

It isn't about me

It is about making an honest amends to someone I had harmed. 

I spent more time talking about it in meetings and discussing the possibility with my sponsor some more, and understand now that the benefits to him, of my public admissions of the harms I caused him,  are little consolation to the years of bad behavior on my part, but that what he offered me (because with a clear conscience I can see his kind heart) is a way to peace.






Saturday, July 15, 2017

Dear Diesel



Dear Diesel,

You were such a good boy.  The best there ever was.  Even some day (and it will come) when I forget my own name, I will never ever, ever forget your sweet, loving and healing soul.

No one could ever in a million years, understand the bond we had.  How could they? For it was divine intervention, I have no doubt, that we intersected each other's paths on May 14th, 2016.

For you, it was the time in your life when you were 7 years on this earth and your circumstances left you recovering alone from surgery to remove cancer from your leg, in a strange, loud place (which you hated) confused about where your humans who had once loved and cared for you had gone, and desperately in need of a second chance of living your life with a family who loved you.



For me, as I reflect on how you came into my life, I was in similar circumstances.  I was sick (SO sick) with Anorexia, trying desperately to recover but hindered by my continued abuse of alcohol, food restriction and over-exercise, alone and confused about where my humans (one in particular) who had once loved and cared for me had gone, and desperately in need of a second chance of living my life in peace, with a family who loved me.

Neither of us trusting of the unconditional love of another, having been "abandoned" in our own minds, because of something we had done wrong, our quick-forming bond was not only unlikely, but doomed even more given that you were a menacing pitbull, judged harshly by others (including me) who didn't even know you, based solely on your breed.

And me?  Why would you be trusting of me?  You were brought to a shelter by people you trusted, for some unknown reason that you could never understand, after you loved them all the 7 years of your life until that point.  You likely judged me, another human, as untrustworthy, based on my "breed".

Yet from that first night, when you picked us to be your forever home from all the other humans who came to the shelter before us, somehow the bond had already started.

Inherently, without any words either of us could understand, we trusted each other.  We had to.  It was a leap of faith I'll never understand because my trust meter was pinned on empty.

From the car on that first day we brought you home, I didn't put the lead on you, and you walked behind me to the front door, as if you knew you were home. When we got inside the door, you literally reached up to kiss me, and without fear of what could have happened next, I bent down and you licked my face with the gratitude of a dog who understood he was home. All at once, I trusted that you would never bring harm.

And thus, the beginning of a far-too-short time together, where you never missed an opportunity to love us, to make us laugh and to bring us together in a way that we desperately needed after being fractured for so long.

You spent each day with Maddi, our first summer with you, snuggling her gently all the days that Summer and I were working, when she broke her arm in four places.  You knew intuitively that she hurt and you carefully set about helping her mend with your goofy smile, posing for endless snaps and selfies when that was her only way to communicate with the outside world. You snuggled your body up against her gently, and rested your head on her lap when she slept from the pain medication, there for a kiss when she woke.

It was the way you also seemed immediately to understand that I needed to be rescued, and your eagerness to take on the task, that leaves me here on this Earth without you this night, lessons you taught outnumbered only by the tears because you are gone.

Some of them were obvious right away.  Some I didn't understand until you had to go away.

Your surgery prior to coming home with us, left you with scars that we could see and understood not to touch, as you gently but firmly "asked" us not to touch you there.  There were scars we could not see as well, which wouldn't let you relax enough to enjoy a belly-rub or to be picked up into a car or truck that was challenging to your short and sometimes, pained legs.

And then slowly, you began lying on your side and offering up more and more of your belly, trusting us to give you the joy of a good scratch, without fear of pain.  Eventually, you even groaned with delight.

We taught you that there can be joy in trusting others.

(Picking you up however, was another story...)

I too had scars you could see from Anorexia and some that were less visible, but no less deep.   You didn't require that I talk about any of the guilt or pain associated with them.  You just consistently wormed your way into my heart (and under my covers) from our first day together,  by lying still with me while I cried, or fought to stay away from alcohol or purging, lending me your warmth and rhythmic breathing, gently nuzzling your nose under my chin as if to say, "I'm here, you're safe".

In those early days, you helped me endure a life without my partner, who had given all he had to me and my disease but who found it time to set healthy boundaries from me when my deceit to stay sick (and secretly drinking to excess) became bigger than my desire to be honest.  I was empty and lonely and completely under water.  You gave me a purpose, you needed me to be able to take care of your needs and in return, you gave me unconditional joy and love and taught me that there could be joy in life again.

By day, we went everywhere together.  We took endless walks and drives to the sea where you loved to explore the shoreline, hike in the woods or sit quietly on my lap as we drove until my urges to restrict or overexercise or drink passed by me.  You never judged me or required me to explain.  It never seemed to scare you or phase you if I slipped and had too much to drink before I finally gave it up for good in early August.  You simply lent me your warmth and rhythmic breathing, gently nuzzling your nose under my chin as if to say, "I love you, no matter what".  You taught me that I was worthy of love, not because I was "perfect" but rather, even because I am not.

When you met Sandy, our other dog friend, you became guarded about your food, always standing in the kitchen, closest to me as I divided out equal amounts into each of your bowls.  Once the bowl was down, you devoured it far too quickly to enjoy it, ostensibly to be certain of not having to share.  This anxiety faded, as you began to trust that you would always have enough, no matter who else was in the house, and it showed in your willingness to wait to eat and (sometimes) slow down a bit to enjoy the taste.

You met me at the door, every time I came inside (even if I just forgot something and ran back in quickly to grab it) with a wiggly butt that wagged a happy-to-see-you tail and always a gift in your mouth (that you would run about the house looking for so as not to ever greet me empty handed).  You greeted us all in this genuine and enthusiastic way, making us always safe and happy to be home.  You taught me to trust that no matter what kind of day I had, you would be here waiting, with endless amounts of love and joy that needn't be earned with getting things "right".

So, as the days passed and my recovery continued to start and stop with each passing reason to "begin again tomorrow", I started to learn to take comfort in your being here for me, night after night, as I distracted myself from the meal I had to eat and the booze calling from less than a mile away, working endless crossword puzzles, you curled up beside me, lending me your warmth and rhythmic breathing, gently nuzzling your nose under my chin as if to say, "I've got you".

August 1st, 2016  was two weeks after the last time I purged lunch (at a staff meeting), a week after the pain of meeting with my (then) former partner for a hike in the woods after not seeing each other since May, and just a few days after my ex-husband re-married.  It was also within the four days of  cold-turkey detoxing (against Dr.s orders) from the anti-anxiety medication I was certain was responsible for numbing joy along with pain.  It was the last time I drank alcohol.  It was the last day I used eating disorder behaviors like restriction, over-exercising and purging to change the way I felt. And it was in the next morning hours, when I woke up with you snuggled tightly beside me, lending me your warmth and rhythmic breathing, gently nuzzling your nose under my chin as if to say, "you don't need to do this anymore.  I'm here".

This was the turning point for me, Diesel.  When nothing else that mattered to me could be a reason for sustained, healthy recovery, you walked me across the bridge to peace and health.  Without a lead around my neck, I walked behind you as you did to me that first day from the car, and I trusted you, because I knew you were here to bring me home.

Over that next year, there would be real threats to my sobriety and Anorexia recovery that months before would have shaken my resolve and brought me to my knees, using the familiar, self-destructive coping habits that had darkened my life over previous 4 years.  But I learned to trust that you would be there, night after night, after night, to crawl under the covers with me, to make me laugh at your goofy noises and antics, to need me to throw a tennis ball for you to chase and make sure you had food and water.  In return, I knew you would curl up with me to do whatever I was doing, without judgement, because you loved me, no matter what.  And I learned to cry and be vulnerable and trust that you would lick my face and love me anyway, as if I was all that mattered to you.



I cannot tell you, Diesel, when things shifted.  Perhaps it was as my body and battered up soul began to heal enough that I could love you back,  unconditionally, without conditions or demands or fear that you would hurt me.  But a time came, when you needed me to be there for you in the same way you had been for me.

Ironically, it came two weeks prior to my one year anniversary date of abstaining from alcohol and Anorexia behaviors.

You stopped enjoying our walks and would look up at me with your eyes to tell me it was time to turn around, that we had walked far enough.  You progressed to the point where you approached food, which had always made you happy, with apathy and disinterest.  You looked to me to notice that something wasn't right, with the trust in your eyes, that I would take care of you now.

After countless vet trips and various medications to ease your growing discomfort, it was time to consult a specialist to try and figure out what was causing the symptoms that were slowly stealing the joy from your eyes.

All at once, she confirmed my biggest fear.

An ugly and invasive carcinoma that had invaded your lungs to the point that each breath, even without physical exertion, required extreme effort from you.

I was to take you home and keep you comfortable with medication until we received definitive word from the lab that this was not fixable.

In my initial desire to hang on to hope that there could be a possibility for a rare airway disease that could be miraculously treatable, I decided through tears and denial, to wait for the lab result.

"It will take 24-48 hours for the results", the Vet said.

You rode on the floor in the car all the way home.  For the first time ever.  You knew that I needed to know from you that the time was nearer than I was willing to accept.  For every other trip in the car, including the one this very day to arrive at the clinic, you rode in my lap.

In fact, in the days after you passed, I realized that you had known in your soul, that this day was closer than I knew.  For about a week before you died, you began sleeping on the floor next to my bed or on the end of my bed facing away from me.  Uncharacteristic of your need to snuggle and be in my lap, even by the campfire in chairs far too small to support us both.

You had been preparing me for life in recovery, without you. You lent me your strength and the warmth of your body and rhythmic breathing, nuzzling me all those times with your nose under my chin saying this time, "you are strong now.  You can do this without me".

For the first time ever, you let Ken carry you up the stairs to bed, without complaint, settling into your deep and profound trust for him to care for you.

The lesson of that moment not lost on me, as you modeled for me how to let go of your scariest fear, expose your greatest vulnerability,  so that someone could help carry you when you couldn't do it for yourself.

In the night before your passing, you woke me with your labored breathing to signal the kind of urgency that I couldn't deny, that your time was drawing nearer.  I curled up beside you at the end of the bed and rubbed your ears the way you like, realizing that you needed me to be unselfish in my love for you in these next hours, easing your pain as you had mine for the last year.

In the morning, I prayed for a definitive sign from you that it was time to let you go, still holding out hope for the Vet clinic to call with the news that this wasn't terminal.

As I was getting ready for whatever might come that morning, Ken called me from the shower that you were looking around with your head up and that I should come in.  I kneeled down next to you and for the first time in many hours since you were struggling with breath, you leaned toward my face and kissed me.  Exactly as you had May 14th, when I brought you home through the front door, signaling that it was time once again, to bring you home.

In the subsequent moments, you continued to answer my prayer for certainty, by asking to go outside and shitting defiantly in the neighbor's yard (one of the many reasons for loving you).  You let out a wail I had never heard before and fell onto your side, looking up at me, begging to be understood and trusted in the way you had grown to understand and trust me. Telling me that there was no need to wait for confirmation of the lab results.

Ken carried you again, with your full weight and trust in his care, back into the house.  I gave you some sedative to help ease your breathing, and said some tearful, final good-byes with your girls.

I thanked you, as they said goodbye, for taking care of Maddi when her arm was broken and for being home with your wiggly-butt tail-wag and a gift for Summer each day she came home from school. You kissed each one of them as if to continue trying to make our pain somehow more tolerable, with no regard for your own.

Once at the animal hospital, in your last moments, hugging your favorite (headless) stuffed squirrel, it was my turn to lend you back the strength you had given me, through my warmth and rhythmic breathing, nuzzling my nose under your chin saying, "you don't have to do this anymore, Bubba.  I've got you"























Wednesday, February 1, 2017

What I Did on My Summer Vacation


At first, a day in the life of recovery was almost worse than A Day in the Life of Anorexia .  I know that sounds strange, but my (Eating Disorder) brain was constantly over-riding my own brain when trying to navigate even the daily minutia of life, to the point that I no longer could discern my own "real" thoughts from my eating disorder brain's thoughts.

Early recovery incited Olivia's relentless negative commentary in my head more loudly and viciously than when I acquiesced back into my illness.

In order to even remotely begin to embrace recovery, I had to trust what my therapist/loved ones were telling me, in spite of what my eating disorder brain was trying to convince me of.

It's like looking at a car that to me (when I was sick) was decidedly and undeniably painted red.  It was the shiniest and most brilliant, deep red I had ever taken in with my eyes.  Yet, my therapist/family were telling me that it was most assuredly green.

Even though my eyes saw that the car was red, I had to believe that what my therapist and family were telling me was the truth.

"Green, you say?? But.... I see a shiny, deep red."

"Green", they would say,  "Most assuredly and certainly, green".

It was with that same leap of faith, that I started to begin trusting my therapist when she told me I needed to start a program called Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT).

As soon as she mentioned it (for the fifth or sixth time) my eating disorder brain railed against it.

"You don't have time for that! It is 1.5 hours each week, at night, all the way in Falmouth....for six months!  Just keep doing what I tell you and you will feel better again.  Restrict, exercise excessively, shut everyone out and we will be safe!"

"Green, you say?"

DBT, in part, saved my life and catapulted my recovery to a place I never thought reachable.  Taught by a saint with grey hair and a sailor's mouth, Olivia didn't stand a chance.

"Dialectics" is the idea that two truths can simultaneously exist at the same time.  Not rocket-science for most, but for many of us with Anorexia, part of the re-wiring of our brains included the idea that not everything is black or white.  Primarily, and most important for me, was the idea that both acceptance and change could live in the same house.

"I am perfect just the way I am.  And I need to change"

Extreme thinking is a hallmark of Anorexia.

DBT is a treatment modality which focuses on 4 important skills:

  • Mindfulness: the practice of being fully aware and present in this one moment
  • Distress Tolerance: how to tolerate pain in difficult situations, not change it
  • Interpersonal Effectiveness: how to ask for what you want and say no while maintaining self-respect and relationships with others
  • Emotion Regulation: how to change emotions that you want to change

Each skill required training and practice for six weeks before one could fully absorb it.  And, because I came into the course during a time of great distress, I took the first part over a second time at the end, to be certain that I got what I might have missed in early recovery.

What this course did for me, that therapy alone never could, was replace the Anorexic coping behaviors I was being asked to give up with healthy, productive alternatives.

The importance of this piece to my treatment cannot be overstated.  I had to learn how to re-wire my brain so I could override the negative, unhealthy eating disorder thoughts that kept me sick for so long.  Simply giving up restricting (Just eat!) or limiting my exercise was a way to let my body heal from the years of starvation and physical punishment I put it through, but without anything to replace these coping mechanisms with, I continued to relapse over and over again.

Another suggestion that my therapist made (many times) was to consider abstaining from alcohol and perhaps even attend the support of Alcoholics Anonymous.

"That car is decidedly red", I said.

"No", my therapist said,  "It is most certainly green".

"Green, you say?"

So, in fits and starts, I began attending AA no fewer than 4 nights per week all summer long, and sometimes more.

It was in the supportive and understanding rooms of AA that I believe my recovery finds even greater protection from future relapse.

I did nothing the first few months of attending but cry.

It didn't seem to matter to the other people in the room.  They just kept bringing me tea and kleenex and suggested that I "keep coming back".

Each meeting, I found a chair in the back, listened intently to what people were sharing about their lives, their "alcoholic brains" (which are first cousins to my anorexic brain) and how without the fellowship and step work of the group, they would never have been able to slay the demons which brought them to their addictions.

I slowly surrendered to the idea that this was the place I might finally lay waste to Olivia's presence in my life.

I did what they told me to.  I got a sponsor (then Olivia fired her).  Got another one (and Olivia fired her too), until I could find someone I could work with, and who Olivia couldn't fuck with.

I'm working through the steps.  Never in a million years would I have understood the power in those steps until I met my sponsor who my God put in my path, because she takes no bullshit from Olivia.

There are 12 of them.  I am on number four.

The first two involved me getting over myself and understanding my powerlessness (resulting in my giving my "newcomer" chip back three times).

The third step involved me finding a Higher Power I Can Do Business With.  No apologies here.

The fourth step, is the beginning of the end for Olivia.  It's called a "Personal Inventory" and I am working on it now.

This step involves listing all (I mean all!) people, places, things and ideals that I have resentments about.  Then we spend a lot (I mean a lot!) of time dissecting each resentment for my character defaults which contributed to them.

So far, I have filled two complete notebooks with the writing this step requires.  It is all at once, frightening, humbling, liberating and healing in a way that has turned my path back toward a peace and normality in my life that I have been longing for since succumbing to Anorexia.

This step alone could already have eaten my lunch (bad... all the way around.... I know!) if I didn't have the DBT skills in place, the genuine support of the fellowship of AA, my sponsor and my therapist surrounding me as I walk through it.

I am not finished with it yet.  I am not even sure what else comes next.  But the fruits are starting to emerge in the form of 9 months of TOTAL anorexia-free behavior,  6 months of complete abstinence from alcohol (that one took a little more convincing...),  confidence in my ability to defend and advance my recovery against Olivia, a strong, healthy body, and the hope in a process that will reveal, repair and release the demons which threaten relapse.

There are 8 more to go and I have promised myself to see it through to the end because Olivia has a difficult time fighting against facts, confidence and healing.

Oh hey look, a car!











Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Relapse VS Recovery. A Love Story



I remember wondering how I would even know if I was truly recovering from Anorexia, when I couldn't even distinguish between my own voice and Olivia's.  For so very long, they were one and the same (as far as I could tell).

Having been Anorexia-behavior-free now for almost 7 consecutive months and completely alcohol free for a little more than 5 months (that one took a few more lessons for me to be convinced that drinking had become an ED behavior too), I am gaining a solid confidence in my ability to discern what Olivia wants for me (relapse) and what I want for me (a fully-recovered life).

Committing to the idea of recovery from Anorexia was complicated, exhausting and sometimes, if I am honest, scarier than staying sick.  It required, all at once, standing on my own two feet, trusting a process that I couldn't fully (yet) trust, and focusing a driven and purposeful attention with precision on only one thing (me).

Maintaining a state of recovery is a little less complex, but no less exhausting, and at times, scary. Maintenance is as simple as being able to first identify, and then choosing pro-recovery behavior over pro-relapse behavior, over and over again until one day, someone tells me that I no longer have Anorexia.

I know that day will come.

I am sure that there is a more scientific reason (a fully-nourished body, new coping skills to replace over-exercising, drinking and restricting,) for this strengthened ability to remain in recovery, but it honestly feels like things just finally "clicked".

Cliche?  Maybe... but I can't really attribute it to just one thing I have done.  Rather, it is a series of deliberate decisions, each day, driven by the conviction that I am worth a full life.

Now, let's be clear.  I don't have a new understanding of what recovery behaviors or relapse behaviors are.

I have a new understanding that allowing even just one relapse behavior, at this stage in recovery, invites Olivia (who has been doing push ups out on my sidewalk without me, getting stronger just in case I give in) to come back inside and unpack her suitcase once again.

I have a new understanding that self-love and confidence drive recovery.

I have a new understanding that the more I love the person I am, the more I  choose recovery behavior, and the more I choose recovery behavior, the more I love the person I am...

All of the Red Flags for Relapse I posted back in 2015 were true.  However, they were only the things I was willing to share and by no means, an exhaustive list.  When I re-read that post, I am aware of my intention to protect the small tattered corners of my security blanket of Anorexia, in case I wasn't fully committed to recovery.

As it turned out.  I wasn't.

There was something in Anorexia at that time that I wasn't ready to give up completely.

Notice that the behaviors for relapse below, have nothing to do with food.  They are the easiest to hide.

Relapse behavior includes secrecy, half-truths and lies.

Recovery involves trusting others with where I truly am, even if it means disappointing them or losing them altogether.

Relapse behavior includes allowing thoughts whispered by Olivia, to become facts that control my emotions.

Recovery involves checking the facts when it isn't immediately obvious to my newly-recovering brain if something is true, by trusting only what I can observe.

Relapse behavior demands that I do everything perfectly.  The first time.  And that when I don't, to assume that I am not capable or worthy of love.

Recovery involves understanding that everything is as it should be, given the events that came before it.  That I am not required to be perfect to be worthy of love.

Relapse behavior includes believing that I have to control the universe.  And that when things go wrong, it is entirely my fault.

Recovery includes an acceptance that there are things I can and cannot control, and that with a God I can do business with, I can ask for guidance regarding His will for me, rather than for the outcome I desire.

Relapse behavior requires that I allow myself to become too tired or hungry or emotional to make healthy decisions when faced with distress.

Recovery involves self-love.

It's a love story starring me, loving myself enough to care for my own needs no matter what life throws at me, so I can be the best "me" I can be, even (especially) in the face of distress.






















Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Lessons I have Learned




Anorexia is not my friend. 

Just because two people love/care about each other, doesn't mean they belong together.

Replacing one default with another still gets me to the same dark and lonely place.

Happiness is not outside of me.  (I don't need someone else to make me happy).

Everyone is hurting.  Everyone has pain.  It's not all my fault.  I didn't cause it all.

Some people can say, "I love you" and not mean it. 

I am not always a good judge of character.

I CAN do it alone.

 I have the ability to reach out to others who are in pain, and help them. 

Even though I am flawed, I am still someone worth knowing.

Sometimes, people are just going to let me down.  They are doing their best.

I can be mom AND dad.  Because he chooses not to be.

I have to ask for what I need sometimes.  And that doesn't make me weak.

Sometimes, people truly suck ass.

Doing what makes me happy isn't selfish.

Guns N Roses suck.

Money doesn't make me happy.

Someone who understands that I want to fight my own way,  and other times,  I need to be taken care of will forever win my heart.

Donuts make CO's happy.

Some people are truly, just mean.

It's OK to ask for help.  But don't stay stuck there.

Facebook/Instagram don't always tell the whole (true) story.

Our children need us.  Even when they don't.

I need someone who will drop everything when they see me, and hug me like they have missed me (even if I just saw them ten minutes ago).

Dogs will never hurt me.

If I try to become someone else in a relationship, to please my partner, I lose (everything).

We.All.Have.Pain.

Parents' and pets' love are the truest form of unconditional love there is.

If who I am is not who you want, it's OK if you keep on walking.

Mens' jeans are simply more comfortable than skinny jeans.  It's true (Julie).

Partners who dig you do not seek affirmation/attention from others (digitally or in person).

People can leave scars.

Some men truly know how to be "men".

The love of your life will probably show up when you don't want him to.

Just because I clean the sink, doesn't mean it will stay clean.

Healing is a deliberate choice.  So is staying sick.

People genuinely want to help.

Men who ask for (have) photos of (other) women  on their phone/fb/instagram, aren't good enough for me.

Restricting/drinking prolongs the pain.

Guns N Roses still suck.

Love is a two-way street.  And it takes effort.

Life is good.

Healing takes time.

When I can notice (and help mitigate) others' pain, I am healing and growing in my own recovery.

Sometimes when people leave, they clear the way for your happiness.  (And you should write them a thank-you note).













Sunday, May 8, 2016

One Year Ago Today...




Exactly one year ago today, I woke up in the ICU after failing miserably to tolerate the loss of my (then) partner.  It was the 4th (and final) time I swallowed enough of my prescription medication, along with copious amounts of alcohol, because I wanted someone else to take over for me for awhile.  I didn't want to die, as I have stated before, I simply wanted to make the pain stop.

I missed my daughter's first High School prom.

I spent Mothers' Day (and the next five days) in ICU

One year ago today, I decided that no matter what happened in my life, I would never, ever, ever be so selfish and risk my life again, in an effort to nullify the pain I thought so unbearable.  That I would be here to be the best mother I could be, as I have always been.

One year ago today, I decided to re-enter Mercy's partial hospitalization program for Eating Disorders for a second time, because I was at the lowest weight I had ever been as an adult (and I dipped even lower prior to being admitted to the hospital).

One year ago today, I made changes to my life that even those closest to me wouldn't trust (and some still do not) until this time, one year hence.

One year ago today, I made a commitment to reach the "midpoint" weight my nutritionist demanded in order for me to be considered a "healthy weight" and not to ever dip below it again (and I have KEPT that commitment!)

One year ago today,  I started to take my recovery seriously, for the first time. (Though not without relapses).

Today, my life resembles my life of one  year ago in some ways.

Ken has stepped aside from our relationship a second and final time, leaving me to fight this without his support, having given all he had to the process.

I am waking up daily with the sorrow of the loss of the man I thought I was going to marry, due to my failings a second time,  feeding the demons who assure me I am not enough.

I am the sole, present parent of my daughters.

But today, my life is very different than it was one year ago.  In ways I never dreamed possible when I was staring out the ICU room window, trying to figure out how I was ever going to be normal again.

I have maintained my midpoint (or higher) weight since being discharged from Mercy the second time (something I have NOT been able to do in over five years) in spite of some recent relapse issues.

I love, love, love my job.

I have decided to abstain from alcohol with the support of treatment and will attend a full evaluation this Wednesday, and I am committed to taking whatever steps are recommended to close this final loop that leaves the door open for Anorexia to remain a part of my life.

I attend AA meetings a minimum of 3 nights per week.  In my own community, clients or acquaintances in attendance or not.  We are all human beings.  We are all there for the same reason.  Vulnerability is a part of my healing process.  I needed to suck it up.

I am working through the pain of the loss of Ken without trying to numb it away, without making this painful situation worse, and by taking deliberate steps to mitigate the painful encounters/communications that threaten my recovery.

I am committed to weekly meetings with my Eating Disorder therapist and make getting there each week a priority over everything else in my life.

I am enrolled in a 6 month, weekly group for Dialectical Behavior Therapy (which I LOVE because it replaces all of the coping mechanisms I have had to give up in order to be rid one day of Anorexia and alcohol abuse).

Because I am nourishing my body the best I can, without excessive exercise and restrictive behaviors that get me into a dangerous thinking state, I am able to cope with the distress that once threatened my life.

By no means is this an "anniversary" for celebrating.  There are many things in this past year that went very, very wrong.   One thing I am learning is to be as gentle with myself as I would be with a friend in my same situation.  (Olivia hates that, which strengthens my resolve to keep at it).

I have come a long way in a year.  I dare to call myself strong now.  I have a long way to go in this coming year with many hard lessons and reflections to explore.

This year, I am focused on authenticity.  Vulnerability.  Doreenability (yeah... I made that one up). 

One day at a time.  Keep watching.

And please, don't give up on me.





Monday, May 2, 2016

Raw Words for Dinner

I wrote this blog this morning.  Long before my day unfolded.  I have no idea how things will turn out.  But this is my blog.  Where I get to be real.  Be me. Be seen.
So far it works, if I keep things real.


(Oh, and where the words actually come from...whether they were ever spoken out loud or not, matters not.  They are owned by Olivia.  Tomorrow is another day)


Anorexia.

Alcohol Abuse.

Loud Screaming!

SHUT UP!

We have something good.

I believe in you.

I can't trust you.

You are so special.

Don't eat...don't lose control!

You are awesome!

I don't know if  this is even worth going forward with.

Drink.

I know you will do this, I have no doubt.

Do NOT tell about the drinking!

Disappear! You don't deserve all this space.

I knew all along you were drinking.

I love you, now and forever

Don't drink

I never expected this.

Restrict.Disappear.Don't eat.

You have a special reason for being here

You weren't honest with me.

Just be normal.

I didn't even care about our relationship then.

Let me fill your glass for you.

I'm leaving the country.

How do you think I feel!?

You can trust me now!

How could you lie to me?

I love you with all of my heart.

You deserve to be confused!

What will it take for you to believe me some day?!

Healthy means you failed.

From now on, we only talk regarding the kids.

If you restrict, you will feel better.

You lied to my face!

It's not the same.

I'll take you just the way you are.

You have to be mom AND dad.

Do it ALL.

Do it RIGHT.

I didn't dare tell you how I really felt back then.

I won't increase monetary support.

You're beautiful.

You were too skinny. 

I'm in.  1000 percent.

You're a great mom.

Don't wallow in self-pity, see your friends.

You are only special when you control like no one else can.

Let me know when you make it safely.

I don't believe you.

Why are you so upset?

Your disease is the only thing special about you.

You have to handle the health ins., Dr. visits, broken hearts, broken ankles, don't fuck it up.

I don't even know if this is worth it.

One day you will believe how much I love you.

Loud Screaming,

SHUT UP!

Alcohol Abuse,

Anorexia,

...thoughts that leave little room for dinner.