Something that I really didn’t expect to come as much as it has in my therapy sessions has been my history with food. When I went in to the Counseling Center, it was to talk about the panic attacks and terror I had been experiencing. But on the initial evaluation, there were lots of questions asking about food and my body image, about whether I felt I was in control of what I ate or if I liked the way I looked. Apparently, my answers to those questions indicated that I had a not-so-stellar relationship to my body. My therapist asked me in our first meeting if that was something I wanted to address. At the time, I was doing okay–honestly, much better than i had been in the past. I wasn’t on a specific diet, I was okay eating junk, I was exercising a regular amount. I told her I wanted to put it off for a while, so we could focus on addressing the OCD. My relationship with food and exercise and my body had been toxic for years, since I first started middle school. That was a beast that I did not want to mess with.
Luckily for me, my therapist is really good at her job and somehow finangled me into opening up about it. While I wouldn’t say that I had an eating disorder, I certainly suffered from disordered eating. As is common for a lot of women, the problems started in middle school. I started to see myself as too tall, too fat, too freckled, too ugly. I didn’t look like the stick-thin blondes that I went to school with. I started restricting what I ate. It started out with genuinely healthy switches, like wanting whole wheat bread and skim milk instead of white bread and 2%. But as I aged into high school, things grew more restrictive; for lunch every day I would eat a Greek yogurt, almonds, carrots and a piece of fruit. Or some days, just an apple with peanut butter and some almonds and carrots. I would skimp on the dinners my mom made if I thought it wasn’t “healthy enough”, only to give into unbearable hunger later in the night, devouring bowls of cereal, ashamed that I couldn’t resist. I saw myself as fat and ugly: You can’t get away with eating nothing, so eat as little as you can without it being too noticeable, so Mom doesn’t notice. You’re already too fat, so you better not gain anymore weight. Even though I was 5’10” and weighed 130 pounds–certainly not fat–I looked in the mirror and loathed what I saw. There was so much I wished I could change about the way I looked, so I took it upon myself to do everything I could to change it.
Exercise was another mechanism I used to try and change the way I looked to be more “beautiful.” After my basketball practices in middle school, I would come home and bounce up and down on our Bosu ball for up to an hour (since I read somewhere that was considered a good cardio exercise) and it was more subtle than the treadmill so my parents couldn’t get mad at me for exercising too much, something they told me frequently. My parents were angels in all of this–constantly comforting me and reassuring me that I was beautiful and wonderful, that I didn’t need to be so rigid. But I couldn’t hear the truth they were trying to help me understand. I was completely desperate to burn more calories, to get rid of as many of the calories I had eaten that day as possible. In high school, I would end up going for runs after two hour basketball practices, because the practices weren’t “enough” exercise for my standards. I overused my body so much that I fractured my foot and had to wear a boot for six weeks. But that still wasn’t enough to stop me. Nothing was enough. I told myself I would always be too ugly and too fat, and I had to do all I could to change the way I looked.
Other people noticed my habits. They praised me for being so dedicated to working out and eating “healthy”, always choosing a salad no matter where we went. And I loved it. I loved being known as a health nut. They could see that I had it all together. Their praise morphed into an unhealthy standard for myself: “Kaila, you can’t order anything but a salad. What will people think if you eat a burger, even though you really want one? They’ll see that you aren’t what you say are.”
I clung to this for years. When I was with other people, I ate salads and fruit, keeping my crown as the queen of eating healthy. But in secret, I had developed a binge eating problem. I would eat an entire bag of popcorn, or 12 mini Twix bars, or an entire box of cereal in one sitting. I hated myself, so the massive amount of food helped me to not think about how angry and sad I was with the way I looked. The bingeing made me feel worse–I hated myself for eating so much, for not maintaining control on what I ate, which made me binge more to combat the negative feelings. A vicious cycle.
I didn’t think I had a problem. Every girl struggles with body image, I would think. It’s not like you’re eating nothing or making yourself throw up. What you’re doing is fine–normal, even. But the attitudes I held toward my body and sense of self were destructive. I didn’t see myself as beautiful or worthy. When it came to boys, I assumed that there would never be one who thought I was beautiful, because I saw myself as fat. I didn’t deserve a romantic relationship because I didn’t weigh what I wanted to, my hips stuck out too much, my stomach was too fat, my chin had too much loose skin. I was convinced that I was the ugly fat friend of my friend group, and that they all judged me for not being skinnier than I was, despite all the healthy eating and working out I did.
This semester, I have begun the difficult task of deconstructing these lies I’ve been telling myself all these years. I’ve realized that they’re all made up, false limits I’ve put on myself that no one was expecting me to live up to. I really am my harshest critic. And that has been painful to realize. I was looking at old pictures of myself today, from freshman year of high school. I was skinny as a rail–thin arms, thin legs, thin face. And it broke my heart, because I HATED the way I looked at that time. I saw myself as totally overweight and hideous. I spent so much time and energy hating myself, time I won’t get back.
The road ahead is long. Eight years of hating something as strongly as I hated my body cannot be undone in one semester. And there will always be a struggle, a back and forth between actually being healthy and being obsessive. Slowly but surely, I am learning that my body is capable of so much: running, dancing, laughing, singing, cooking, hugging. I am ready to embrace it for what it can do, rather than hating it for what I feel it can’t. I may be heavier than I was in middle and high school, but I am SO much healthier, and I wouldn’t trade that for anything.