musings, life lessons & poetry from Theresa Jarosz Alberti

Category: Uncategorized (Page 10 of 14)

The Gifts in Lacking Power

It was not the weekend we’d planned.  Husband Bob got off work early, and we decided to take on the project of rearranging our living room, which hadn’t been done in more than a decade.  It involved moving the entertainment center, with the multiple electronics/devices/computer and all the many wires in our complicated setup.  The living room was soon a mess of stuff piled on the floor, the couch upended.  In the midst of this, a wicked windy storm blew in.  And our power went out.

The chaos of the weekend went on to include our sump pump not working and half of our basement flooding (an unfinished storage room, ankle deep in water), a wedding to attend, hauling all the stuff in the storage room into the back yard to dry everything out and throw some away, mopping up water, putting the living room back together, and one of our cats peeing on the couch and pooping in a laundry basket, upset by all this upheaval.

Yeah, it wasn’t great.  It was exhausting.  But even in the midst Continue reading

The End of an Era

 

Saw this while driving this morning…

Rosy Apple blossoms

We have a street in our neighborhood which is lined with crab apple trees, and for about a week and a half every spring, they bloom and it’s like driving down a pink-and-white flower tunnel (smells good too).  Then it rains, and the curbs are striped  with rosy apple blossoms.  Sigh.  The end of an era (okay, a very short era).  It was fun while it lasted.

This month, we’re encountering a few bigger endings. Continue reading

A Tale of Gaining and Losing

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Me & my big cousin Care

[NOTE — October 18, 2019:  I wrote this blog post almost 6 years ago, and my journey has gone through many twists and turns. I have learned A LOT about diet culture, fatphobia, size discrimination and how to heal disordered eating, and I’m in a much different place. I no longer believe many of the issues and sentiments I wrote about in the post below. I am leaving it here as a record of where I was at the time, but look for an update from me soon.}

It’s surprising for me to realize that I was a “normal weight” for the first half of my life. I can see it now in old photos, but I grew up feeling fat and ugly, like so many girls in our culture.  For me, it was the messages I got from others, from the media, from comparisons of my body to my smaller sisters.  I started dieting young, and developed emotional eating issues that made me feel crazy.

And then, I really did get fat.  I got married at age 24 weighing 150 lbs (looking pretty but not feeling great), and over the next 15 years gained almost 200 lbs.  Yep, kinda unbelievable, even to me.  It was a combination of pregnancies, major depression, low self-esteem, issues leftover from my dysfunctional childhood, and big-time emotional eating.  I had no clue how to feel my feelings, so I numbed them with food.

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High weight, back view

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At 348 lbs, I felt horrible physically and emotionally, and limited in what my body could do. I got on an eating plan,  lost about 50 lbs and got stuck there.  I was exercising a lot, felt better, eating healthier, but still plagued by emotional eating.  Decades of therapy had helped, but not quite enough.

By January 2013, I hit another rock bottom.  I was still morbidly obese  (oh, what lovely words), and my body just couldn’t take it anymore.  Over the last 2 years, my daily pain had been increasing—despite exercise, my legs stiffened up and I hobbled, my heels burned, and my knees were constantly sore.  Walking hurt.  I was increasingly feeling like a disabled person, my life limited in so many ways by my weight.

The pain of staying the same was greater than my fear of change… so in January I mustered my wits and courage, and worked to lose weight.  I devised my own plan of calorie counting (a moderate amount, not deprivation mode), cutting back on processed carbs, and eating lots more fruits and veggies.

DSC01147_2 cropAnd I started losing weight—in fact, I lost 45 lbs in four months.  I still had pain, but it was lessening.  I was on a roll… and then last week I crashed. I knew from all my reading on eating disorders that diets/deprivation often leads to binges.  My routine was off and I was bingeing, days in a row.  But, instead of wallowing in shame and beating myself up (old pattern), I wanted to understand what was going on with me.

After much processing and watching a few TED talks (so helpful!), I came to see that I’d been SO focused on losing weight that I was off-balance.  I was impatient to lose the weight and get it over with, that I wasn’t tending to my whole person—loving where I’m at and who I am right now.  I still have about 120 lbs to lose—this is going to take a while.

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Recent weigh-in pic

I need to tend to my self-care, even while I work on losing weight.  For me, this means:  wearing clothes I like, meditating and giving myself space to feel feelings, saying “no” when I need to, gently working on my other  issues in life (like anxiety, and clutter), getting enough sleep… and relax about the numbers.  I’ll get there when I get there.

So, I’m picking up my pack and continuing on this journey, feeling hopeful.  My little bump in the road turned out to be a great learning experience.  It’s funny to think that in trying to lose half of my body weight, I’m actually gaining more of myself!

This post is part of a Brave Blogging Link-up for Liv Lane’s How To Build a Blog You Truly Love ecourse. As a participant, I was challenged to step outside my comfort zone and share something with you that felt especially brave. You can see what others have written by clicking here: http://blog.livlane.com/2013/05/brave-2013

Going It Alone

Today was a special day in South Minneapolis–  the May Day Parade, an annual tradition for 39 years.  The parade is a favorite— put on by the Heart of the Beast Puppet Theatre, it’s created by talented artists there working with members of the community who want to be a part of the parade.  For months ahead of time, people come together to build puppets and costumes out of cardboard, paper mache, cloth and other  “junk,” working together on a theme—telling a story of despair, hope and renewal and weaving in social, economic and environmental issues.  The result is a festival of color and imagination, playful and joyful.  I always feel good about myself and my community when I watch the May Day Parade.

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Even when I go alone.  Which I did this year.

Me at the parade (took it myself!)

Me at the parade (took it myself!)

It’s really no big deal, but it wasn’t always easy for me, the idea of going certain places ALONE.  I remember growing up that going to the movies alone seemed to be taboo. I loved going to movies, and when I moved away to Colorado for a year and lived alone, I found a discount theatre nearby and decided to break that taboo.  At first I looked around cautiously, but nobody in the crowd noticed or cared.  An older relative had told me she’d never go to a movie alone, that it was too lonely and awkward.  That wasn’t my experience at all… I loved being part of the crowd, and getting lost in the story.

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Still, some events or activities DO seem harder to attend alone.  In fact, this parade was one of them for me, once upon a time.  When our kids were growing up, we always attended the May Day Parade as a family… and it was fun to see the delight and amazement on their little faces.  Then the kids turned into teenagers, no longer thrilled by a parade.  My husband was working full-time and trying to finish his college degree, so he was busy all the time.  One year I managed to cajole a kid or two to come to the parade with me (I still wanted to go!), but they weren’t thrilled.  It wasn’t their thing anymore.

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Then came the year NOBODY wanted to go.  I’m not proud to say I remember throwing a little tantrum–  why couldn’t my family want the same thing I did?  I didn’t want the bother of trying to call around and find a friend.  I felt frustrated and angry.  I hated being in this position:  I had to decide to stay home, or go alone.

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Little girl giving High-Fives

You know, I found myself thinking like my relative—worried that I’d feel lonely and awkward and conspicuous, going to this parade by myself.  But going always lifted my spirits, so I decided to do it. And it turned out fine.  The parade was still fun to watch, and I found that I’m pretty good company on my own.

So I’m challenging myself on thinking outside the comfortable zone, an imaginary box I’ve drawn around events and my expectations about them.  Another challenge I’d like to work on is taking the time (and getting past the fear) of inviting others along—that’s a whole ‘nother topic!  But for now I can bask in the enjoyment and memories of a fine, sunny and warm May day.

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