
I stopped short of posting a picture of myself in a bikini for this post, even though my husband took one last weekend that is really nice. The reason I was even thinking of posting a picture like that is not to brag, “look at me!” but instead to brag to myself: damn, you look fine! So, I decided to post a picture of my beautiful cat Presley. She looks like she is about to give me a stern talking to, which is appropriate. I am so grateful I have such a beautiful cat.
I have to remind myself daily that I am where I want to be. I look the way I want to look. I like the way I look. I love the way I look. I am enough.
I chose to NOT let myself think those things before. I think that is because it gave me an excuse to not show up in my life in the best way I could. If it was a weight problem I had, then it wasn’t me. If I was distracted with “fixing my weight problem,” then I did not have to work on fixing myself.
Maybe I had to finally get to a low weight to let myself think, “I am enough.” I wish I could have thought “I am enough” without having to finally reach a really low number on the scale (on the day of this post, I have a BMI of 20.5).
I am so grateful that I am learning to overcome my bad eating habits.
Disordered eating encompasses a spectrum of disordered eating habits that fall short of meeting diagnostic criteria, which I just listened about here).
- Chronic dieting
- Binge eating
- Skipping meals
- Overeating
- Emotional eating
- Rigid eating patterns
- Unhealthy exercise habits
- Food avoidance
I am working on healing all of these behaviors in myself. My weight loss in the last year was the first time I lost weight without obsessively leaning into these 8 behaviors. However, they are ones I have heavily leaned on in the past. As I continue to now maintain my weight, some of these behaviors tug at the periphery of my thoughts. I am actually more tempted by some of these past behaviors than I am of excessive food. I do not find myself hungry, I do not find myself craving foods, but I do find myself, at time, craving certain behaviors. I think I miss (at times) how they have distracted me (in the past) from whatever stressor (or even boredom) I am experiencing.
Instead, I find myself falling back on something I call Bio Joy. I tap into the behaviors (they vary in efficacy between different people, they are not one size fits all) that I have discovered that work to tap into my own specific biological chemistry of pleasure, reward, contentment, soothing, and gratitude. It was trial and error to figure out the best ones that work for me. They are truly NOT “one size fits all,” which is why adopting one person’s healthy lifestyle and eating choices does not necessary “cure” the next person of what is not working in their lifestyle and eating.
We want to believe that if we just do EXACTLY what that person is doing, eat EXACTLY what that person eats, that we can have that EXACT same outcome and/or feelings. But all our bodies are all just a bit different. For example. not everyone will experience a “runner’s high” after 20-30 minutes at a precise target heart rate. Personally, for me I have found I need to be climbing an elevation, because it’s when I exert that extra effort to get to the top of a hill, (with the result I feel a little puffed out at the top, meaning I have sudden increased breath and heart rate), that I experience a corresponding high. Even if it’s just in my head because, hey, I just accomplished that, I still end up feeling high or energized, for the next hill as I continue my hike.
That being said, I am going to work at defining what constitutes my specific biological chemistry of:
pleasure
reward
contentment
soothing, and
gratitude
I want to write them down for myself, for those times when I need reminding (when I feel the siren song of an old habit that no longer serves me) that it’s really not a food I am craving, it’s the distraction of the disordered behaviors I have used in the past.










