“Oh, how I wish to be thin. To look better in the clothes that I am in. To be a size six instead of a ten.”
That is a portion of a poem that I wrote in high school. During that time, I was the captain of the cheerleading team, an A+ student, and I was competing in beauty pageants. My size was everything to me.
As a result, I have been on some form of a diet to lose weight since I was about 13 years old, and this poem reflected my thoughts about my health and weight.
From using diet pills to suppress my appetite, to my brief stint with purging, I over-exercised, counted calories, and drastically reduced my calorie intake (at one point I was only eating 1000 calories a day). I ate a vegan diet for 10 years, didn’t eat after 8pm, reduced carbs, tried giving up sugar.
The list goes on — all in an attempt to lose weight, to take up less space, to be an acceptable size for a woman in this culture. I have never appreciated the size I was and was always seeking to be smaller. I didn’t really think about my actual health as much as I cared about the number on my clothes tag.
You can watch body positive warrior Taryn Brumfitt’s message about your body below. Post continues after video.
As an adult, the way to lose weight among my friends and family has become all about weight loss challenges. Every January and at the start of every summer, my social media timeline is flooded with weight loss challenges.
Top Comments
You're definitely on the right path and you'll be happier & more contented for it.
My path includes being a vegetarian ( almost vegan ) for the last 34 years because I simply didn't want to be part of the animal cruelty in the food industries.
I also did Tai Qi and Qi Gong classes most of which I still remember and do each exercise 1 to 10 times each depending on how I feel.
I've also been meditating since I was about 4 years old.
I was a child migraine-sufferer and practiced "tuning out " to get away from the pain.
My migraines actually disappeared about 18 years ago when I was diagnosed with Crohns Disease - but that's another story.
Meditation ( various versions - mostly my own ) has been my friend.
I'll always be short & plump - and I accept that.
I have no intention of ever again wishing I was a "fashionable" size.
I just don't care and I'm happier for it.