The Weight of Weight: A Journey of Epic Proportions

The Weight of Weight: A Journey of Epic Proportions

Many times, people think my health, wellness, and weight loss journey has been a one-and-done action. That is far from the case because this is a complex journey.

While I have lost half my weight and kept it off for more than three years, the process of maintenance is an ongoing journey, full of mental and physical actions that look and feel similar to the ones I used when losing weight.

Of course, I am thrilled to have lost half my weight. When I eat right, I have emerged from physical and psychological heaviness, which is the weight of weight.

The weight of weight is one of the most important reasons I decided to lose weight. My physical health weighed heavily on my mind, not just on my body.

I knew I was not acting in my own best interests. I knew that there were too many contradictions between healthy foods and the foods I was eating.

The unhealthy choices were having profound ramifications on my mind and my body. I wanted freedom from the mental and physical traps of my weight.

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Transforming My Shadows:  My Framework for Making and Sustaining Personal Changes

Transforming My Shadows:  My Framework for Making and Sustaining Personal Changes

Personal changes are hard to make – especially the changes that run counter to our human tendencies. Making these changes and sustaining them in my life are challenging processes.

When I decided to embark on a serious journey to improve my overall health, I knew I faced a 97% failure and 3% success rate for sustaining long-term weight loss.

I wanted to understand the roots of my failures. I wanted to learn from these failures in ways that led to the long-term successes that had eluded me all my life.

I am still learning to try to maintain long-term success. Doing that means understanding the blurry line between failures and successes where one is always part of the other.

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Satiation: Discovering a New Sensuality

Satiation: Discovering a New Sensuality

Satiation. I love this word and have only recently started to understand its meaning around my hunger drive.

Satiation is the pinnacle of what it means to fulfill the hunger drive, to eat when hungry. Satiation is the linchpin of my long-term success.

Discovering satiation was a confusing, complex process. I had lost half my weight and had maintained that weight loss for more than a year.

Yet, I was flailing and careening all over a razor blade even though the numbers on the scale held steady.

I was desperately trying not to fall into the abysses where one of my shadow selves ruled — either through the excesses of food addiction and binge eating, or the deprivations of anorexic restriction.

I had no idea how to maintain my success.

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Shadow Boxing: Fighting Myself for Myself

Shadow Boxing: Fighting Myself for Myself

Last weekend, I had a failure around food. Failures around food always expose my shadow selves. This time, it was a trigger food for overeating.

But, this post is more about failure than food. Failures happen, and I have gotten used to them. I have also gotten used to getting out of them, which I did.

But, sharing these failures in a public way is new ground for me, and I haven’t known how to talk about my failures in meaningful ways.

My failures around food feel epic and so do the struggles to turn them around. But, the solutions themselves are unremarkably boring.

Talking about the solutions may be more boring than the solutions. I ate clean unprocessed plants. I worked out. I shopped for groceries. I prepared food for the next day.

Transforming my shadows occurs in the boring routines of daily life. But, there is tremendous value in talking about these mundane details to learn and grow.

Still, I had been asking myself: How will I talk about my failures in ways that go beyond summarizing meaningless details?

The answer materialized out of nowhere.

SHADOW BOXING

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