Reflections of an Ex-Annorexic


I used to be a slave to my body -
To the sustenance that passed my lips
To the necessary nourishment -
counting numbers
and calculating possibilities.

Each holiday came with the knowledge
that I'd have to push myself harder
to rid myself of those
moments of weakness.

One of my body's core functions
became my greatest enemy -
keeping me up at night
as i
counted
counted
counted.

Always falling short,
attacking myself for my weakness -
how could I not resist
what my body so
desperately
needed?

I thought it made me stronger -
this need for control
as I watched the weaker
devour their sandwiches
while I picked at my salad
and sipped my water.

But the thing that brought me purpose
keeping me up at night
counting
counting
counting
could have been my end.

It threatened to steal from me
precious dreams
of future kin
if I continued
counting
counting
counting.

I'd look in the mirror
pinching non-existent fat
never measuring up
to my expectations
of being skeletal thin.

I remember the day
I recognized my problem
and asked for help
as tears fell into
the bowl of soup
I'd been stirring, untouched,
for the past hour.

The voice never leaves.
Once you've given yourself to it
for a season,
it's your constant companion.
But it gets quieter,
even muted at times,
and then one day you forget
you ever let it have power over you.

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Lessons (draft posting)


The last few months have been weird.
I'm trying to find myself in ways that I don't yet understand.
I'm learning how to navigate adulthood
and pray I don't lose my imagination in its wake.
I'm learning that being soft isn't wrong,
but being soft with the wrong people can be devastating.
I'm learning to breathe deeply
and rest fully when given the opportunity.
I'm learning to breathe deeply
and feel comfortable in my skin.
Sometimes 'no' is the right answer
and explanations are unnecessary. 
Sometimes silence is okay.

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Soft Warrior (draft posting)



I was raised to be a warrior
A strong fighter
a woman who wouldn't back down
who'd stand her ground
in the face of trials.

I was born to be strong
to stand up tall
to confidently walk into battle
to endure the fire
and come out with minimal damage.

But a warrior is soft.


I'm soft, but I'm fierce.
I'm fiery, but I'm vulnerable.
Living in this juxtaposition is hard to swallow.

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Busy // Process


Every year I think "next year is when I find rest, surely, at the bend in the road, things will slow down and I'll find normalcy." Yet, somehow the next year I find myself busier than the year before asking the same question, "how did I get here?"

 I like to be busy. I thrive on busy. If I don't have things to do, I somehow feel like I'm missing my potential, yet in every season God is whispering to me, asking me to just stop moving for a few minutes to meet with Him. To sit with Him. To breathe in His life-giving breath and listen to His heart beat for His people. And sometimes I'm good at that, in lands not like my own when I'm surrounded by beaches or volcanoes or people speaking a native tongue that isn't my mother tongue.

I'm wrestling with that. That it's easier for me to talk about my sweet Jesus in a foreign language, in a country hundred of miles away from where my body finds its home most often. Where do I go from here? Burned out, exhausted, and still trying to find my bearing after a summer filled with more challenges and changes than my lips can express. I'm different. Things have changed. This is how I always feel after a season of traveling; I've only just finished explaining to those dear to me how I was different from the last round of experiences only to get yanked into new ones. It's exhausting to have to introduce yourself to people who believe they know who you are over and over. It's easier to just retreat within myself, and keep a very small number of people gripped in my hand tight, spitting up words as my mind can't take the internal processing any longer. And sometimes that's all I can handle. 

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Recovery.



As many of you know by now, I picked up a parasitic friend last summer in the Dominican Republic. My parasite is/was affectionately know as Diablo (devil in Spanish.) What started in October with weekly vomiting morphed into intense pain when I ate anything but bland food. December landed me in the ER, and I was discharged after 7 hours, a CAT scan, an X-ray, and an ultra-sound, finding a benign lesion on my liver. A few weeks later I drove to Iowa for 3 weeks for an extended holiday stay. Within the first week I saw 2 doctors and had an MRI, only to have less answers than before - my vomiting and pain weren't caused by my liver. After "smelling my way" through Christmas (smelling fudge and cookies is better than nothing, right?) I had another test to see if there was something wrong with how my body processed food. Basically, I ate eggs laced with radioactivity and got to see my stomach on a screen.

If nothing else, I've learned way more about the human body than I ever knew before. I returned to Minneapolis without answers, and went to see a travel doctor. After 4 doctors, 6 hospitals, and 2+ months of not being able to eat, on February 9th I found out that I had, in fact, picked up a parasite and I'd be given a one-time antibiotic that should take care of it.

It's been a few weeks since I've been able to eat again. I think somewhere between saltine crackers and bowls of oatmeal, I found myself again. I'm not going to pretend like any part of it was easy. Those few months were dark days, and there were times where I felt like I was fighting for my soul as well as my body, but I never fought alone. I'm grateful for God who doesn't leave me even when I don't want him. I'm grateful for a God that loves me at my weakest - when I turn my face from him and say "don't look at me like this" - but reminds me that He is strong for me. I'm sure that won't be my last run in with a parasite, it's kind of part of the territory.

Thanks for your prayers, from the bottom of my heart.

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