It’s Not Really About the Food

Last night I argued with my child over food. He didn’t talk to me the rest of the night, and I went to bed early without talking to anyone. I hated myself.

I was a chubby kid. I remember my first food binge. It was ice cream and no one was home. I was seven years old.

I became a morbidly obese teenager. I ate my feelings every fucking night.

In college, I lost some weight. I discovered walking and weight lifting. I was back to chubby. By my junior year, I was a Creative Writing major and I poured all of my childhood trauma and anger into stories and poetry. Did I still eat my feelings? Oh yeah, but not to the same extent.

Just after graduating from college, though, I became bulimic. Interestingly enough, my first puking session was ice cream. I ending up losing another 30 pounds or so. My dad was worried about me. I remember how he came to the video store I was working at and he was so worried I’d die from losing so much weight. This was not going to happen. I still ate a lot and just puked enough to maintain the initial weight loss. But I know it wasn’t as simple as that. I was fucked up and Dad was worried.

I went off to graduate school, still throwing up, just not as often. Then my teeth started to hurt and I had to go to the dentist at the age of 23. I hadn’t gone since I was four years old. We didn’t have the money to go when we were kids and the one time we did go, I apparently had a horrible experience. I have no memory of it, but I broke down in tears when I had to see this dentist while I was in grad school. He’s the one who told me I had a bad experience. He had seen this before. He was kindest, gentlest man and dentist. He pulled a tooth and was good to me. I stopped throwing up on purpose that day. I was too freaked to lose my teeth.

And now? I continue to struggle with my relationship with food and my weight. It sometimes comes up in therapy. Some days I just don’t care about any of it because life is too exhausting on other levels.

But now my son has gained a lot of weight. I don’t know what to do.

My beautiful boy has been on antidepressants for several years now. I think it has saved his life and I’m so, so grateful for our beloved Dr. Lauer for getting him on the right path. Unfortunately, those meds often cause weight gain. For my boy, his hunger was insatiable. Being a growing boy, his hunger could be pretty intense as it was, but this? This was bananas. Along with that, though, was his love of gaming and hatred of exercise. When you combine it all, it leads to weight gain.

I’ve worried about his physical health, although with a battery of tests he needed to do this past week, he seems to be good–except his weight is in the morbidly obese category. Just like his mom’s was at the same exact age.

Last night, we ended up fighting about a pizza, which was really a misunderstanding. But none of that was super clear last night, and I was too in my head to fix it. So this morning, I got up before 7 because my body wouldn’t let me sleep. I had coffee and just felt too unsettled to relax and read. So I started cooking. Not eating. Just cooking. I made healthy breakfast cookies, yeast rolls and sweet potato black bean chili. I listened to an audiobook while mixing and chopping and doing dishes. I felt calm but determined. I needed to fix this.

Being a 17-year-old kid, my son didn’t awake until nearly 11. I had been up for over 4 hours by then. I had a little plate with breakfast cookies on it, waiting for him, and I poured him a glass of milk. He was so happy by the cookies–it’s something I used to make a lot when he was little. I apologized to him and said we needed to talk about it. I started to cry and told him I never want him to have the fucked up relationship with food or his body that I do. I just want him to be ok and healthy and live a long, beautiful life. He hugged me and we talked about what happened. He doesn’t have a bad self-image in the least. That makes me incredibly happy. He does eat his feelings sometimes, but doesn’t seem to have that toxic relationship with food that I do.

Do I want him to lose weight? Yes. That’s an emphatic yes. I know you can be healthy and be large. But when you’re already 6’8″, you don’t fit in a lot of clothes or cars or anywhere. Being heavier increases those challenges. He’s already a broke, queer giant on antidepressants. He doesn’t need anymore challenges.

If he doesn’t lose any weight? Oh well. I’ll get over it. If my kid is healthy and happy and can find clothes that fit, then I’m happy, too.

My son is aware of my various eating disorders and he’s seen photos of me as a teen. Before, he only knew the mom who runs and eats well (most of the time). He didn’t know the person I was before and really still am. Once I showed him the photos, he understood a bit more. Today he is more aware of why his weight gain has triggered this manic urge to fill the house with salads and fruit and severely limit any kind of “junk” or processed foods. And it’s because I told him. I was honest with him.

I don’t know how long I can keep up the good meals and stores of fruit and vegetables in the house. No matter what anyone says, eating well can be expensive. But I’ve decided that it doesn’t matter right now. If I have to charge a load of groceries on my credit card, I’ll do it. (Ok, I already did.) The good meals will be harder since that shit takes time and energy that I don’t seem to have lately. But I’ll try. And I’ll get the kid to help and the husband to help when he’s able.

We’re gonna do this, damn it. This kid will be a part of changing this country for the better. I completely believe that. So I’m going to shove my own eating issues down deep and just try to feed my kid in the healthiest way I can. In this case, food really is fuel. I’m gonna fuel my boy up so he can help govern this country in the near future. He’ll be part of the generation that shows the world that we really are a country of people with differing beliefs and genders and colors and wants and needs, but we will help one another RISE UP, not be pushed down.

I’m off to meal plan for the week. It kinda feels like the beginning of a revolution. ❤

Stay well, friends.

Missing Pieces

This week I joined Weight Watchers. I have 10 pounds of sadness, sweet creamy coffee and gluten-free baked goods to get rid of. My occasional running and eating everything I want when the mood hits me is certainly not working. Do I need a therapist more than the WW app? Probably. But trying to lose the weight gives me a sense of control that I may or may not really have. For now I’ll take the illusion.

I happened to start my weight loss program on the same day I got a message from the facility where my mom currently lives. For reasons unknown, Mom has started to pull her hair out…by the fistfuls (trichotillomania). And when I went to visit Mom yesterday, I realized they were not exaggerating. Much of her hair on the left side of her head is gone.

Mom’s hair has been thinning over the past few years due to medication, so honestly, it didn’t look as bad as I had feared. I was so worried, though, that I brought both my son and husband with me to visit. I knew I couldn’t do this on my own. I’m really good at faking happiness and cheer, but sometimes I need back-up, you know? It turned out to be a great visit. We all laughed, they ate donuts and drank coffee, and I just kept my smile on. I didn’t even cry when we got back to the car, or even that night. I was ok.

But then when I told my sister about Mom, she said one little thing that just broke me. She said how sad it was that Mom had to end up this way. And she’s right. It IS fucking sad and horribly depressing to see a bright, energetic woman end up with half of her hair, scratches on her face from her own making, and only a handful of memories left.  I couldn’t sleep last night. I kept thinking about Mom and when I finally did sleep, I was restless and I kept hearing things that really weren’t there.

Today I hung out with my dad so my stepmom could go to church. Dad is on oxygen 24/7 now and can get confused easily, so he needs to have someone with him all the time.  I always have a good time with my dad, and he hasn’t lost so much memory yet that we can’t have a decent conversation. He typically asks how my mom is doing, but today I told him before he could even ask. I started to cry when I told him about her hair. He cried, too, and we both agreed that Alzheimer’s was a horrible fucking disease. Later, when my stepmom arrived, she asked about Mom and I cried again.  Maybe I’m really not ok.

puzzle

What I finally realized is that the missing hair is like a physical manifestation of Mom’s absent mind. Each week when I visit her, something else is missing–another memory or something is no longer understood. Last week it was my brother’s height. He was always the tallest in the family but Mom kept asking if I was the tallest. I guess I am now, but I won’t admit to that. I kept saying, “No, Phil was the tallest.” And this week she had stories to tell me about who colored pictures in her book or on her wall, and she said both of her grandchildren colored them. I know they didn’t, but in her mind they’ve been there to visit and that made her happy. If Mom can remain in these happy places in her mind, maybe she won’t keep scratching her face or pulling her hair? I really don’t know.  But I have to have hope that this trichotillomania will come to an end, either through medication or good thoughts or a bit of both. I have to hope because there is nothing else.

I’m watching my mother disappear, and I have to wonder, which of us will disappear first? Will I no longer recognize the woman I’ve known to be my mom first, or will she no longer recognize me?