I've already written a brief synopsis of my journey and what happened with some doctors in my past in Metamorphosis and Vituperation. What I really haven't written a lot about is my fight with obesity. Yes, I mentioned it. No, I didn't really talk about it.
If you think this is easy for me to write, then you are deluded. I'm sitting here, torn, wondering whether I should bare my soul or not. Is it worth it? I hope so. I do it with trepidation.
Have you ever been on steroids for anything? Do you remember the hunger you felt on them? That's all I remember feeling in my life prior to my surgery. I have always been hungry. Ok, let me clarify "always". Let's say 80% of my life I've been hungry. Between the flu and what I now know were "lows*", I have had periods of no hunger. But for the most part, I've been somewhere between stomach-growling hungery to ravenous, bite-my-arm-off hungry.
Does that mean I had no willpower? No. I managed, with the help of my very nutritionally wise mother, to stay at a normal weight even through college. I did put on the freshman 15 in my sophomore year of college, but also managed to lose it by essentially living on caffeine and a diet of books. (Study, that is.) Labs are not good places to eat, and I basically lived in one.
Was that easy? NO! I confess to binge eating at times. I don't think I ever purged. I don't remember doing that. I would be so absolutely hungry and nothing would sate my appetite. Nothing. I know my mother knew it, too. I remember slipping into the kitchen when I was small and "stealing" bread or crackers hoping she wouldn't notice. She never mentioned it, but she was sharp. She knew. I would panic at the thought of not being able to have food even at a young age.
Snacks were forbidden when I grew up unless we picked an apple off the tree or a tomato out of the garden. We ate three nutritional meals a day, drank skim milk, and lived outside. Yes, I exercised. Only we called it "play", then. Bicycles were star ships and swings were space stations. Lightening bugs were made by God to be chased. Dusk was a time for hide-and-seek. But I digress...
After college and graduate school, I got married. Had babies. Couldn't lose weight. You can read all about that in Metamorphosis. The thing is, I was hungry all the time. But I DID NOT EAT all the time. Sure, it absolutely possessed my every thought, my every action and my every plan. I had to know food was available even if I didn't eat it. And yes, sometimes I lost control and I overate. I wanted so much to be free of that obsession with food.
I did manage to lose that obsession one time on phentermine. Yeah, you can read about that in..... (you know the drill).... However, I started gaining weight even then. I was in a "low*", either induced by the phentermine or just coincidentally, prior to that gain. I vote for the latter.
My disease accelerated. I became "florid" or "classical" as my neurosurgeon coined it. I daily went from periods of nausea in the morning to periods of starvation by afternoon. Ok...it felt that way. I WANTED FOOD! I wanted to EAT! But did I? Most of the time, no. I counted calories, I measured food, I watched my carbs, I measured fat grams, I ate high fiber, I tried to exercise.
Let me emphasize: I TRIED to exercise. Have you ever walked through mud? How about walking in the waves in the ocean? That's how my legs felt when I tried to do anything. That started a long time ago, but I persisted in trying to build them up. Even when I was at my worst before surgery, I did water aerobics and/or swam several times a week. I did that until the pain became unbearable.
Did I lack willpower? I don't think so. Only a few people know the magnitude of the will it took to find someone to help me, understand me, diagnose me and get me on the road to recovery. I fight hard every day to lose this weight. I fight hard to get well. I fight hard to live! To work! To be here for my daughters and my parents. I don't just fight myself. I fight the "establishment" called medicine, too. And I am not alone. Zebras do exist.
I am no longer hungry for food. I am hungry for understanding. Not just for me, but for all who fight as I do for others to see beyond the obesity to the true problem.
*"lows": periods in the cycle of cyclic/intermittent/episodic Cushing's where cortisol is low.
Thanks for sharing this, Robin. Your post encouraged me to share a little on my blog, too. Maybe it's time to talk about this stuff more!
ReplyDeleteHugs,
Mary
I-yi-yi....I'm definitely having second thoughts today..... Thank you, Mary.
ReplyDeleteI feel for you. I used to live on massive doses of prednisone (hadn't heard of Cushing's yet) and I ate constantly. Unlike you, who had willpower (I bet it was very hard though) I would find myself cooking frozen meat in the middle of the night. And yes, I ate it all. I felt frantic for food.
ReplyDeleteThe doctors told me the pred would give me the munchies, this was sooo past the munchies.
I applaud you.
Hi, Judy. As I said, I had my binge moments. Those were the times I had no control. I was so hungry I could not help it. And I didn't know about Cushing's then, either. I was just eaten up with major guilt when I did that. So, I'd starve myself for days afterwards. Well, more than normal. It makes me wonder if there is a tie with eating disorders and cortisol. Wonder if anyone has studied it? I'll have to check it out.
ReplyDelete