If you’ve struggled with losing weight, have you ever
wondered if being heavy provides some benefit, protection, or safety?
It’s not easy to think about, and certainly not something I
ever considered until I started losing weight in late 2000 and had a moment of
panic. It took me completely by surprise, particularly since I hadn’t lost that
much – twelve pounds out of an eventual 135. But I had enough of a start to
know that I would get to my goal, and that frightened me.
As I wrote in my journal in November 2000:
“If I go through with
this, which I have every intention of doing, I will at some point have to deal
with the fact that I will be attractive. That shouldn’t be a scary thought, and
yet somehow it is. Because in that case, if someone rejects me, I won’t be able
to have the comfortable, superior thought that it’s because of my weight – it
would be because of me.”
I had never before realized how much I relied on my weight
as a balm to wounded pride. While I’m sure that sometimes people did judge me
and treat me harshly because of my weight or what I ate, it probably wasn’t the
case all the time.
I simply didn’t want to look at myself more closely to see
what might cause someone else to reject me or be mean to me. I felt that I
suffered enough in my daily life, with the burden of my size and other
adolescent differences, and leaning on the weight as a scapegoat became very
easy.
That moment in November 2000 forced me to think that perhaps
part of me hadn’t wanted to lose weight
those earlier times because I found some measure of unacknowledged safety in my
size. Confronting that truth humbled me, making me understand myself in ways
that I hadn’t wanted to admit.
On the flip side, only by acknowledging that truth could I
let go of my safety net and summon the courage to continue losing weight,
recognizing that I did it for me, to
achieve my goals, not based on what
anyone else thought.
And having come through that, I have learned that while some
people may still reject me, or be mean to me, it’s not because I’m a bad
person. Certainly I make mistakes, and I can’t please everyone.
Even more important, though, I’ve often found that if people
judge me harshly, it’s often not because of me at all – it’s because of their
own issues. I only wish I had known that sooner, so I might have had an easier
time letting go of that safety to be my authentic self, no matter what size.
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