I think we all want to achieve balance in our lives. At times it seems illusive: we want less stress, but we don’t want to feel disconnected. We want to make more money, but we don’t want to lose time with our family. Balance means different things to different people and to a former bulimic balance is difficult terrain to navigate.
Bulimia is a game of extremes: you binge on large amounts of food, then go to extreme measures to purge it: either by throwing up, using laxatives or exercise. I did all three. Once I beat bulimia finding balance was difficult. My attitudes towards food were distorted. I still ascribed to my list of “good” and “bad” foods, but knew I needed to get away from excluding foods if I wanted to get better. I also knew I needed to get to know my body better. I didn’t really know what true hunger was. I didn’t really know what full felt like. I couldn’t read my own body’s cues. And my view of exercise also had to change. For the most part exercise was a way for me to burn calories (which it is for many people) but I was compelled by fear (of being fat) not enjoyment, even though I did enjoy exercise.
When I stopped bingeing and purging and finally began to let go of the ‘old’ thinking. I had to find balance with food and exercise. I had to find a way to incorporate these into my new way of thinking and living.
Achieving Balance with Food:
- Recognize that there is no “bad” food. I had to stop making lists in my head of food that was “good” and that I was allowed to have and food that was “bad” and that I wasn’t allowed to have. I started to give myself permission to eat things I previously had labeled “bad” like all fat (nuts, avocado, oils, butter etc.), pizza, ice cream, brownies and fried foods. Giving myself permission meant that I gradually incorporated these foods into my diet, not every meal, but on occasion; knowing that my goal was to find balance.
- Learn to eat intuitively. Giving myself the freedom and permission to eat all foods was the first step in learning to eat intuitively: meaning that I would eat when I was hungry and stop when I was full. It took a while for me to learn my own body’s cues. But with time I began to follow what it was telling me. I began to fuel it properly. There were (and still are) occasions where I overeat. It was important for me to recognize that these are normal and not let guilt force me to “punish” myself for overeating: meaning I wouldn’t let myself feel like I had to exercise to burn off the excess calories. Another way I eat intuitively is that I honor my cravings, maybe not every single time, but if I want a certain food I eat it. I’ve found that satisfying cravings prevents the impulse to binge later on.
- Stop recording my food. When I was in the thick of of my struggle with anorexia and bulimia I obsessively recorded my food in a little notebook. I kept track of every calorie. I knew if I wanted to find balance I had to stop. So I did. I know that many people use food tracking apps or write down what they eat and for some this is an important tool. Even though it can be a tool it is still not part of intuitive eating and its important to recognize when it stops being a tool and starts becoming a distracting obsession.
- Have specific goals. Even though I gave myself freedom to eat what I wanted I knew there would be occasions where I would want to lose weight. Specifically after giving birth to my daughter. This was the most difficult area to find balance, because to some degree I felt like even the desire to lose weight might force me down the slippery slope back into bulimia. I was scared. But I knew that it was another area where balance was necessary. During pregnancy you gain a significant amount of weight, necessary for a healthy child and birth, yet it is unhealthy to keep that weight after your child is born. After a period of several months of adjusting to life with a newborn I started to make an effort to lose the baby weight. I had a specific, reasonable goal (one that wasn’t oriented around fear) and started to work towards it. I added structure to my diet (though it was not rigid) and started to incorporate exercise into my daily routine. And because I was not longer engaged in a vicious binge/purge cycle, the weight came off much more easily than I expected. There was no need for extremes, because my body was naturally finding a new balance. Last year, when I was running and racing competitively my diet also had more structure. I new that if I wanted to preform well I needed to cut out some of the less beneficial foods (pizza, chips etc) and focus on eating foods that would optimally fuel my body (lean meats, complex carbohydrates etc.). Again, I had a specific goal, added structure but stayed away from rigidity and extremes.
Balance in Exercise:
- Check your motives. If exercise, specifically running, was going to be a part of my life after bulimia, I had to get back to my original motives. Fear of becoming fat, fear of what other people thought of me and obsession with my weight and appearance had become the primary drivers of my activity. It sucked the fun out of running and made it an obligation, rather than an enjoyable activity like it had once been. So I had to get back to that original motivation: loving running for the freedom I felt, for the possibility of achieving great things and for the realization that out on the road I felt good enough-I didn’t have to strive to prove anything I could just be me. I say that I run for the road ahead, the unknown and the possibility of greatness. It sums up the feeling I get from running. I fell in love with running all over again after beating bulimia because it became something I did for love, not out of fear.
- Determine what is extreme. This could be considered different for everyone. A marathon to some may seem extreme, but to others is something they do on a regular basis throughout the year. I love running and I love the learning process of training for and racing a marathon. I love the challenge of the distance and the uncertainty you face on race day, wondering how your training will pan out, whether or not you’ll be able to pace yourself properly and if you’ll have that extra kick at the end to finish sprinting. For me a marathon is not extreme. But it is important that I recognize cues from my body and rest when its telling me I need rest. Almost like intuitive eating I have to run intuitively.
- Find a place for it. Training for marathons takes time. Lots of time. It is important to find balance with family, work, friends and other responsibilities. I don’t want to become obsessed with running, I know I have the personality of an addict, I could easily replace one addiction with another. It is important that I have perspective. It is important that I structure my life so that my running serves me instead of me serving my running. When my running serves me it is enjoyable, it is a stress relief, it is the alone time that I need to re-charge. When I serve my running, it takes over my thinking, it feels more like an obligation and it takes me away from my family. One of the ways I create balance is by running early in the morning before my husband and kids are awake (although that is becoming more of a challenge) or if my husband is home I run during my kids’ nap time. And if I need to take a day off because it gets in the way of family, then I do it.
- Have a specific goal. To achieve balance with my running I set specific goals that allow me to cycle through periods of intense training and rest periods. That way I give my body the break that it needs and don’t let running take over my life. Yes I am a runner, but that is not the only thing that I am and it certainly is not the most important thing that I am. So I set specific goals, such as a spring marathon and early fall marathon and then spend the late fall and early winter resting before the next training cycle begins. If I have a specific goal, work towards it, have the opportunity to achieve it then I’m less likely to get caught up in letting fear and obsession drive my motivation to run.
Our culture bombards us constantly with extremes. Many of them unhealthy and unachievable. Finding balance is essential, whether or not you have had or have an eating disorder. It can be especially difficult as a woman, because we are often told we can “do it all:” we can have the career, the marriage, the kids, the hobbies, the clothes, the body, the lifestyle. And so we do what we can to achieve it, but in the process lose sight of what is most important. Balance is all about living deliberately: deciding what you value and what adds value to your life and eliminating the things that don’t.
How do you find balance in your daily life? What tips can you offer to others? Are there areas where you struggle to find balance?
-Sarah
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Once again a very interesting post I can really relate to
scanney says
Glad you can relate. Navigating recovery is a difficult thing. It can be such a challenge to find balance and not swing towards another extreme.
I still swing to extremes from time to time, but on average I think I have found my balance… One thing recovery forces you to do is to learn a lot about yourself and be more aware of your body than other might be
Running in Mommyland says
I’m not bulimic, but consider a myself binge eater and struggle with over eating in a similar way to a bulimic does. It’s very hard to manage. I like food and I like to run, but when I’m having a tough time balancing the food issues I find myself wanting to run more. Really I need to balance the food more and run accordingly.
What you said about not counting every calorie and recording every meal. That’s good advice I should take. When I feel hungry and see that there’s only a few hundred more calories left for the day it send me in a frenzy and I just start to EAT!
Great post.
Thanks for writing it. Gives me lots to think about!
scanney says
I think the biggest challenge for binge eaters, overeaters and bulimics is eating intuitively. I found that I had so many “hang-ups” around certain foods, or amounts of foods that I couldn’t let myself eat without feeling guilty. And I didn’t trust my body to recover from a meal of overeating naturally. I think the hardest part for me was on those occasion when I did overeat, say at a party, cookout or Thanksgiving forcing myself to sit with the food (rather than purging) and really working my mind to get rid of the guilt. I really had to actively try to control and eliminate guilty thoughts. That was a big reason why I stopped recording calories, it was making me feel guilty or setting me up for panic mode (like you mentioned) where I would suddenly feel deprived cause I had so few calories left and then the purpose of counting calories backfired and I’d binge.
I think the battle begins in the mind. You have to change your thinking towards your body and towards food before you see any outward change. When I started to let go of all my preconceptions towards food, calories, weight gain and my body that is when I began to feel free.
Thanks for stopping by and commenting:-)
keepmoving4wd says
Hi, So glad I came across your blog, yay, you write so well (hope you don’t mind me following you hehe)!
A lot of what you’ve written I need to work on like finding a balance, although I have been working on it and that’s when I decided I need to take a break from things.
I can also relate to what you’ve said although I am not bulmic, I have struggled with similar things with counting cals and recording everything that I eat when I was doing elite gymnastics, although we had no choice, but I took it too far, then I kept getting injuries, then I decided to quit which was probably the best thing as i took up running and triathlon, which became my outlet and thanks to my coach at the time he taught me about the importance of eating enough for fuel, otherwise I just wouldn’t have the energy and at times when he knew I wasn’t eating enough he wouldn’t let me complete the sessions and as I hated this I quickly learnt that I needed to eat more!
Wow kinda going off track here… Anyway, just really glad I found another amazing person on here… Good luck with everything! Auds
scanney says
Thanks so much for stopping by and taking the time to read the post:-) I think for many fit-minded females balance is a really hard thing to achieve because our love of athletics and sport can often get distorted by the desire to be thin (or the competitive advantage of being thin like in gymnastics and running). It is such a fine line. Good for your coach for supporting a healthier perspective. Some coaches are not so kind or thoughtful.
I hope you stick around and continue to contribute to the conversation:-) Your thoughts and comments are valued!
Stephanie says
I love this post. Thank you for being open and honest!!! I have so much more to say maybe private email at some point
scanney says
I love ALL of this, and I especially love how open you are about writing about what has to be painful for you. I think you put it perfectly at the end when you wrote “Balance is about living deliberately.” YES, that’s exactly what it is. This was such a well thought out and helpful post. It really made me stop and think about what my intentions are. And, although I don’t struggle with eating, I tend to overtrain or overthink how important my training is. I love when someone helps me to keep it in check! THANK YOU
Thank you for sharing your story Sarah. I can understand how it would be difficult to find balance in food, exercise and so many other things after having an eating disorder.
Thank you for your comment lori:)it has been a challenge at times but with six years of sobriety it doesn’t feel like the effort it once was, now it’s just who I am:)
Mary says
Thanks