Saturday, December 12, 2020

Why You, & Everyone Else, Should Have a Therapist.

In sixth grade (1996) I asked for a black and white Adidas puffer coat for Christmas not at all expecting that I’d actually get it.  We didn't have money, so when I opened that package Christmas morning I was beyond elated.  I couldn’t wait to wear it to school and finally, just maybe, be cool.  When I decided to write this piece, I asked my mom if she could find the picture of me wearing that coat, she sent it over, and my face is somber and almost sad looking as I posed in front of the tree.  I was perplexed because I remember well how excited and happy I was, so I asked my mom, “Any idea why I look so serious?”  To which she responded, “Welllll……you were serious quite a lot.  This was probably the beginning of the troubled age.” 



After Christmas break that year, I waited for the bus, rode to school, and when I got off and walked to the door, felt like a million bucks strutting down the sidewalk until I heard a seventh grade boy yell,  "Look at Sadie!  Now she really looks like Shamu!"  (Shamu was Sea World’s most famous killer whale at the time.) And this was a nickname that unfortunately stuck for years. In the hallways, on the bus, at recess, I would hear the voices of little shits of all ages shouting it out.  Of course that wasn’t the only name they had for me, and other kids called me straight up fat nearly every day, in addition to “mayonnaise girl” (my personal favorite) and other equally crappy things.

The school I went to was so small, I literally had seven kids in my class, that when we started playing instruments, we had to take a bus to another, larger school to be part of a full band.  In eighth grade after practice, while waiting to head back to our school, a younger kid called me Shamu as we boarded the bus and it was just not the day.  I grabbed him by the collar, slammed him up against the side of the bus, put my face in his face, and snarled, “Don’t. Sayit. Again.”  I will never forget the look in his eyes as he stammered, “O, o, o, okay…”  I got on the bus, he got on behind me, and another kid who had not seen this altercation, looked my direction and said, “Hey Shamu!”  I took three huge steps toward him, pushed him into the bus window, and yelled, “It’s enough! Shut up!” Word must have gotten around because that was the last time anyone called me Shamu, but was unfortunately not the last they called me fat. 

At fourteen, super traumatically for me, we moved from that tiny town in South Dakota, to an even smaller one in Northern Minnesota. Although I was heartbroken, I thought this was finally my chance to rebuild myself as the cool new kid and because my parents felt guilty for ripping me away from my friends, they bought me a whole bunch of new clothes.  I felt like a badass when I started ninth grade, and was surprised how nice people were to me…well most of them.  I made friends easily, although maybe not with the best people, and for the first time in my life, felt like I fit in.  For a while.  After some months though, a few of the older high schoolers started noticing that I was a bit different and didn’t quite mesh with their rural Midwestern crowd.  I called out bully behavior when I saw it and confronted peers when they were being assholes to other people.  I guess that really stuck in the craw of one guy in particular, Bryce, who made a point of saying jerky things to me whenever he had the opportunity.  He knew I was always in the art room, because that was my haven, and would often open the door, stick his head in, say my name until I looked at him, then yell, “Yer fat!” and close the door to take off down the hallway.  One day he did this but, instead of leaving, came into the room.  He muttered something mean as he walked by me, I turned, asked him to repeat it, he did, and I punched him directly in the stomach.  He bent over, let out a breathy, “oof!” and then bent over, pretended to be looking at something on a table while his eyes watered and he tried to catch his breath.  Once he’d mostly recovered, he called across the room to the art teacher, “Mr. Wolf!  Did you see what she did!?”  Mr. Wolf, who had been watching the whole thing, looked at Bryce, looked at me, and said, “Nope, sorry, I didn’t.”  I grinned, Mr. Wolf smirked, and Bryce asked for a pass to the bathroom.  He still said nasty things to me now and then, but nowhere near as often.  Two years later, I was all but engaged to his best friend and boy did he love that.  I wish I could say that was the last time some prick thought they needed to report to me their interpretation of my appearance, but alas it was not. 

In my first year of college which I was extremely not ready for, I was so petrified that someone would point out my weight or be an asshole to me that I rarely left my dorm.  I started using chat rooms online when these things were in their infancy, texting didn’t exist, I didn’t have a cell phone, and my social anxiety was such that it almost completely paralyzed me.  I spent innumerable hours in chat rooms talking with strangers from all over the world.  I was fascinated by everything I was learning from them as well as shocked and flattered by how many thought (or at least told me they thought) I was beautiful.  Eventually, I ended up talking more with one specific guy who was a photographer in the military and stationed in Afghanistan.  Lazaro was so unique, uncommonly intelligent, interesting, surprising, poetic, artistic, and had these dark intense eyes that seemed to gaze into your soul.  When he finished his deployment, he came to meet me in person and we fell into an intense, passionate, and dangerous love.  Because I really wasn’t keen on college at eighteen in the first place, when he suggested I move down to Clarksville, Tennessee to live with him right outside the base where he was stationed (Fort Campbell), I miserably finished the semester, packed up everything I could fit into my Accord, and drove the thirteen hours to Tennessee.  There is a whole lot more to this story, but to make it brief, Lazaro was severely mentally ill and I was so young I didn’t understand what was happening, so thought I could somehow make it better.  I tried my best to help and support him, be an adult, have a job, and live a thousand miles from my wonderfully supportive parents. 

Not long after the move he was discharged from the Army due to his mental instability and we moved back up to Minnesota.  The relationship progressed horribly, as did his at that time undiagnosed Schizophrenia, and turned into a physically, verbally, emotionally, and sexually abusive cluster fuck of huge emotions, manipulation, gaslighting, and cheating.  On more than one occasion he packed all of his belongings into his rucksack and told me he was leaving.  When I begged him to tell me why, to stay, to talk, he would say that if I gave him a BJ, he’d wouldn’t leave.  And because I truly believed I was worth next to nothing and that women were meant to suffer and serve men, I did it.  Afterward he’d force me to unpack his things while berating me.  Saying things like,

“The skin on your stomach is literally ripping apart [stretch marks] and you just keep eating!”

“Why do you stomp around the apartment?! [Me just walking normally.] You know we have downstairs neighbors right, what is wrong with you?!”

“No one could ever love you the way I love you, look at how fat you are.”

And although it hurt to hear, I knew he was right.  Eventually, he decided we were no longer going to eat any animal products and were to be Vegan from then on.  I came home from work to him having thrown all of my recently purchased groceries into the dumpster.  The next morning he woke me up at 6:30 demanding I get dressed and jog around the apartment complex in the frigid December air.  Lazaro jogged behind me yelling various insulting comments about my appearance and pushing me to keep going.  Similar things went on for about two years before a close friend recognized what was happening, came over with her sister’s truck while Lazaro was at work, helped me pack all of his stuff, drove it over to Barnes & Noble where he worked at the time, and stacked it on top of his car.  He came out while we were putting the last items on, held out his hand for me to shake and said, “Nice knowing you.”  I was shattered. 

Despite that coldness, after I kicked him out, he stalked and harassed me; showing up at my job, my apartment, and calling hundreds of times a day.  I tolerated this behavior for about five years before it finally stopped completely.  Several years later, after having had no contact for a long period, I drunk dialed him like a complete and total idiot.  Regrettably, he answered and I chose to share that I no longer dated men and now identified as a lesbian.  He laughed and laughed then told me I didn’t know what the hell I was talking about and, “what a ridiculous thing to say.”  It was then that I hung up and made that the last time we ever spoke.  Needless to say, it has always been difficult for me to stand up for myself, until for one reason or another, it isn’t. 

I think a huge part of why I put up with the asshole kids calling me names, Lazaro treating me so poorly for so long, and all of the other awful relationships I had as a young person, because I had been receiving the message loud and clear from the time I was able to comprehend it, that I deserved it all because I was fat.  While reading Seventeen magazine at fourteen years old, I learned that women must be stick figure thin to be found attractive or ever even have a chance at happiness, and that I should draw as much attention to my mouth as possible when I was around boys.  At the same age, I observed my mother, after having worked at least a nine hour day, cook dinner every night, serve it to my father, more often than not accept his snarky criticism of her food, and then say nothing about it being shitty of him to mention.  She did this because she was constantly sacrificing herself, striving to calm his tumultuous mind, and to keep the peace.  

At the same time as literally every Disney movie I loved as a kid was telling me I should be a demure young lady who needed a man to save and take care of me, my mom poked me under the table when I said things she knew would upset papa, shot me the scary severe mom face when she recognized my attitude was irritating him, and consistently demonstrated an overall tense and hushed tolerance of each of his juvenile and intolerant behaviors.  She regularly tip-toed around pa’s fragile identity, sidestepped any subject that would set him off, and strongly encouraged her daughter to do the same.

As I was simultaneously hearing fat jokes on every show in existence and being called fat every day at school, my mother was suggesting I have an Herbalife shake instead of breakfast or lunch and saying things like, “Too much is too much, Sadie.” My nine year old self in turn believed that I was “too much,” and began the inveterate battle of making myself smaller in every way possible.  None of those ways being the one in which she subtly and not so subtly suggested I shrink. 

Flying in the face of her staunch Second Wave Feminist ideals and fierce advocation for her only child, my lovely mama has always been captured by the predominant thought and mainstream notions of weight, health, and appearance.  Although she’s exceedingly kind, loving, thoughtful, and generous, for as long as I can remember she’s made self-deprecating comments about her weight (and that of others), her shape (and those of others), how her clothes were fitting (and those of others), how she knew what it was like to be fat since she weighed one sixty in college… (Mmm hmm, okay, mom.)  She’s been drinking that Kool-Aid for so long, she’s literally blind to how destructive her particular brand of self-ridicule is for herself and for everyone around her.  Pretty sure though, that ninety percent of us do and say similar, if not exactly the same things because we’ve been hearing them all our lives and now believe them reasonable.  (They aren’t.)

Speaking of unreasonable, my father had some influence in my thought processes as well.  He was born with the soul (and talent) of a tortured artist and unfortunately grew up with a rigid father who pushed him to be someone he wasn’t.  His retaliation then, was the decision that he would never change for anybody, not even himself.  He has maintained the emotional intelligence of someone less than half his age and took/takes pride in having never changed.  My mom confirms that he’s been the same since he was about twenty five.  Invariably, papa became the victim in life situations whether or not he actually was.  He was hyperemotional, extremely sensitive, and has never had much control over the expression of intense emotion he seems to nearly always be feeling.  Since mom is not the same way, they would often snip at one another and argue over her lack of passion versus his overabundance of it.  Pa didn’t understand how she could be so contained and stomped around the house yelling and demanding to know why she was never as upset about things as he was.

Since we lived in the middle of nowhere and I was a "gifted" child with no siblings or neighbors who didn’t easily relate to kids my age, my parents were my examples for development of social emotional “skills” and ways in which to relate to myself.  At quite a young age, I was emulating not only my mother’s self-deprecating behavior, but also my father’s fly off the handle emotionality.  I considered my husky frame disgusting because I wasn’t built like the tiny-waisted women in the cartoons I watched or the hot models in Seventeen and YM magazines.  Because they fed off of my substantial overreactions, the kids at school called me names making those awful thoughts about myself worse, and my mother solidified the beliefs with her abundance of negative self-talk, comments or suggestions on my food choices, leaving “Prevention” and “Shape” magazines in my bedroom with articles about exercise/weight loss highlighted, and offering to bring me along to her Weight Watchers meetings.    

Despite their obliviousness for how negatively I was affected by their shortcomings (which could have been greatly reduced with some self-awareness and therapy), I am supremely fortunate to have had the love and unconditional support of my amazing parents all my life, and I wouldn’t trade them for anything.  They are wonderful people and taught me so many invaluable things, but neither of them realized that their behavior, the way they navigated their relationship, and my father’s volatility were not only affecting me hugely, but were building a scaffolding it would take several years to identify and a lifetime to dismantle.  They didn’t realize that when Lucinda invited everyone but me to her Halloween party in sixth grade, that it wasn’t because I was in a “troubled age” and had something wrong with me, but that I was behaving just as my father did which made other kids uncomfortable and not want me around.  My emotional outbursts, inability to express or manage my feelings safely or rationally, hyper defensiveness, and a propensity for self-victimization, were all things I had learned from observing my father.  I had also gleaned from watching my mom, that my job as a lady and partner was to comfort, pacify, and care for men.  So later on, when I began dating, that belief and the deep-seated conclusion that being chubby made me worthless, assured that every relationship I had as a young person was unhealthy and ultimately, traumatizing. 

My mother wasn’t (and still isn’t) able to see, that when I was a child I never felt comfortable or safe because of papa’s unpredictable explosions of emotion and her insistence upon normalizing and glossing over them.  I was perpetually anxious and anticipating his next detonation, so comforted myself the only way I knew how: with food. Instead, they identified me as the problem and put me in therapy, having never attended themselves.  They had no comprehension of the message that would send to my impressionable adolescent mind, and never considered that I’d have a genetic predisposition for depression due to papa’s brain chemistry. They didn’t realize that I would deal with many unnecessary challenges in my youth as a direct result of my emulating the ways in which they had conducted themselves all my life.  They still don’t see that their behavior, action, inaction, word choices, language, and lack of reliable self-awareness molded who I was and paved the way for most of the painful and traumatic situations and relationships I got myself into.  I know that I sought out and stayed in terrible relationships and sexual circumstances because my misled, abused, and bullied mind convinced me I couldn’t do any better and probably deserved to be treated so poorly.  I know that I absorbed my parents’ marriage dynamics and adopted them as my own which led me into codependent relationships with severely mentally ill people.  People who were not self-aware, weren’t working on themselves and weren’t participating in therapy with a professional…people who shared some of the same negative traits as my parents.  I know that I equated my value as a human to how much others wanted to have sex with me because society and media strongly suggested I do so, and I know the things my parents did and said only made that worse.  To this day, they don’t look inward, they don’t seek therapy, and they don’t see how their poor mental health formed who I was and am.  Which, I can only speculate is why two days after Christmas last year (my 35th), my mother chose to write a secret e-mail to my therapist (Amy).  Mom expressed her concern over some comments Amy had made that I’d shared with her.  The context is irrelevant so I’ll spare you the details, but Amy is amazing and this is what she said,

“Direct them [my thoughts] towards self-acceptance and love.  Your body and self is an illusion.  And all the bullshit is just that, bullshit.  You have no problems.  There’s nothing wrong with you.  There’s that shit that happened to you, effects of that, but you are perfect and lovable and worthy and all ten things right now, just as you are.  I mean, there’re problems…don’t get me wrong, but you are not one of them!  That bullshit has to go.  It’s the only thing in your way.  Your belly, your weight, your sweaty nervousness, none of that is the problem.  It’s how you are relating to them influenced by the problems, namely shame and stuck trauma.  Time to fuck that shit hard and get it gone.”

This apparently triggered my mom because she is so “under the influence,” (as Amy puts it) of our culture’s garbage.  She wrote to Amy that she appreciated her encouragement for loving myself as I am, “…but it seems treating the eating disorder should also have top billing.”  She went on to list all the reasons why she believes it necessary that I lose weight, from medical issues not even related to my size to her constantly worrying about me being unhealthy because I’m fat.  She mentioned more than once how she should probably “keep her nose out of it,” and should, “maybe not be writing this at all,” before she ended the note with a, “P.S. I ask that this communication is just between you and me. (smiley face & peace sign emojis)” 

My mother obviously assumed that Amy and I have less trust and respect for one another than we do, and clearly had no concept of how far this would set me back mentally.  I’ve been working with Amy for just over five years, have been in therapy for about twenty years all totaled, and still have yet to overcome the self-loathing and insecurity that permeate every aspect of my life.  Over the last year or so I’d been feeling an internal shift and thought maybe all the really challenging work we’ve been doing for so long was finally permitting my mind some divergence from those negative beliefs that have traveled for thirty years down, now deeply entrenched, neural pathways.  It’s as though, since learning of my mother’s letter, my brain reverted back to old patterns and thought processes because regardless of her assurance that she hadn’t silently judged me (I’d always suspected she did) the same way she openly judged herself and others, I now know she did/does.  I feel betrayed by the one person whom I believed I could always trust, and also feel as though she’s been lying to me about how she really sees me for decades.  Which are probably some of my biggest fears realized. 

When I look back on the threads of my life, my childhood, the people who hurt me, what they said and did, how they made me feel, what American media taught me to believe, and how my parents handled it all, I realize that those traumatic experiences have been tightly woven together into a tapestry of lifelong insecurity, low self-esteem, self-injurious behavior, codependency, depression, and anxiety. And I can’t help but wonder, had my parents cared for their own mental health with the help of a qualified professional, would this tapestry exist at all?  Would it be so impenetrable if the kids who bullied and put me down had gotten the love and help they needed?  Would my adolescence and young adulthood have been so tumultuous and painful?  Would I have experienced all the trauma that daily incapacitates and keeps me working jobs that undervalue me and waste my mind and talent?  The answers to those questions are unknown, but what I do know is that I’m better off now than any of the people who contributed to my trauma. 

Most of the kids who called me Shamu have significant Googleable arrest records, the one who harassed me in high school (Bryce) literally shot and killed multiple people, a cop, then himself, Lazaro is unable to function on his own and lives in an inpatient treatment center on the East coast, my father still maintains that never changing is a positive thing- not seeing how his insistence upon this has had a hugely negative effect on his (and his wife’s) life, and my mother has been in an emotionally abusive, codependent relationship for fifty years.  This is not to say that any of them necessarily deserve the negative things in their lives, but had any or all of them had some sort of intervention by a qualified mental health professional, maybe it would have been different for each of us.  If only someone had helped them recognize that their trauma was suggesting all sorts of shitty behavior to compensate for the shitty things they’d experienced as young people.  If only someone had told them they weren’t the problem, that trauma was the problem, and then helped them work through it.

I think part of why I’ve survived so much in my short life, found the strength to do the hard work on myself, and continue to struggle with healing, is to be here to share that regardless of any of the incoming garbage suggesting otherwise, you are not the problem.  As Amy reminds me weekly, “people are not problems, people have problems.”  Untreated and unacknowledged trauma and its effects lead people to create new trauma for themselves and for others; whether or not they realize this is what’s happening.  It is very much a vicious cycle that must be consciously confronted, interrupted, and (in the case of my mother’s internalized fat-phobia) must also be actively resisted. 

So then, how in the fuck does one actively resist the predominant view of fatness and fear of being fat or in the proximity of fatness?  Let me offer some (semi) simple suggestions:

1.     Pay attention to the language you use both internally and externally and actively change it. 

When your mind offers up completely unprompted comments like, “you’re fat and gross,” literally tell yourself to “STOP.”  Saying it aloud can help a lot to redirect the neurons in your brain traveling down well-worn pathways.  It takes practice!

When criticizing someone else’s body shape or how their clothes fit seems like something you should do, remind yourself that you don’t have to be part of that negativity and tell yourself to “STOP.”

2.     Call other people out on their fat-phobic (& racist, sexist, homophobic, ignorant, etc.) language. 

Let them know it’s hurtful, anti-feminist bullshit, that you won’t tolerate it, and let them know why.  Even when you hear that stuff in shows or movies, call it out to yourself internally.  Remind yourself that it’s bullshit even if you can’t say it aloud. 

3.     Surround yourself with people who share your values and will help you resist the garbage.

If you have friends who still make comments that perpetuate stereotypes and straight up lies about fat people (or anyone else for that matter), have a chat with them about this.  If they make no effort to change and/or can’t understand why this is important, maybe move on from that person. 

This includes TV and social media!  Don’t follow celebrities who are drunk on the toxic messages of society and choosing to use their platforms to perpetuate those messages.  (Ahem, Kardashians.)  Do follow those who are working to invalidate untrue and harmful perceptions and introduce positive and factual thought processes (Jameela Jamil). 

Here are some Twitter & Instagram accounts to follow (some handles are only one or the other, some are both): @yrfatfriend, Michelle Allison- @fatnutritionist, @bodyposipanda, @KivanBay, Michelle Elman- @ScarredNtScared, @Lizzo, Jameela Jamil- @jameelajamil, @i_weigh, @Ok2BeFat, @Artists_Ali, Cake Plus-Sized Resale- @cakeplussize, Cat Polivoda- @CatPolivoda, fiercefatfemme, rachel.cargle, simonemariposa, chikalogy, mattzhaig, brenebrown

(some of these people are local and host in-person events!)

4.     Remind yourself often, that you and others are not the problem, but that those messages and the trauma they cause are the problem. 

You are only human and have absorbed these ideas via the social environment in which we all developed.  None of us, “licked it off the ground,” (another therapist Amy saying) and we will have to work hard to change it.  Although it may feel Sisyphean, observing the changes that have already happened show us that it’s possible!