Moving the Goal Posts

I had a conversation with my husband the other day that really set the wheels turning in my head.  It started with him saying, “I need to talk to you.”

Uh-oh.  Nothing good ever comes from that opener, does it?  That’s how people bring up divorce, or mortal diseases. I cautiously approached him and waited for him to start talking.

He hesitantly added, “I don’t want you to take this the wrong way…”

Double uh-oh.  Now I knew he was going to tell me something terrible!

Instead, he told me he wanted me to know that he truly loves the way that I look right now.  He said I am perfect the way I am.  He said he is attracted to me if I choose to lose weight, too, but he didn’t want me to feel like I had to lose weight to make him happy, because he would be happy if I don’t lose anything.

I would assume he was just saying that to make me feel better, but my husband is not a sugar-coater. He is blunt, like me, and very honest. He does not say something unless he means it. It’s one of the many things I adore about him.

This is good, right?  I should have been happy, grateful that he loves me the way I am, relieved to have any imagined pressure taken off me.  Instead, I was upset.  And it took me a long time to figure out why.

After a few days of picking at the edges, working out the knots, it finally unraveled and seemed so simple once it was laid out in front of me.  The majority of my reasons for wanting to lose weight are external: wanting to be a better role model for my stepkids, wanting to look good for my husband, wanting to prove to others that I can do this. 

My stepkids are now mostly grown, so while I can still be a role model for them as a strong, healthy adult, my influence is limited when they are saturated with unhealthy expectations and attitudes from others.  And when my husband said he likes me the way I am right now, well, *poof*!  All of my external reasons for wanting to lose weight deflated.  I was left with an empty box, no compass, no direction.

Or so I thought.  I have focused so hard, so long, on shallow reasons to lose weight that I nearly forgot about ME.  I am pretty short, so my current weight is simply not healthy.  I used to really enjoy running, and I struggle with it now because of pain in my joints.  I used to take pride in my fitness, and I derived happiness from it.

It’s a huge shift in my thinking, my planning, my goal-setting.  I have no idea now what my goal weight is, but I know it’s not a goal weight that I set while trying to fit back into a certain pair of ancient jeans that haven’t fit since I was willing to work out for 2 hours a day.

I am going to weigh in tomorrow morning for an updated, accurate starting point.  I may not know for certain where I want to end up, but I know for certain it isn’t where I currently am.  So step #1: pinpoint  exactly where I am right now.

I am going to start with losing 10% of my weight.  I have read that losing 10% of extra body weight can have significant positive effects on health, so that will be my mini-goal.  

I also need to put some thought into meaningful goal posts for me.  Not fitting into a pair of jeans, but things that add value to my life, like running a certain distance again.  Being comfortable during those runs, not in agony.  Getting back to things I used to enjoy, like maybe kickboxing, definitely strength training.  

I have some homework to do this weekend, but I believe I am finally on the right track to move forward in a healthy way to get to a better place for myself, mentally and physically.

Ta-Da!

Ta-da! Check out my new and improved blog!

Yeah, I know. It looks the same, right? Nothing appears to be different. Am I on crack or something?

Nope. I haven’t changed how it looks. Oh, I am sure I will mess around with images and pages and layout, but that is not what I am talking about. I am talking about my blog’s purpose, feel, tone.

Remember my post about spring cleaning? I extended that philosophy — of purging anything not serving a positive purpose for me — to my mindset and attitude as well. That has been, by far, the heaviest, most burdensome clutter I have been carrying around.

I am a worrier, a thinker, an obsesser. If it’s worth thinking about, it’s worth pondering to death, coming up with 50 worst-case scenarios, and twisting and turning in my mind until I’m exhausted. It can be a good thing: I am very detail-oriented and don’t miss much. But it can also be a drain: I end up ceaselessly obsessing over things over which I have no control and can’t possibly change, anyway.

I am not going to suddenly stop worrying about my stepkids just because I am exploring a more sane and positive mindset. They are still in an unhealthy environment. But my husband and I have focused over the years on teaching them to think for themselves, to take care of each other, to pursue their own dreams and ambitions. Teaching them is all we can do. We can’t make their life choices for them.

I need to focus on myself for a bit. I have pushed myself to the back burner for years, taking care of others. I don’t regret anything I have done for anyone else. I just regret letting myself drop off my own to-do list.

Caring, but letting go of anger and frustration and negativity, is tricky. One of my biggest fears is slowly turning into someone like my husband’s ex-wife: negative, sour, jealous, petty, never pleased unless she is dragging everyone around her down to her level. She has been trapped in a toxic mindset so long that I don’t believe she can ever escape it. Like my husband says, her ugliness starts from inside. I don’t want to become like that.

So I won’t. I don’t claim that I will suddenly prance around in fields of flowers, singing hippie songs, writing love poetry, and pretending that nothing bad ever happens. But when it does, I need to stop and ask myself: what parts of this do I actually have control over? How can I respond to this in a way that maintains my personal health, sanity, and integrity?

As for my blog, I want to use it more actively, have more fun with it. I used to have a make-up and beauty blog that I abandoned years ago. Maybe I will start writing some product reviews here. So this might become my weight-loss/fitness/running/beauty/stepmom/cats/random jokes blog, ha ha. I’m okay with that.

I am a work in progress. My hope is to take care better of myself and be a more positive person in the process. I am still honest, blunt, and straightforward, so I am not dulling my edges or pulling my punches. I just want to express myself and live in a way that is healthier for me and for my family.

I don’t even know if any of that made any sense. I hope so!

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