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“Nobody objects to a woman being a good writer or sculptor or geneticist if at the same time she manages to be a good wife, good mother, good looking, good tempered, well groomed and unaggressive” -Leslie McIntyre

How I Became “RealFitMama”

I’m not going to lie. I have had body image issues my ENTIRE life. I never thought I was thin enough. I never thought I was pretty enough. I never thought my teeth were straight enough. I always thought I had too much hair (everywhere) and I ALWAYS felt like my hips were too wide.
My grandmother always told me that I was beautiful. “I have the most beautiful grand daughters in the world,” she would say. I would tell her that she was biased and HAD to say that. I was always looking for something wrong with my body. Something to be dissappointed or disgusted by.
February 7, 2001 changed everything for me. I had a daughter. I instantly began to struggle with the fact that my disordered eating and feelings about my body were going to be passed down to Linsey if I didn’t change them in myself.
I gained 60+ pounds during my pregnancy. I felt disgusting. I felt exhausted and I felt ashamed. I was 200 pounds and only 5 feet 4 inches tall, but I was too lazy to get off my butt and do anything about it. I would plan out exercise schedules, but never do them. I would figure out how many calories I had to eat each day to lose weight, but never stick to it. Finally I decided (for reasons that still escape me) that I HAD to get up off the couch. I had to get healthy for my daughter if for no other reason. I DID NOT want her to EVER feel bad about herself for how she looked, or how much she weighed or how wide her hips were.
I began to use the Weight Watchers program and I started dropping pounds instantly. If my memory is correct, I lost 5 pounds in the first week! I was STOKED. After that I continuously lost 1 to 2 pounds a week until I was down to about 135 pounds. Still not really happy with that weight I started walking before Jason went to work. The pounds kept coming off, but I wasn’t getting that toned look I saw in the magazines.
When Linsey was about 18 months old Jason and I packed her up and moved 2,000 miles away to Portland, OR so he could go to culinary school. While we lived there I became very interested in organic foods and really exercising. I was still only doing cardio, but I was getting faster and faster every day.
By the time we moved back I was still at 130 pounds, but my body looked different. We moved to St Louis at that point and I began working in a health club where I got a free membership as a perk! I started going into work early so I could work out before hand. Now, 5 years and one more child later I’m weighing in around 115 pounds.
I still feel jiggly some days or like my stomach could be firmer, but I don’t make those comments out loud. I work very hard to push those thoughts out of my head when they sneak in. I remind myself that I eat for nourishment and I exercise for my health. I still want to fit into my size 2 Gap Jeans, but (most of the time) the scale doesn’t define how I feel about myself.
I have decided to live by the Three A’s from the book BodyLove: Learning to Like Our Looks and Ourselves by Rita Freeman, Ph.D.

Attention — Refers to listening for and responding to internal cues (i.e., hunger, satiety, fatigue).
Appreciation — Refers to appreciating the pleasures your body can provide.
Acceptance — Refers to accepting what is — instead of longing for what is not.

I have also learned that I am not alone in this fight against Body Image Issues. While reading Shape Magazine I found out that famous actresses (who seemingly have the PERFECT body) have body image issues of their own. That surprised me because some of them were the picture perfect specimens that I was aspiring to be like. I would compare myself to pictures I saw of them in magazines or while I watched them in movies. To hear that they had body parts that they wished they could change or just wanted to get rid of really made me aware of how NOT alone I really was and still am.
At least I know that I have (and continue to) do my best NOT to pass these traits onto my daughters. I tell them everyday how beautiful AND smart they are. I never tell them they are perfect because I feel like that is a dangerous comment to give to someone. No one is perfect and if we all really knew that we would be much happier with our WHOLE selves.

My Weight Journey in Pictures…

circa ‘98

August 19, 2000

Christmas time 2000 (8 months pregnant with Linsey)

August 2006 (Linsey’s first day of 1st grade)

Winter 2006 (work banquet)

August 2007 (7 months pregnant with Regan & 10 year high school reunion)

Summer 2009 (Susan G Komen Race for the Cure w/ Linsey’s brownie troop)

Winter 2009 (sorry for the butt shot! Thank my husband…)