Quiet

I’m trying to practice what I preach. I’m trying to slow down. I’m trying to breathe.

I will admit that you are meeting me at a vulnerable time for reasons I will delve into in future posts. Maybe this vulnerability is why writing is especially important to me right now. I’ve recognized the importance of this process, the process of getting the thoughts out of my head and onto paper. The process of searching for the gray and holding on to it. I’m in a black and white moment and this is me actively finding the gray.

I am writing tonight in one of my more anxious states. At the current time my thoughts are something along the lines of, “chips and queso, chips and queso, chips and queso.” Why? The most simple explanation is that earlier for lunch I ordered chips and queso along with my burrito bowl. I did not eat the chips. I was distracted with work and I was pretty full from the bowl. In other words, at the time, I did not feel I needed the chips to satisfy me.

But now it is 10:25 pm and the chips are calling my name. The thought of them being a few feet away nags at me. I have to keep refocusing my brain on something else. It is hard work. There is no denying it.

The more complicated answer to the “why” question above is that food and I have a messy relationship. Food is my comfort. Food is also my drug. It is the reason therapy was a necessity years ago and it continues to be one of the reasons I am still in therapy to this day.

I was 18 or 19 when I stuck my fingers down my throat for the first time. I am now 34.

It has taken me approximately 16 years to admit what I just did. I gave you my name and I shared something so very personal about myself with you. I am bulimic. It is part of me. It has shaped me. But it is not me.

There has been an undeniable fear of writing these words. A fear that these words would take on an identity that I could never rid myself of or that they would be turned into something so meaningless, so degrading.

“Oh you know Sarah? She is bulimic.” As if that is all that I am.

“Oh you remember Sarah? She is still bulimic?” As if that is all I have to show for the last 16 years.

I realize now that many of the fears I put onto you were projections of my own self-hatred.

Eating disorders and shame go hand in hand. At times, it has felt like I am living a double life – the one where I keep it together in front of other people and the one where I privately fall apart. But this double life has come at a cost – my sanity. Secrets are dangerous and they are heavy. They weigh you down.

Over time I will share more about the eating disorder and many other things.

For now I will focus on tonight. I got home from a date. I was feeling pretty good, but I was also feeling anxious. I’ve learned that anxiety is not all bad emotions. Instead it seems like an excess of emotions or sometimes extreme emotions. For me, anxiety is almost always in the form of racing thoughts that won’t turn off. That is, until I find something to focus my brain on. This is where chips and queso come in. Focusing on food offers this false promise of a quiet brain. I go somewhere else when I binge. It is temporarily quiet. When I’m anxious I crave this quiet even if it lasts for a very short time.

And part of me, even after 16 years, is afraid to let it go. I want to let it go. And then I don’t.

It is not one or the other. It is both.

And it is gray.  

Cue “Secrets” by OneRepublic

Gray

What is the color gray? A color between black and white. A color without color. But is that all? It can also be a combination of colors. You can mix equal parts cyan, magenta, and yellow to get gray. Or you can mix green, blue, and violet.

In psychology, gray is thought to be an unemotional color. It symbolizes a state of detachment and impartiality. It is controlled. It is balanced. It is dependable.

What do you think of when you think of the color gray? I will admit these are not always the words that come to mind for me. Sometimes it only seems dull, boring, lifeless. Does this mean that dependability is boring? Is balance boring?

My mind is always searching for an answer, the answer. I want to know why things happen. I want there to be a reason so my thoughts stop spinning. I want to avoid the things that feel bad and steer myself in the direction of the good. But life keeps teaching me that it is much more complicated. Filled with nuance (there is that word again). I am learning through my experiences that it is less about truth and more about perspective.

I am trying to accept this. I am trying to embrace this. It hasn’t been easy.

I’ve been in therapy for years, for over a decade at this point. It isn’t because my life depends on it, not anymore, but I continue to be better off for it. So I keep going. When I first started it was more out of necessity. I was unhappy. I was lost. I wanted to be someone else. Sometimes I still feel this way, but most of the time I do not.

While I think there is less of a stigma around therapy, I still do not think it has been embraced and fully accepted. Too often it still seems like a last resort in people’s minds. It is only for acute and significant mental disorders. It is meant to be temporary. I just need a quick therapeutic jolt. “Oh, I don’t need therapy. I’m not that bad.” “It is okay if you go, but I’m not at that point.” We think it is a sign of weakness. We could not fix ourselves. That is hard to admit to others, but I think it is actually hardest to admit to ourselves.

It took me awhile to realize that therapy isn’t a fix. It is about finding perspective. This realization has been powerful. When I only saw it as a fix, every day I still struggled felt like a failure. Why isn’t this working yet? What is wrong with me? How weak am I? This mindset was based on the assumption that therapy could take away my pain. That being “fixed” meant never feeling pain or any other uncomfortable emotion.

For me embracing a world of gray means embracing perspective. It means accepting that the world is not black or white. That I am neither healed nor broken. Your truth doesn’t have to be my truth and vice versa.

Nowadays the world seems extreme. It is certainly stirring up extreme emotions. Try not to lose perspective. Try to let the other colors seep in. Those that move us away from a black and white world. Those that mix together to become a beautiful gray.

Cue ‘Change Your Mind’ by Sister Hazel

Life is amazing.

And then it’s awful. And then it’s amazing again.

And in between the amazing and the awful it’s ordinary and mundane and routine.

Breathe in the amazing, hold on through the awful, and relax and exhale during the ordinary.

That’s just living heartbreaking, soul-healing, amazing, awful, ordinary life.

And it’s breathtakingly beautiful.

L. R. Knost

I discovered this quote recently at a store in Rockford, Illinois while visiting my family. I love meaningful quotes about life, but this is probably my favorite for its truth. These words serve as a perfect reminder for what life is and what it is not. It is not perfect. It is messy and it is gray. And gray is beautiful.

If you know me personally you know I am always thinking. I am always searching for my truth, searching for the answers, making sense of my life and the world around me. For the last few years, I have wanted to write a book. I have wanted to put onto paper all the things in my head, all the things I have learned. But instead I struggle to even journal consistently. I started writing a few pages a couple years ago and then I stopped. This is the pattern. I start and stop. And start and stop again. Why?

As much as I love the beauty of the written word, I think I fear it as well. Words seem both meaningful and meaningless. More so than ever there is a permanency to them. We cannot even google search something without it being linked to us. The words we type get saved and are used to understand each other, to figure out what we are in the market for. Does everyone now know I’m in search of a new eye cream? Instagram knows. Instagram always knows.  

On a more personal level, we hold on to the things people say. They affect us. They become part of our story. They can even be misconstrued to be our whole story. I’m sure we all have countless examples of when something we said was taken out of context. “That is not what I meant!” “It came out wrong!” Or examples of when something someone said hurt us. This scares me. This undeniable meaning, this permanency that words have holds me back. Once I link the words and my name, that is it. I can’t take it back. What if my words become a label? What if they push you, my reader, away? Or even worse, what if they push away those I hold so close?

On the other hand, would they even mean anything? Would they be met with indifference? More so now than ever, we are drowning in words. It seems everyone has something to say…about everything. The meaning behind our words is getting lost in the volume of them. I can only read so many comment threads in a day before going mind numb. And what are words without action anyway? Sometimes words are just that. You say something kind and then your behavior is opposite. You say you will do something and you don’t. This scares me too – that I could pour my heart and soul into my words and they could mean nothing to you.

So again I stop.

But there is a difference between what scares us and our truth. I refuse to let my fears be my story.

And so I write.  

This blog is about me and maybe you and what is great and what is not. It is about the gray. The nuance that is all around us but is so hard to accept. It won’t be perfect and may not always flow, but that is life.

The first thing I’d like to tell you is my name – Sarah Newman. I had butterflies in my stomach just typing that, but I did it.

Until next time.

Cue ‘These Words’ by Natasha Bedingfield