So, I
think it's finally time I tell you how I ended up being in the position of
having so much weight to lose. I know you know the gist of what happened, but
today I am going to share with you the specifics, and, if you are someone who
actually needs to gain weight, you can even follow my plan and, I promise, you
will be packing on the pounds in no time!
![]() |
The good thing about eating snack size bars is that you feel like you are getting more to eat with fewer calories. |
Now, I
know you already know that my weight gain is related to how I dealt with my
ex-husband's emotional unavailability, but allow me to elaborate. By the time I kicked my ex-husband out of our house in September of 2010, I was already 40
pounds heavier than I was when I ha gotten married to him in 2004, and, for
that matter, than I had ever been in my life. I had started a pattern of
emotional eating, usually bingeing on sweets, often late at night. I would get
up after the old ex had gone to bed, and migrate to the kitchen, whereupon I
would extract the box of snack-size Weight Watchers fudge bars from the
freezer, and proceed to eat the entire 12-bar box in one sitting. I would then
hide the wrappers and box in the trashcan underneath other things so my
ex-husband would not know about my nocturnal activities. Often I would feel ill
after these eating binges, and I would always feel guilty and ashamed, but I
kept doing it because eating my feelings was easier than talking about them. It
was not always Weight Watchers fudge bars, but the food it was didn’t really matter. What mattered was that I was eating in a
way that human beings, save for those who have been lost in the jungle starving
for 43 days, are not meant to eat.
Eventually,
this binge eating became a hot topic of discussion in my marriage, as my
ex-husband, true to form, rather than being supportive as I tried to stop this
habit, accused me of bankrupting us by eating all the food and forcing us to
re-buy the items that I had unceremoniously scarfed down in a midnight feeding
frenzy. In fact, his words on this exact issue were what caused me to reach my
breaking point at which time I told him he had to get out of my house.
And get
out he finally did, but, unfortunately, he did not take my bingeing habit with
him. With him out of the house I was in what I now refer to as a
"transitional" phase, meaning I had no idea what was going on and I
did crazy things and made bad decisions. Now, I know we have all been through
our own types of transitional phases at one time or another, but this
particular transitional phase was nothing short of spectacular.
Within a
week or two of getting my ex-husband out, I started doing Nutri-System to lose
the 40 pounds I had put on, with the goal of becoming thin and svelte, and then
running into my not yet ex-husband as often as possible to rub it in. In case
you are not familiar with Nutri-System, you actually have to buy a special kind
of food, and then you just eat that food and not a whole lot of other good
stuff, but, if you can manage to stick to it, it works. Nutri-System was kind
of hard to adhere to, plus, when I kept the breakfast muffins in my house I
would just eat, like a whole week's worth in one midnight binge-fest. So, I
removed all the food from my house, other than canned goods, because, bad as my
bingeing habit has been at times, it has never been so bad that I would open up
a can of green beans to feast on at three in the morning. I kept my food at my
parents' house, and, as my parents live just down the street from me this was a
pretty convenient arrangement.
Well,
this little move worked, and I started losing weight on Nutri-System. It did
kind of stink not being able to eat when I felt hungry, but I am not convinced
I could even have identified when I felt hungry at that time, so I guess it really
wasn't all that bad. I can't say I followed the Nutri-System program perfectly.
There were several times when I would have a glass of wine with my Nutri-System
dinner, or, sick of fat free dressing, I would use regular, full-fat honey
mustard dressing on my salad. But, I lost ten pounds in about a month, so I was
doing okay.
Then the
bad decisions started. I reconnected with an old friend on Facebook, a friend
with whom there had always been a question of what might have been. Thrilled
that a man was paying attention to me, other than to simply tell me what I was
doing wrong, I let myself do what all divorce experts tell you never to do,
which is to get romantically involved with someone before you've had time to
process your divorce. I felt considerable stress from the weight of this new
relationship, which I think I knew subconsciously was a bad choice. I did not
want to admit my misgivings to myself, much less to anyone else, so, of course,
I turned to food and ate my feelings.
With no
food in my house on which to binge, I would wake up in the middle of the night,
dazed, eyes swollen and red from having cried myself to sleep, and I would have
a visceral craving for sweets so strong that it felt like I would die if I
didn't get some. So, I would head to my car and drive the short distance to the
nearby 24-hour Dunkin Donuts where I would order a dozen donuts or a large box
of Munchkins, and then eat the entire thing myself. I would feel very ill every
time I did this, but would force myself to finish whatever I had ordered,
though, to my credit, I never tried to throw up afterward or anything, except
for the time I just threw up naturally because, let's face it, the human stomach is not meant to hold an entire large box of Dunkin Donuts Munchkins at
one time.
I started
making these excursions nightly, and I feared that the woman who worked
overnight at the Dunkin Donuts had started to recognize me, so I took to
sometimes wearing a hat with the hope that this might throw her off the trail.
I also considered wearing sunglasses, but figured that would make me more, rather
than less noticeable. One night, tired of donuts, I had a killer craving for a
Butterfinger candy bar. I schlepped it up to the all-night gas station (safe I
know) in my orange bat-print Halloween pajama pants and clashing pink t-shirt.
Did I mention that my hair looked like it had been brushed with a stand mixer,
and that I wasn't wearing shoes? Still, ignoring the "No shirt, no shoes,
no service" rule followed by most respectable establishments, I went in to
the gas station anyway. (I am proud to say I never removed my shirt.)
![]() |
Being barefoot on the beach = good. Being barefoot in the gas station = not good. |
So, there
I was, in mid-October, without a jacket in the chilly air, padding around
barefoot in the gas station at three in the morning, wearing the world's least
color-coordinated sleeping outfit, with fright wig hair and only half my mental
faculties. The gas station did not have any Butterfingers, so I bought two Baby
Ruth king-sized bars, went to my car, and cried because what I had really
wanted was a Butterfinger. Grief will make you do strange things, as you can
see, and I kept up these nightly trips for a couple of months, resulting in a
weight gain of about 30 pounds during that time period. I gained more weight
later, but that is a story for another time.
After a
couple of months, I realized how monumentally unhealthy my behavior was, and I
stopped. I haven't engaged in such behavior regularly since then, but I have
had a few occasional relapses, one of which happened this past Saturday night.
Stressed out, but not sure about what, I made the trip to the Dunkin Donuts
where, surprisingly, my old friend from several years ago still works the
overnight shift. This time I ordered the small box of Munchkins, and, though I
did finish it, I also realized that I have to figure out what's bothering me so
that I do not do this behavior again. My success rate with stopping relapses
into nighttime excursions to Dunkin Donuts is 100%, after the initial relapse
visit is over. Once I talk through or write out my feelings, I am able to put
things in perspective, and to realize this is not a road I want to go down
again.
I have
now lost about 45 of the 100 pounds I gained in the course of my disastrous
relationship and my much less disastrous divorce. I still do not keep any food
in my house, which has, by this point, grown quite tiresome, but every so often
I bring, say, one package of granola bars into my house overnight just to see
how I do. While I am not at the point where I am ready to reintroduce all of
the foods I like into my home, I can still reliably keep canned goods and pasta
without eating them, and I can still say I am losing weight, which is good for
both psychological and physical reasons. As I said earlier, though, my weight
loss is not perfect. Often it involves picking myself back up and climbing back
on the wagon after a bout of uncontrolled eating. I do not give up, though,
because I know I am a work in progress, and the best and most rewarding things
in life often entail hard work and many failures before we reach our goals But,
if you want a quick weight gain
plan, then boy do I have one for you! Just head on up to the Dunkin Donuts around
3AM nightly, order the large box of Munchkins, and if you see my old friend
working the overnight shift, tell her Audrey says hello!
Weight Watchers image courtesy of http://www.weightwatchers.com/shop/categoryshowcase.aspx?pageid=1056551&navid=moreww
Barefoot image courtesy of http://breatheandsmile.org/how-to-live-a-barefoot-life/
I love a good fat 2 fit story! Keep up the good work!
ReplyDeletesupreme shirt
ReplyDeleteadidas stan smith
coach outlet
kyrie irving shoes
mbt shoes
adidas stan smith men
nike air max
yeezy shoes
golden goose sale
coach
xiaofang20191207