Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Taking Baby Steps

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Taking Baby Steps

    How I Got Up Out of Bed Again.

    I won’t go into details, but in October, 2001, I became a widow through one of the most horrid events of my life. I turned 31 a Widow and after my family went back to Oklahoma, I went to bed.

    At the time I was unemployed and didn’t care. I had cats and they don’t care if you’re up or down as long as the litter box is clean and they have food. So I stayed in bed, only getting up to eat when I had to, only taking a shower when I might be going out in public and not really caring.

    My doctor had put me on Zoloft and Atavan since while I was in the bed, I didn’t sleep, I just stared at the walls. Counseling didn’t seem to help a whole lot, I would go home and crawl back under the covers and stay there. I honestly considered suicide, but I couldn’t do it. I couldn’t do to my family what my husband had done to me.

    One of my dearest friends brought me a stuffed frog, and reminded me that I wasn’t alone, and of all the things that I’d gone through and made it past and how I did it.

    I took that advise and looked at it long and hard, and realized that it would work.

    I didn’t look at the rest of my life, the next year, the next month, week, day or even minute. I looked as far ahead as it would take for my heart to beat just one single time. That’s not very long at all. And since my heart rate was over 60/minute, it wasn’t even looking one second ahead. And I would tell myself if I can get up and stay out of this bed for one heartbeat, I can do it. And then another one would pass and another one, and before I realize it, I’d been up out of bed for a minute, and then an hour.

    I kept this up through the holidays, finally bringing myself to look at the day to day things I needed to do to survive, but it still seemed impossible. But I kept “faking it” making myself try until one day I had a wake up call. I had a green light and a little car, and a dump truck blew the red light. I remember seeing the truck and I thought it would be so easy to end it all, then I stomped on the breaks so hard that I thought I had broken my foot from the pressure. And I stopped. I realized that it would be easy, but I wanted to live. Three months of not looking any further than the next heartbeat, and I wanted to look further ahead.

    I stopped the medication on my own, very slowly and didn’t tell my doctor or councilor. Eventually I stopped going without a word.

    I realized that I am worthwhile, and a good person and what happened to me wasn’t my fault. That I wasn’t alone, no matter how bad it felt. That nothing is insurmountable if I look one heartbeat ahead.

    This October was a tough one, don’t let anyone tell you that the first year is the hardest, because you’re too numb to care. It’s the next ones in which you realize what you’ve lost. But also what you’ve gained. I discovered that I was ready to move on, and take back control of my life, and my size. And I am. Daily, baby step by baby step. Small battles almost every day with Atkins, but I’m winning each small battle.

    I know I’ll never be the carefree girl I was at 30, but I think the new me is going to be even better.

    5'5" - 34 F - 10-11-04 293.5/c-259/cg-225/fg-135 or 18%bf

  • #2
    :hug

    Thank you so much for sharing that.
    -Corinne- 31, 5'6.5", female
    off Atkins temporarily as of 11/17/04 due to Doc's orders- am currently on high protein, low-fat
    HW: over 200/CW: 162/GW1: 145/Final GW: 128

    Comment


    • #3
      All I can say is wow.

      I can't even begin to imagine what you've gone through. There is so much in life to be thankful for and sometimes we don't realize how much some people can be hurting. I'm happy that you have decided to go forward. You add a lot to this place.

      I think the new you isn't going to just better, the new you will be simply amazing.
      Jim


      Yes I'm eating a smore in the picture, how do you think I got so fat?
      M/41/6'2"
      Original Start 348 6/14/04 Low 275.2 9/13/2005
      Restart 338.0 2/5/10 ---Current 325.0 2/22/10---Goal 210(195?)

      February miles run - 20
      "It's very hard in the beginning to understand that the whole idea is not to beat the other runners. Eventually you learn that the competition is against the little voice inside you that wants you to quit" - George Sheehan

      Comment


      • #4
        Da nut - what an amazing story of overcoming and beating the demons. I hope this helps others who are having problems :hug
        30/f 182/137/130 5'5
        "Never give up, for that is just the place and time that the tide will turn"

        Think PINK for Dawn!!

        Comment


        • #5
          da Walnut,
          Your post really touched me. I was also widowed at 29 years old. You sound like a strong, remarkable woman.
          - Redheaded giRlie giRl. 146/135/125, 5'6"

          Comment


          • #6
            Thanks for sharing how you felt and the struggle you faced to overcome your pain. I'm sure that many people who are facing depression can relate to the emotional strain it is on your heart and soul. So happy that you realized that you were worth the effort and that you climbed back out of that dark place and started to live again.
            Starting Date 3/12/04 285/165/145 - F



            Dedication gives wings to our dreams and keeps them in flight! In One Word...COMMITTMENT.

            Comment


            • #7
              da Walnut :hug thanks for sharing. Oct is a tough month ofr me too. I hope your message helped somebody else in that situation and they doin't need a big truck incident to make them realize they too want to live.
              by the book atkinseer

              started 6/1/02 at 313
              goalie 5/04 at 167 with under 15% body fat ADBB Presidents exercise Challenge


              Comment


              • #8
                da walnut, thank your for your thought provoking letter. My son died 2 yrs ago from complications from a brain tumor and it still hurts like it did the day I saw him take his last breath.

                Your strength and positive additude is an inspiration to anyone fortunate enough to come across your letter. I wish you continued strength to go on as you have.
                female, over 40, okay, over 50, okay, never mind.
                8/21/05 starting over at 165
                I'm not to fat for my height, I'm too short for my weight.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Here I go again!!

                  I've been away for a while. I've decided to take baby steps this time and set myself mini goals to go by instead of expecting too much. Maybe I will do better.

                  Kathy :wave


                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Small battles win the war

                    Thank you for sharing your story. I think trying, if only for a heartbeat is very good advice. Sorry about your husband. I lost mine too. What you were doing sounds very sane compared to what I did. God bless you.
                    Suffering is necessary until you realize it is unnecessary. Eckhart Tolle


                    ]
                    Female, 48, 5'3 :lol:
                    SW 207 / CW 165/ GW 150
                    Started Atkins 1st Feb 2005
                    Still holding at a happy size 16.




                    Comment


                    • #11
                      :hug :hug :hug :hug :hug
                      Female, 58 years old
                      5'7"
                      doing Atkins since June 01, 2003


                      1??/ CW 124/ GW 120

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Way to Go!!

                        Way to Go Da Walnut! You can do it and we're here for you.. Hang in there!
                        :hug
                        45 - F - 5'2" - 167/167/107




                        Comment


                        • #13
                          What an eloquent and painfully beautiful story of your personal struggle and triumph over unimaginable grief. I thank you so much for sharing it.

                          I try not to ever tell anyone I know how they feel because, as hard as we try, as hard as we love and as much as we care we never walk in the shoes of another.

                          But I can tell you this as someone who spent nearly two years in his bedroom, shades pulled down, phones ripped out of the wall...nothing worked and every aspect of my life broken - I've felt the kind of pain that's so deep and so unrelenting death seems like the only option for relief.

                          People sometimes think that those who commit suicide want to die, I think it's the opposite it's that the pain becomes so blinding and unbearable it seems at that time, during those darkest of moments to be the only option left, the road to peace and to sleep and to finally a relief from the constant unwavering pain.

                          But of course, that's not true there's always another choice that's not as easy - and that's the hard and rocky road back towards life.

                          You chose that road when you hit those brakes - in that one moment you rose from the ashes of your life determined to reinvented yourself and transformed your agony into a new beginning...it takes great courage and strength of will.

                          Having been there and survived you'll never go back and a beautiful new life will keep unfolding moment by moment for you because you've earned it - every single step of the way.

                          Thank you again for sharing your story

                          Peter

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            :hug :hug :hug :hug :hug :hug Great story, fantastic post and thanks for sharing.



                            41 pounds down and counting

                            If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else. - Yogi Berra

                            Comment

                            Working...
                            X