This Isn’t Pink Floyd’s Wall

I’m pretty sure that if my husband had the opportunity to do a Terminator and go back in time to stop Pinterest from being born he would. It gets me, and him by association, into more trouble than I’m willing to admit. Due to the somewhat unholy combination of a lot of free time after my layoff, a creative nature, and f*%$ing Pinterest, I have more projects currently in process than any one person probably should in a lifetime. He’s pretty glad to see the end of this one because for a good portion of the process I wasn’t sure if I would actually pull it off.

Here’s a little secret about me: I don’t handle failure well. At all.

On top of that, I’m pretty sure I’m starting to head into The Change because there is no other explanation for the lightening speed at which I can move from perfectly calm and rational to wicked witch of the west.

So yeah, this was fun for him. Still, he was way more patient with me on this project than I was.

What I wanted was a headboard or something similar for my guest room. The guest room accidentally ended up with a purple theme when I found an awesome purple vintage vanity at a consignment shop. It was one of those things I wasn’t remotely looking for, but couldn’t leave the store without it once I saw it.

vanity

Here’s what the bed area looked like before I started.

before

Pretty plain jane, right? I got rid of the red comforter. Actually, I got a duvet cover for the red down comforter that was on the bed before the purple vanity of destiny arrived.

After looking around on Pinterest at various options, I was almost settled on making an upholstered headboard. And then I found this.

Perfect! It would make that plain cream colored wall much more interesting! The only problem was that there were no instructions. I search the interwebs but couldn’t find a tutorial anywhere. No matter, I thought. I’m crafty, I can do that!

(That statement right there is where the Universe laughed at me. I imagine great gales of guffawing laughter pealed out of a Zeus-ian booming voice. And probably thunder. No, definitely thunder.)

I started by gathering fabrics in various shades of purple and gray. Since there would be sixteen 18″ squares in all, I chose six fabrics, including the one I am going to eventually use to make a bed skirt for the bed. In order to get at least 3 squares out of each fabric, I bought a yard and a quarter of each one. Actually, first I bought a yard of each and then remembered that math isn’t my friend. If the squares are 18″, I needed at least another 2″ on each side to be able to wrap around the back of the board and staple it. Don’t be like me, folks. Get a yard and a quarter at least the first time.

fabric

Why yes, that is a fitted sheet. I found that set of sheets at Goodwill for $7 and that’s the future bed skirt material.

I went to a local fabric store that carries upholstery supplies and bought a 1″ thick high density piece of foam that was 6′x8′ in order to have enough for the 6′x6′ total area I wanted the finished product to cover. At $69 this was the most expensive single component of the project, but the silver lining was that they cut the foam into 18″ squares for me at no charge. This was a definite bonus because that stuff is not easy to cut and I wasn’t looking forward to using my electric knife out on my front lawn. I bought high density because I wanted it to be comfortable enough to sit up against like a head board, but low profile, and I didn’t want to add batting on top of that because batting would wrap around and be stapled on the back. I wanted the squares to butt right up against each other to keep the lines as straight as possible.

At Home Depot I bought two sheets of 1/2″ OSB, which stands for Oriented Strand Board. It’s cheaper than plywood, but still plenty sturdy. I didn’t care that it looks like smashed together chips of wood because I was covering it anyway. I bought 1/2″ because my original plan was to screw the squares together using Simpson ties, or something similar, so I wanted the squares themselves to be sturdy. This turned out to be way overkill because Plan A went down in a screaming ball of flames. If I were to do this one again, 1/4″ sheet goods (either plywood or OSB) would be sufficient and the finished product would weigh A LOT less than mine does.

My Home Depot cut the squares for me at no charge, but I’ve heard that some HDs charge for this. The downside to having them cut it turned out to be that they weren’t exactly the same size, and not all of them were exactly square. Normally I’d be pretty easy-going about that, but when you’re piecing squares together into a whole bigger square it turns out that size does matter.

suplies

If you are working on upholstery projects I HIGHLY recommend a pneumatic stapler. It is life changing. I bought this one from Amazon and it is awesome. So far I’ve used it on my dining room chairs, a bench I rehabbed, a chaise I did with a friend, and now this project. It makes projects go so much faster you won’t even believe it.

Covering the squares is pretty straight-forward. I spray glued the foam to the boards, but you don’t really have to. Then it’s just a matter of cutting the fabric, ironing it if needed (don’t skip this step – you’ll be sad if there’s a crease because it will show and getting it out later is more tricky), and stapling the fabric to the back side of the board. I stapled the corners first, and then worked on opposite sides. The best way to get it really tight is to put your knee on the edge of the board while pulling the fabric taught and stapling the bejeezus out of it.

square

This part of the project goes pretty fast, and lulls you into false complacency. DO NOT BE LULLED! The rest of this project is a right wanker.

finished squares

I laid the squares out on the floor in different patterns until I came up with one I liked.

layout

As I mentioned, my original plan was to connect all the squares with metal ties. I was going to mount them in four strips of four squares because that would be less weight than one solid piece.

plan A

This is where those Universal guffaws come into play. Not only is math not my friend, physics is kind of a butthead too. Because there was no way to attach the middles of the strips to the wall without having it show on at least one end, we just attached the top and bottom. And then the middles bowed out because the whole setup wasn’t rigid enough and the part about physics being a butthead.

I can neither confirm nor deny the magnitude of the meltdown that occurred at this point. You can add up the aforementioned almost pathological hatred of failure and the also previously mentioned whoremoan issue and draw your own mental picture, and then know that whatever you come up with doesn’t hold a candle to what actually happened.

After I came off the roof we revisited the project and Jason came up with Plan B. We would back the whole thing with fiberboard and screw the squares into that.

plan B

This one went down in an even bigger ball of flames than the last plan because each time a screw was placed the squares shifted ever so slightly. Only we couldn’t see that until the whole thing was assembled and we turned it over and it was an unholy mess of cattywhompusness. Nothing lined up. No way was I hanging that up. In addition, fiberboard isn’t really rigid enough either and trying to move the thing was like trying to carry a giant, very heavy noodle.

It’s a really good thing that I’m pretty good at unmaking the things I make because I’ve had to do that a lot.

I took it apart. Again. While taking it apart I came up with Plan C, which involved yet another trip to Home Depot, more plywood and liquid nails.

We picked up two sheets of plywood and Jason cut and connected them to make a 6′x6′ square. I snapped a chalk line down the center of the board and, starting in the middle, started puzzling the squares together. Remember how I said they weren’t exactly the same size or all square? This is where that came into play. I had to move the squares around and flip them different directions when the fabric pattern allowed in order to get them as lined up as possible. Then we glued those suckers down with Liquid Nails and put weights on them and let it cure overnight.

plan C

And lo, it worked. But it still had to be mounted and now it weighed considerably more than I originally anticipated. We located the studs and measured carefully and snapped chalk lines and measured again, and then put the brackets on the back of the piece and really big wood screws into the studs in the wall.

mounting

Even with all of our careful measuring it still took four tries to get the holes in the brackets and the screws in the wall exactly lined up so that we could hang the top of the eleventy-hundred pound piece like a picture. We put the same brackets on the bottom of the piece, but let the two end holes stick out and those were screwed into the studs as well.

Finally. FINALLY!!!! it all came together and I’ll tell you right now, that room is staying purple until the end of time because neither one of us wants to take that monster down ever again.

done

But it’s a pretty good-looking monster. I love how it turned out, and I have enough fabric scraps to make coordinating throw pillows to bring it all together. It really makes a huge difference in that room!

 

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Doors

All around me it seems like I’m surrounded by the sound of doors closing.

We sold the house where we spent the first seven years of our marriage together. It was difficult and stressful leaving a place that had so much history. My husband grew up in that house, so there were many more years that our seven worth of memories and baggage to leave behind. Now that it’s over and we’ve been in our new place for several months it’s so so SO nice to be in a place that’s free of the past for either one of us. We’re writing new history here and it’s good. Really, really good. So while that door closed, we opened the door at our new place and we’re making it ours like the other house never could be. When I walk in the door at this house I am home.

I’m still in the process of saying goodbye to my former self. I quite literally don’t recognize myself in the mirror from two years ago. I lost a person – an entire adult person. One hundred and twenty pounds. One hundred and twenty pounds. That’s almost half my former weight. I still have a hard time navigating this body. Buying clothes is weird and fun but frustrating because I keep shrinking out of clothes I love. (More about that later because that’s not what this post is about.) My friend keeps telling me to stop acting like I’m still fat – stand up straight and quit hiding. It’s true. Those habits are hard to break. I’m starting the process of dealing with the aftermath of this weight loss because while I’m a whole lot smaller now, liking the way I look is still pretty difficult with all the sagging and bagging going on. I am not in the least embarrassed to say that I plan to be nipped and tucked and body sculpted into something that looks a lot less deflated. I didn’t come this far to still not like what’s in the mirror. Halfway is bullshit. [name that quote]

I said goodbye to my appendix. And good riddance. Something that can go bad for no good reason whatsoever out of the clear blue sky on New Year’s freaking Day doesn’t deserve real estate in my personal landscape. Don’t let that door hit you in the buttocks [tell me you said butt-ocks ala Forrest Gump] on the way out!

And now, this week, I’m closing the door on nine years at my now former employer. In September my hours were reduced. In February I was placed on seasonal leave, which means basically you’re still on the books as an employee but we don’t have work for you right now. Last week I was officially laid off. There’s no going back now. And you know what? I’m ok with that. Don’t get me wrong, being unemployed SUCKS and I will miss the people I worked with. But I have spent a lot of years working at a job that didn’t light my creative fire. I was good at what I did, and I was paid well for doing it, but I am at heart a creative person. I had lost that over the years. The more time I spend away from linear thinking and day-to-day rote tasks the more I can feel that part of me coming back, and I’m realizing now exactly how much I missed it. Now the trick is going to be to find a way to get paid for doing things I love. I have several ideas so we will see. I’m looking forward to opening that door.

I also need to find a way to reduce the number of closable doors around me because damn. I’m about done with that for a while. Anyone got a spare doorstop?

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On the Upside of a Downward Spiral

RandylandHave you ever looked at your life and found it unrecognizable? This past year and a half has made mine exactly that. There isn’t one major area of my life that hasn’t changed, and the process of change around me has effected a lot of change inside.

My dad died a year and a half ago. I wrote about how that changed my perspective on relationships and making sure the people you love know that you care. Since then I’ve also learned that you can only effect change in yourself, you can’t make people respond the way you want them to. You’ve got to know when to hold ‘em, and know when to fold ‘em, and sometimes it’s best to just walk away. I’ve learned to invest in the meaningful relationships in my life and turn the page on the ones that seemed too one-sided.

This last year has been the hardest emotionally that I can ever remember. Unfortunately most of the story involves a struggle that wasn’t mine, and therefore isn’t my story to tell. I can say that it takes a lot to break me, and this one almost did. I came out of it even stronger, and with a completely different set of priorities than I went in. There is something about being faced with life threatening choices that alters you forever, and forces you to decide exactly how far you will go for another person. Are you all-in or do you walk away? Because in this case there was no middle ground and both choices had big consequences.

Yes, I’m being vague and I hate it when people do that, but it really can’t be helped and I feel like I can’t start writing again here without at least touching on why I stopped. I know it sounds dramatic, but I assure you it was much more dramatic in real life. And it’s in the past now. Things are good, better than they’ve ever been, and I’m very thankful for that.

I learned to quit sweating the small stuff and to let go of the things I couldn’t control, and for quite a while last year there was nothing in my life that I could control. Work was weird – I had a new boss and my hours were reduced. And now I have yet another new boss. My husband was laid off. We were trying to sell our house by the end of the year and dealing with banks and shady lawyers and random people knocking on the door offering cash & cars to get their offer preferential treatment. People are strange, yo. Then we had to find a place to live and move in a week when our house sale finally went through and the original plan for a place to live fell through.

Even my own body is foreign territory. I’ve lost 112 lbs in just under a year. I cut off my long hair for a short pixie style when I couldn’t stand it falling out anymore and I absolutely love it, but I don’t recognize myself in the mirror anymore. I love that when I went to the doctor for a follow-up on my recent and quite unexpected appendectomy, the PA called me an athlete and said he could tell by my very low blood pressure and heart rate. I am a runner. I can lift weights while balanced on a medicine ball like a trained seal. My knees and feet no longer hurt. My relationship with food is changed to the point that sometimes I forget to eat. Like I said, I don’t even recognize myself.

We live in a new house now, one that I absolutely love. It’s the first time in my adult life that a house has felt like me, like it’s my home, and I feel good just walking into it. It helps that I don’t have to worry about freezing wells and old septic tanks and propane tank fills and firewood and not being able to flush a toilet if the power goes out. Of course the trade-off is higher power bills and actually having a water & sewer bill for the first time in 8 years. It’s a small price to pay to live somewhere that doesn’t have a backstory. Our previous house was my husband’s childhood home, and there is always baggage that goes along with living in a place 30+ years. Plus it was always his home, not mine. We did a lot over the years to update it and put our own stamp on it, but it never felt like mine. I feel like I belong in this house. I felt it from the moment we walked in the door, after looking at trashy rental after trashy rental. Hooboy there are some doozies out there!

We moved right before Christmas. I mean right before. We managed to get our tree put up by 11:55 Christmas Eve, amongst the unpacked boxes and big empty spaces where future furniture would live.

We celebrated New Year’s Eve. For the first time since we’ve been married we actually went out on NYE to usher out 2012, with great hopes of a brand new 2013 that would hopefully be more peaceful than the last year and get things moving finally in the right direction. We kissed under the Reno arch at midnight and watched the fireworks. It was a nice start.

The next day, the first day of the brand new year, I was admitted to the hospital with appendicitis.

Then exactly three weeks after my appendectomy I was back in the ER and having surgery for a mesenteric hernia.

Oh 2013, you are going to be a funny fucker. I can just feel it.

I’m getting a little tired of people poking me.

Am I back to blogging? I don’t honestly know. It has felt awkward, like I couldn’t just jump back in without saying something about the happenings that kept me away. Now that I have done that, maybe?

I have a lot of projects I’m working on that I should write about. Pinterest is like that friend that gets you into all kinds of trouble but you just can’t quit her because she always promises fun. My new house has an actual real live craft room that is only just for crafty/artsy/sewing adventures. I’m so excited about that I can hardly stand myself and I have projects stacked up one after the other already. Plus there is all the decorating to be done. I’m also cooking a lot more now that I have a kitchen that’s more cooking friendly.

Maybe I’ll even go crazy and start taking pictures again. I haven’t picked up my camera except to move it since I was in Pittsburgh. My creative juices just don’t flow when my life is a mess. I wish I was one of those who seem to find creativity an outlet in times of stress, but I expend all my energy getting through the muck and then I just shut down.

So we’ll see. For now, it’s good to be here.

Do that sharing thing:

So I Went to Pittsburgh

And I took some photos:

 

 

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Adventures in Cake

It’s been two years since I made a cake, and never have I made one for a wedding. Wedding cakes are scary because that is a moment in time that can never be regained if it goes wrong. When my friends Glenn and Val asked me to make their wedding cake I was honored they trusted me with it, and at the same time terrified of letting them down.

A couple of months ago I started making the orchids. My Facebook friends are probably sick of looking at my instagram progress photos of these orchids.

It was challenging at first because once the various parts dry they can be rather fragile.

Wiring them together took a little finesse.

Once I finished the flowers and wired them into a spray I thought I was pretty much home free. This was the hardest part, right? I was a little worried that the heavy flowers would tear away from the fondant, but I already had a plan if that happened.

My friend Pam was generous enough to offer to do the actual baking, which helped me a lot. And boy oh boy, her cakes and fillings are delicious! I just had a bite of cake, OK 3 bites of cake, from the first in a long line of things that went wrong. As I said, it’s been over 2 years since I made a cake, so one of my layers was a dismal and yet delicious leaning tower of fail. My poor husband has offered to eat the evidence, because that’s the kind of guy he is. Always willing to take one for the team.

All day I torted, filled, stacked and buttercreamed cakes. After all 4 cakes chilled out in the fridge I started covering them in fondant. At the end of July in Nevada (where it’s drier than a sawdust sandwich) working with fondant is tricky because it dries and cracks really easily, especially on 95* days. Each cake I covered in fondant, I set aside on the counter because once you put fondant in the fridge it hardens into an impenetrable force field that just laughs at cake knives.

Did I mention it was 95*? And that I don’t have air conditioning? And since my internal thermostat has decided that 95* is perfectly comfortable, I didn’t notice how hot it was in the house. The buttercream under the fondant started to melt. My perfect (ok, almost perfect) layers now sported more ripples than a shar-pei as the fondant sagged and slid down the sides of the cakes.

*cue meltdown that included pronouncements of NEVER AGAIN and I’M GETTING RID OF ALL MY CAKE STUFF” and much hand wringing*

Crashing and burning in front of a hundred people is not on my Life List.

Pam and I devised Plan B. I would go get yards and yards of sheer organza and tie it around the cakes to cover the ripples, because I definitely couldn’t take it like it was, and I just as definitely couldn’t show up empty handed. It was a wedding – there must be cake! And it must! not! suck! It would still be pretty, but it wouldn’t be what I had envisioned for this cake.

About 4:30 the next morning I decided that was bullshit and cheating and fuck me sideways if I’ll be beat by a cake and cranky-ass fondant. I carefully peeled the wrinkled, bubbled and cracked fondant off of every one of those cakes. I buttercreamed each one again and chucked them in the fridge. I was at the store when it opened to get more fondant, and I re-covered those cakes and slapped them in the fridge again as fast as I could because hard fondant was infinitely better than melted cakes.

After that all I had to do was get it there. On another 95* day, about an hour’s drive from my house, up the side of a mountain. Luckily the Yukon has rear A/C vents and we blasted the A/C the whole way there. I was a frozen nervous wreck by the time we got to the venue, but finally my luck had turned and we made it with the cakes intact. All I had to do was set it up and then it was out of my hands.

Apparently the Universe decided I’d had enough because I didn’t break any orchids or stick my finger in the side of the cake. It went together pretty much like I wanted it to, and it even looked straight and level. I took my first deep breath and set it free out into the world.

Every time I make one of these people ask me why I don’t do this for a living. I’ve considered it, but I’m not convinced it’s what I want to do. I don’t enjoy baking, so it was so nice to have Pam involved. She loves baking and doesn’t like decorating, while for me the baking is a necessary evil to get a medium with which to create edible art. If I had a setup like that each time, a cake business would be a lot more appealing.

Cake makes people happy. People love to look at it and they love to eat it. It’s always fun and gratifying to make something that makes people happy. It’s especially satisfying to make one you’re not sure you can actually pull off, and have it turn out well even after a cake disaster that seemed unrecoverable.

I always swear “never again” during the making when things are going wrong, because something always goes wrong, and then when it’s done I’m already thinking about another one, bigger and more complicated than the last.

It seems I’m not finished with cake yet.

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Can I Sail Through the Changing Ocean Tides

20120719-094629.jpgBefore I say anything else, I want to thank all of your for your overwhelming support for my last post. It really means a lot to me.

I wanted to take the time to address a couple of questions that were asked in the comments of that post.

Martymankins asked: “what are some types of foods that you cannot eat anymore after the WLS?”

Since I have very limited capacity now I eat mostly protein, because my body really needs it to function, so I severely limit my carb intake. Plus I’ve discovered that refined carbs make me either nauseous or go to sleep. I used to be a complete nut for pasta, but aside from a bite of the best mac & cheese ever while we were in Maui I haven’t had any in 6 months, and I don’t miss it.

There are some foods that I’m not supposed to have for the first six months while my body is still healing and I’m used to making sure I chew everything thoroughly – meats that are tougher to chew like steak, fibrous fruits & veg like celery and oranges, and nuts all can cause problems if I’m not careful so I’ve avoided most of them. I did add nuts to my diet a little prematurely because I was having trouble getting enough protein.

Foods I really can’t have because they make me sick are so far limited to bread and rich (buttery) things. Bread makes me just plain miserable, so I avoid more than a bite or two. A couple of times I’ve ordered fish in a restaurant and ended up feeling horrible, and the only thing I can attribute it to is the sauce because I eat a lot of fish at home. I avoid fried foods anyway and especially now that I know fats make me sick, although I will cop to stealing a two or three of Jason’s fries a couple of times.

The sickest I ever got though, was due to a sugar-free cough drop. Even though they are supposedly sugar-free they still contain sugar alcohols, and I’m apparently much more sensitive to those than I am to actual sugar. Now I check labels carefully for those when something claims to be sugar free because I’m pretty sure I used one of my nine lives on that one.

My diet isn’t perfect but I spend 99% of the time in my comfortable little protein food box and do pretty well.

Megan asked: “My lingering concern for you is swapping of addictions. Mitch’s aunt had WLS (don’t know which type) and then ended up with a pill problem. I’ve heard of gambling addictions, etc. after this surgery. Is that what the therapy is supposed to help avoid?”

Addiction transference is turning out to be a lot more common than was once believed, and the biggest problem is alcoholism for two reasons. One, since we can’t comfort ourselves with food we turn to something else to take the edge off. Two, because of our altered digestive system alcohol affects us much more quickly. It goes straight into our bloodstream so what used to take 2 or 3 drinks to get tipsy now only takes a half a glass of wine. The quick effect of alcohol makes it that much more enticing as a stress reliever. Most doctors advise avoiding alcohol altogether for the first year. Shopping and gambling, and pills are other problems that can come up too.

I started therapy for a number of reasons, primarily that I’m going through a really stressful time right now and I needed to keep myself healthy to deal with it. I chose my therapist because his office is the one who did my psychological evaluation prior to surgery, so I knew they had experience with people like me. He helps me find healthy ways to deal with stress so that I am less likely to turn to more harmful coping mechanisms. He also zeroed in on what is probably my main reason for overeating within one session, so I’m pretty happy that I finally seem to have found my therapy match after so many failed attempts.

I’m happy to answer any and all questions (that I can) either now or later. If they’re short I can address them in the comments, but these two seemed like they needed more attention.

And don’t worry. I didn’t start blogging again to bore you with this stuff. We’ll be back to more fun subjects like photography and crazy stuff I do in short order. I did have to get this out, though, before I could blog about other things. It seemed to be the cork in the bottleneck of words for me, so hopefully now that it’s out I’ll have more to say.

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That’s Not How I Want My Story to End

Most of my life, all of my adult life, I’ve had a weight problem. I am someone who really enjoys food. Food tastes good. Good food makes you feel good. Making good food for people you love makes you feel even better.

I was never a binge eater, I ate for comfort – good or bad. Have a bad day? I bet some nachos would make that better. Get promoted at work? Let’s celebrate! With cake! Break up with your boyfriend? This calls for booze AND cheeseburgers. And probably ice cream. With cookies.

Ok that sounds like a binge, but it wasn’t. I am a quality over quantity person. I make hugely bad but very tasty and comforting choices in not necessarily huge amounts.

Afterward I would feel better, whatever ailed me having been successfully buried under soothing fat grams and delicious calories. I could go on with my life, I just had to buy bigger pants.

But I am not without willpower. In fact, I have mad willpower skills when it comes to dieting and exercise. In the last 15 years I’ve lost huge amounts of weight, and I’ve done it in different ways. I have taken pills, I have Jenny Craiged, I have Weight Watchered, I have quite literally run my ass off, I’ve been in televised weight loss programs Biggest Loser style. I have been very successful at every one except Jenny Craig because have you tasted her food? Just no.

Over the course of my adult life I’ve lost enough weight to make an entire obese man over six feet tall. I’m not lazy, and I’m far from weak.

I’ve also sought out numerous therapists to try to get around the comfort food issue. Why was I driven to soothe all of life’s hurts with food? I had no traumatic childhood to point to, or anything else for that matter. Is this an adult children of alcoholics thing? And how do I break that cycle? No one had answers for me, so I stumbled around in the dark trying to fix myself.

One therapist actually said to me “when you feel like eating, just drink a glass of water instead.” Really? I’m so glad you spent all that time in school to become an addiction therapist. What, exactly, do you say to someone trying to quit heroin? Another one tried to get me to find religion.

Every time I lost weight I would hang out at a normal weight for a little while, and then it would start creeping back, slowly at first, but eventually fully and with friends. I would end up heavier than when I started. It seems that either I live on the edge of hunger at all times or I gain weight.

Over the years all this up and down action, along with the body chemistry changes that happen when you cross over that line of morbid obesity, has done a number on my hormones and metabolism. My body no longer even considers losing weight without extreme motivation – like dangerously low calorie intake and an exercise addiction. And I can do that…for a while, but no one can maintain that indefinitely and eventually I fail. And I feel like a failure, which if you’re a comfort eater is a vicious cycle.

After my Dad died my sister and I had to clean up his house, empty it and get it ready to sell. Scattered all over his once beautiful house was the evidence of the addictions that wrecked his body and made him old before his time. He was only 67 when he died, but he had the body of someone much, much older. It was obvious that he’d stopped caring for himself quite a while before we knew he was seriously ill, and that he’d been self-medicating for a very long time. When you live all the way across the country from the people who love you, it’s easy to hide these things.

I remember several different occasions when he quit drinking. He could go years at a time sometimes. Eventually, though, he would start drinking again. Like me, he started slow, limiting himself to only beer or wine. The condition of his house when he died made it obvious there were no limits at the end, and I still wonder what pushed him to that point. I’ll never know and it doesn’t matter. It was enough to remind me that we were very much alike. We were both passionate and artistic and people of extremes. And we both had a monkey on our back, they were just different. I wasn’t going to drink myself to death, but if I didn’t take action I was going to end up in an early grave myself. I refuse to go out that way.

On January 30 of this year I had Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass surgery.

I am not ready to give up this fight.

I am not ready to resign myself to a (shortened) lifetime of Lane Bryant and being afraid to fly because what if I don’t fit in the seat and knee pain and foot pain and back pain and swollen legs and being short of breath climbing stairs and not being able to keep up with my very active and physically fit husband. My future included heart disease and Type 2 diabetes and seriously diminished capacity for anything fun. I wasn’t sick yet, but it was only a matter of time.

And that’s not the way I want my story to end.

But I couldn’t do it by myself anymore. No amount of willpower was going to overcome the metabolic changes that had taken place after years of obesity and yo-yo dieting, and isn’t the definition of insanity doing the same thing and expecting different results? I needed something else, and it needed to be powerful enough to break the cycle.

I told only the people closest to me about the decision I had made, and I got understandably mixed reactions. Some were glad I had made a decision that made my health a priority.

Some were very concerned for my safety, both immediately and long-term because everyone knows of someone who has had a bad outcome with this kind of surgery and they were, quite understandably, afraid for me. I did the best I could to reassure them that I was making an informed decision, and answered any and all questions they had because my intent was never to worry the people who care about me.

And then there were those who mentioned that this type of surgery might be cheating. As if weight loss and good health was a game, and that the only respectable way to go about it is the good old-fashioned “hard way.” I don’t even try to talk to those people about it because they hang on very tightly to their prejudices about obesity and weight loss surgery, and I have neither the energy nor the desire to open closed minds.

I made a conscious choice to not talk about it here, in part because of the third group of people. I didn’t know if I wanted to deal with the troll behavior that tends to come out of the woodwork when this subject comes up. I also didn’t want to turn this into a weight loss surgery blog, and that would have happened had I started talking about this in the beginning when it was consuming my life. And then talking about it here opens it up to just about everyone in my life, and I wasn’t ready for people to be watching every morsel I put in my mouth like some kind of sideshow.

So I waited until it changed from a new experience to my new normal; for a time when other parts of my life moved back into top priority, and how I eat and the number of vitamins I take is just a thing that I do.

And then I waited some more to see if I wanted to deal with the people who will tell me I took the “easy” way out.

It turns out that, after everything I’ve been through both with the surgery and everything else lately, that I have zero fucks to give for haters. They can hate…I rollin.

In point of fact, it’s true that it’s easier to lose weight when you alter your body so that you can only eat small amounts of food, and of that food you do eat, you only absorb a portion of the nutrients. That is a definite true fact.

In six months I have gone from a BMI of 44.8 to 33. Still considered obese, but I’m just on the cusp of being merely overweight, and it’s a short trip from there to a normal body weight. I am less than halfway through the “honeymoon” period where most weight loss surgery (WLS) patients lose 80% of their excess body fat, and I am more than halfway to my goal. So yes, surgery makes weight loss much easier.

But would I call this the easy way out? Not for a minute.

The entire process both leading up to surgery and in the first months after is arduous, and there are parts of it I will have to deal with for the rest of my life. Right now my hair is falling out in handfuls. That’s temporary. Speaking of handfuls, that’s how I’ll take vitamins for the rest of my life – by the handful – because while the caloric malabsorption part of this surgery is temporary (the 12-18 month “honeymoon” period), the nutritional malabsorption part is permanent. I can’t ever take certain types of medication again, which will really suck if I develop arthritis. If I eat the wrong thing I end up barfing up my guts in the Whole Foods parking lot. There are a lot of consequences to WLS, and the only one that’s easy is the actual weight loss.

It doesn’t even make maintaining the weight loss easy. Because my stomach will never hold the amount of food I used to be able to eat, and I don’t have to deal with the almost constant hunger I had before surgery, I have an advantage. But there are ways around all of that and it’s surprisingly easy for people who have gone through all of this to gain weight back. So maintenance? Requires serious lifestyle changes, therapy, is totally on me and not easy at all. Can I do it? I am doing everything I can to stack the deck in my favor.

So. There you have it.

Because I know I laid a bombshell right on ya with this Magnum Opus, and because I love each and every one of my six readers, I am glad to answer any and all questions you want to leave in the comments or email me about anything dealing with this subject. Just how many vitamins do I take in a day? What do I eat? Are there things I can never eat again? There’s a lot of misinformation and stigma and prejudice out there about the kind of people who have surgery in order to lose weight, and the whole process in general, and if I can dispel a little of that then it’s worth laying all of this out there.

Originally, when I first considered posting about this, I was going to remind people that since I pay for this space I get to decide what kind of comments stay or go, but now I think it will be interesting to see what actually happens. I have some pretty firmly defined boundaries regarding what I’m willing to internalize from the opinions and thoughts of people who aren’t me, and I’m the kind of believer in humanity that claps for Tinkerbell and still thinks the Internet has a soul. I think I’ll be ok.

Do that sharing thing:

Who Finally Published a Life List?

I have resisted making a Life List because it seemed like a list of things I need to do before I die to feel like I’ve lived a fulfilled life, and since I already feel fulfilled that seemed pointless. My friend Britt made me see a Life List in a different way – as a reminder to dream courageously. That sounds like a way better idea than a bucket list to me, especially since some of my items don’t seem “bucket list worthy.” I’m all about doing courageous things, great and small.

Right now it seems like a small list, but I plan on adding to it hopefully as I cross some things off.

  1. Take singing lessons. I am quite horrible at singing, but I love it so. I don’t want to be on American Idol, in fact that seems like one of my worst nightmares, I’d just like to be less horrible.
  2. Skydive – Most of my life I thought skydiving seemed like  the most ridiculous thing anyone could ever do with an airplane, but now I kind of really want to do it. Midlife crisis? Maybe. Does it matter? Not in the slightest.
  3. Complete a triathlon – I’ve wanted to do this for a while. I have no need to complete an Ironman, but I would like to at least finish a sprint distance triathlon.
  4. Run the Warrior Dash – Come on, doesn’t that just look fun? I love stuff like that.
  5. Make a quilt – This one is actually in progress. I bought a fancy sewing machine for myself and started taking a class, and I’m enjoying the process. Hopefully I’ll enjoy the result as well!
  6. Learn to make soap – I love handmade soaps. Plus, I’ll have a skill when the zombies invade.
  7. Take a cruise – This is just one of those things that sounds fun. Preferably to somewhere warm because being cold is bullshit.
  8. Run a half-marathon – I love running. I don’t know that I want to push myself to complete a full marathon, but a half will satisfy my need to run big races. I think I’d like to do this one. Hopefully my knee agrees since I’m probably another surgery away from running again.
  9. Sell photos to someone who doesn’t know me – Everyone needs validation, this is mine.
  10. Visit Ireland – With a birthday on St. Patrick’s Day I don’t think this one needs any further explanation.
  11. Photograph the Aurora Borealis – That’s just cool.
  12. Visit Yosemite – It’s so close to me and yet I’ve never visited. I’d like to spend a good amount of time hiking and taking photographs.

So that’s it for this installment of my Life List. I’m going to give the list it’s own page and update it as I think of more things.

What’s on your list?

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Avoidance

So I joined a gym.

It’s a nice gym. Most gyms I’ve been to are at least somewhat dirty. They smell. They’re full of muscley preening look at me type people.

This one is different. It’s clean. It smells, well, rather neutral actually. But the towels they provide smell awesome. The showers are the two-stage kind they have in spas that have the little changing room in front of the shower stall, and the showers have shampoo and conditioner and shower gel. The locker room has hair dryers and lotion and Q-Tips and mouthwash. I go at 5 and it isn’t totally crowded. I’ve been twice this week and haven’t waited for cardio equipment either time. The crowd is a mix of all ages, and everyone is just doing their own thing.

But the best part? The sauna. I love a sauna. And this one works and everything. (the saunas at my last two gyms were hit and miss).

It’s gym nirvana.

And yet I sat in my car texting and tweeting in the parking garage for close to 45 minutes, avoiding going in.

Here we go again.

Do that sharing thing:

Fall Into Color

For once in a very long while we are actually having a Fall. Usually we go straight from 80 degree weather to snow, with no middle ground. I am finding myself very grateful for this interlude between Summer and Winter this year. You should probably remind me of this respite when I am bitterly cursing the winter snows.

Do that sharing thing: