How can you be comfortable in
the world when you feel like a stranger in your own skin? Look deeper and aim higher:
No Body Is Wrong
In fairness to my mom, I of
course understand now that she was trying to help me with what she
thought was tough love. But I don’t
think a child’s emotional intelligence is developed enough to comprehend the
two simultaneous and conflicting motivations that are wrapped up in tough love;
I know mine could compute only one. When
it came to my body, she may have been sending tough love, but I was receiving all
of the tough and none of the love. “Husky”
became part of her vocabulary for fat-shaming me whenever she thought I was
eating too much: “I guess you want to be back in the huskies section next year
too, so don’t cry about it then.” It’s
hard enough being called fat at school or in a store; it hurts more when it
happens in your own home. When I felt
fat, it wasn’t just that I didn’t want to leave the house. I didn’t want to leave my room. My family would get upset if I didn’t come downstairs
when we had company, but I felt paralyzed even if the guests were close
relatives. I just didn’t feel like I
deserved to be seen at all.
From 4th grade on, gym class was a nightmare of bullying. Tough love being a theme in my household, I remember almost being happy the few times my father took the toughness with his belt too far. Awful as that was, I knew my mom would at least have to write a note excusing me from gym class as Catholic school gym uniforms in the late 1970s and early 1980s included absurdly revealing shorts that would have showcased the welts as much as my flab. Not that my parents needed to worry about being reported to child services, as would be required of any school today. The nun who was our principal was more likely to have called my parents and congratulated them for their commitment to discipline. No, it was more about keeping family business in the family, which became a new rat wheel of shame that isolated me even further. I couldn’t talk to anyone at school about what was happening at home, and I couldn’t talk at home about what was happening at school. If I said I was bulled for being fat, I already knew I’d just be told that I was and to lose weight. And if I said I was bullied for being gay? Something I didn’t even really yet understand other than that it couldn’t be anything good? I could never, and back then I don’t know if anybody did. After all, what if someone asked if it were true?
Things would
get even worse in high school. By then I
guess I had gotten a little too old for my dad’s belt, and so it was up to me
to fake whatever illnesses I could think of to get out of gym or just miss
school completely. I would carefully calculate
the number of classes I could miss without failing. Bullying is not the right word for some of
the experiences I endured in that school and especially in the gym locker
room. The most extreme of those would
now be classified as assaults, as gay bashings, as hate crimes. But this was the 1980s and just as nonbinary had
not yet worked its way into the mainstream consciousness and conversation, nor
had the concept that violence against gay students could be anything more than
‘kids will be kids’ bullying. I walked
through the halls a rigid collection of exposed nerves, my body in a constant
state of tension to better absorb whatever blows might be coming from the front,
the side, or the back (or more rarely but even worse, the coordinated attacks
that involved all three and for which I at least had to give them credit for
their planning). The knots in my
stomach, the tightness in my shoulders, and worst of all that awful feeling you get
lodged in your forehead when you are refusing to let yourself cry. That hollow burning behind the eyes was the worst
feeling of all, because what that devolved into was the absence of any feeling
at all.
From 4th grade on, gym class was a nightmare of bullying. Tough love being a theme in my household, I remember almost being happy the few times my father took the toughness with his belt too far. Awful as that was, I knew my mom would at least have to write a note excusing me from gym class as Catholic school gym uniforms in the late 1970s and early 1980s included absurdly revealing shorts that would have showcased the welts as much as my flab. Not that my parents needed to worry about being reported to child services, as would be required of any school today. The nun who was our principal was more likely to have called my parents and congratulated them for their commitment to discipline. No, it was more about keeping family business in the family, which became a new rat wheel of shame that isolated me even further. I couldn’t talk to anyone at school about what was happening at home, and I couldn’t talk at home about what was happening at school. If I said I was bulled for being fat, I already knew I’d just be told that I was and to lose weight. And if I said I was bullied for being gay? Something I didn’t even really yet understand other than that it couldn’t be anything good? I could never, and back then I don’t know if anybody did. After all, what if someone asked if it were true?
I learned to completely disassociate
my body from my feelings just to survive.
Alcohol and closeted sex, which I discovered in sophomore and junior
years respectively, ultimately only abused my body further and left me more
confused about it. But, like the rush I
got from my food binges, at least they provided some new anesthesia to soothe
the constant pain of surgically separating my physical and emotional selves. I started staying up late at night and
getting by on less and less sleep. I told
myself I was just being a night owl who enjoyed the peace after the rest of my
family had gone to bed and when I finally had some quiet hours to myself. While there may have been some truth to that,
even more true was that I spent those hours in a constant state of anxiety over
what was waiting for me when the morning alarm went off. Sleep deprivation creates an odd high of its
own; there is the sensation of being exhausted and wired at the same time. It became something else I learned to
weaponize against my body, and it’s an issue I still struggle with today.
When I think
back to those years, I genuinely harbor no ill will toward any of the other
kids at school or in the neighborhood. I
understand as an adult that abusive kids are often also abused kids. I am less kind in my assessment of the school
administrators and teachers who let it all happen by looking the other way, or sometimes
even smirking to give a subtle stamp of approval. One history teacher would periodically
collect our notebooks to read over our assignments and then return them with his
comments. He was one of those teachers
who would always hang out with the popular kids. I can’t remember if he actually coached any
teams or not, but there were always assorted jocks and cheerleaders hanging
around his office during their free periods and after school. I got back my notebook one day but the
comment that struck me wasn’t one he had written inside about my work, but
rather one I found scrawled across the back cover. The writing had been lightly crossed out, but
it was still very easy to make out my name followed by the words “is a fat
fag.” Clearly one of the kids hanging
around his office had written it, and of course I was accustomed to being
called that and worse to my face. I
remember what hurt more was the way the teacher had so lightly crossed it out; a
fake gesture to spare my feelings that was in fact a genuine effort to hurt
them. He could have easily blacked the
comment out entirely with a dark ink marker.
He could have just ripped the back cover off completely and told me he
spilled coffee on it. But he wanted me
to see it. And all these years later, I
can still see it. And I can also
remember being uncertain about which of those “f” words inflicted more pain and
shame. Was it worse to be a fag or to be
fat, I wondered. I could only conclude
that worst of all was to be both.
If I was
already experiencing confusion about my gender and my body, by now I had
started the process of dividing up the rest of my identity in the way many teenagers
did (and most certainly still do) regardless of their orientations and
backgrounds. I’m not saying that as
teens we have split personalities, exactly; more that we learn to bifurcate the
full personality we each should be developing into different divisions of
possibility and impossibility. For me
some of those buckets were: I can be smart, but I can’t be strong. I can be creative, but I can’t be attractive. I can be a good student, but I can’t be an
athlete. And even this one: I can
be an alcoholic, just not a popular one.
We learn to limit ourselves at the very time in our lives when we should
be feeling our most limitless.
While my
younger self – the husky – had only binged, by college I had already started
adding some cyclical purging behavior. At
first these would mostly consist of crash dieting: Nutri-System. Weight Watchers. I tried them all and would start each one obsessively;
dropping a lot of weight quickly only to gain it all back (and often more) just
as quickly. My drinking also worsened,
and that often added a bloated appearance to whatever my actual weight was. After college, and living on my own, I
discovered more purging activities.
Laxatives and enemas became usual items on my shopping list. I even shifted the foods I binged on to
cookies and ice-cream with sugar substitutes like sorbitol and mannitol, once I
discovered that these often carried warnings in their ingredient list that excess
consumption may have a laxative effect.
They may not have tasted as good but, just like I had done as a kid at
the kitchen breadbox, I was still shoving it all down my throat so quickly that
the taste often didn’t register much anyway.
To find foods I could binge that were effectively also laxatives? That felt like a win-win. I discovered an even more dangerous win-win
when a freak accident resulted in a first painkiller prescription. About ten or fifteen minutes after taking the
first pill, that familiar anesthetic feeling came over me. It was as though I had discovered vodka
without calories.
I soon added compulsive
exercise to my behaviors and started spending most of my vacation and entertainment
budgets on personal trainers. I remember
and have genuine respect for all of them, many of whom whipped me into
incredible shape. It’s not their fault
that much of what I was using them for was as a buffer between myself and the
gym because, aside from the cardio machines (I was always good at running), I still
had an almost pathological fear of navigating the gym floor on my own. I was still disassociating myself from my
body; lifting whatever weights and doing as many reps as the trainers told me to
without ever being fully mentally present and paying attention so that I could learn
how to do any of it on my own. They
became the bodyguards I wished I had back in high school.
The ironic
thing is that sometimes the more muscular my body became, the more disconnected
from it I felt. My then-undiagnosed
gender dysphoria had decided that a feminine aesthetic was thinner and more
streamlined, and so I thought I looked my best when I was binging on the
painkillers (or as I called them, appetite-killers) and hovering around what I
know now was an unhealthily low weight.
When my body would get more muscular, I liked the attention it got me
from other men and yet it felt out of place for myself. Dating was also confusing. Personal ads that included qualifiers like masc
for masc only or no fats or femmes please felt unbearably cruel and
yet perhaps no more so than I was being to myself. By then I knew how to get myself out of being
one of the fats, at least for periods of time, but the femmes (another
vile “f” word)? Giving up my place in
their ranks wouldn’t be so easy, and I had tried. I had tried to walk with a broader gate, to
talk in a deeper voice. None of it had ever
worked and only further poisoned my relationship with my body as I became self-conscious
about literally every move I made and every word I uttered. I remember once dating someone for several months
who always seemed to be running hot and cold with how interested he was in me,
and so I finally asked him about it. I couldn’t
blame him for his answer necessarily, because in a way it captured all of my
own internal confusion. But his delivery
and choice of words were hurtful nonetheless: “Look, I’m really into your body,”
he said, “but then you open your mouth, and it’s like a purse falls out”. Yes, this was someone I was dating. I’ve learned that having a low opinion of
yourself is a surefire way to attract others who’ll be more than happy to agree
with you.
Prostate cancer
would feel like another betrayal by my body, but it ended up being a
breakthrough. The decisions that had to
be made about my male body were the final catalyst for a painful but honest
self-examination of my gender identity issues.
I did this first with my therapist, who then referred me to another who specialized
in gender identity. I slowly started unwinding
years of tangled confusion, which I learned was part of gender dysphoria. Was I transgender? The therapist explained it as a spectrum with
cisgender on one end and transgender on the other. After several sessions we decided that I was
pretty far along on the spectrum in the direction of transgender but perhaps
not quite all the way there, and so we landed on nonbinary. But he stressed that ultimately it was
something only I could decide, and something I had the right to change my mind
about. As I was starting to feel some first
glimpses of understanding in one area, my body obsession went into overdrive
again. The surgeon had entered through
my abdominal area to remove my prostate, and it left a visible scar. This surgery successfully rid my body of
cancer, and I was upset because a scar was interfering with my attempt at a six-pack. How vain, how small, how ungrateful could I
be? Or how sick. All of that looped back to the dysphoria. If I let my body hair grow longer, it covered
the scar. But then I felt more ‘masculine’. If I shaved or closely trimmed the hair, I
felt more comfortably ‘feminine’ but then the scar was visible again. I had found yet another rat wheel. Meanwhile I had gotten completely sober and
kicked the painkillers, but my cycles of binging and purging food got worse
again. The old rat wheels were still
there too.
Last year, I finally
checked myself into a treatment facility that had both an eating disorder
specialist and a gender specialist in addition to other therapists for trauma
and mood disorders. I was so excited to
be finally addressing all those different but painfully intertwined issues in
an immersive and supportive environment.
Unfortunately, problems with my insurance company cut my stay disappointingly
short, but I have been able to continue the work with my therapist and doctor
back home. I in fact had only one
session with the rehab’s eating disorder specialist, but it was a meaningful
one. She started by dissecting and
deconstructing the various tools those of us with eating disorders use to measure
our self-worth and beat ourselves down: Scales? They are not calibrated the same (especially those that purport to generate an
entire health profile because you step on it), and neither are cardio machines that spit out estimates of alleged
calories burned. Clothes? The same size in
clothing means something very different from brand to brand. Calorie-tracking apps? Even experts struggle to estimate calories with any accuracy, as studies asking licensed nutritionists to identify the caloric values of identical meals have yielded wildly varying responses. It was all tough to argue, and the therapist
seemed pleased when I offered that I had already stopped keeping a scale in my
home. But she shook her head when I followed
that up by sharing that I had instead started taking numerous before and after
photos of my body on my phone, which had invited even more constant comparisons
and self-loathing than any numbers on a scale.
“Your mind made a healthy decision to get rid of the scale,” she said, “…but
then your disease found another way.”
I tried explaining all the ideas in my head about my weight, when my body was too fat or too thin, when it was too masculine or too feminine. She quietly took it all in and just replied, "Wow. That's a lot". She then leaned in asked me
a simple question: “What if your body was just your body?” My initial thought was that in fact it was
simple to the point of meaning nothing, and just as I was about to open my
mouth and say so I felt a lightbulb turn on.
Far from simple, it was deeply profound.
What if my body is just the vehicle that is carrying the real me through
the world? What if all the energy I have
put into my body all my life has just been distracting me from learning to love
myself? Not my body, but myself.
This month I
did start a new fitness program, but it was not a resolution. Typical of someone who is body obsessed, I have
followed many online fitness accounts on social media. One always seemed to really go out of its way
to discuss fitness more holistically instead of posting the usual photo barrage
of hot trainers in speedos. Part of their
daily accountability process, in addition to workouts and food logs, is a
gratitude list. There are weekly weigh-ins
and progress photos, which I discussed with my therapist in advance and which we
agreed to try with certain parameters.
The new scale stays in the closet except for those 5 minutes once a
week. Instead of agonizing over photos,
I take a quick video as I turn around in a circle, snap a few screenshots, and
upload them to the platform before deleting everything from my phone. Is my disease setting another trap? Time will tell, but the advantages so far are
that I have the benefit of guidance but not the buffer of a trainer. There are demos of the exercises, but I am
responsible for following them, executing the proper form, feeling out the appropriate
weight per set, figuring out how to adjust the machines for my height, etc. I am being mindful and staying present in my
body rather than detaching from it. I am
navigating the gym floor for the first time without a bodyguard, and I am finally
owning the part of myself that is – and always was – an athlete.
My body is not wrong
because it is too masculine or too feminine, or too fat or too thin. My body is not wrong at all. It’s also not right. My body is just my body. Even if I were to change my mind and decide that
a gender transition is the right choice for me, it wouldn’t be because my body is wrong. It would just be another journey my vehicle
will take me through to arrive at a destination closer to my truer self. And with all respect to the body positivity
fans out there, for me I don’t have to love my body. But I don’t have to hate it either. I don’t have to think my body is beautiful,
but I don’t get to call it ugly.
Basically, I don’t need to attach any qualitative descriptors or
emotional values to it at all. Because my
body is just my body. I need to respect
and maintain it only because it transports all the parts of me that really are
beautiful and allows me to share them with the rest of the world; the parts of
me that are kind and loving and smart and, yes, strong. That’s a big responsibility. It’s true my body also carries some parts of
me that are pretty ugly; the parts of me that can be fearful and negative and
sometimes as judgmental of others as I have been of myself. But that’s an important responsibility
too. I need those parts to stay safe so
that I can keep improving them. The better
I maintain my body, the more time it will give me to work on those ugly parts and
hopefully smooth them into the beautiful parts.
My body is
just my body. Repeating that mantra,
and believing it, is my higher resolution for 2023. Nothing less and nothing more. But if you’ve been punishing yourself with some
other new year’s resolutions, the silver lining may be that you’re statistically
likely to abandon them by early February and so the end is almost here. Just don’t look at that as a failure; embrace
it instead as the freedom from failure.
And then look into the deepest, most beautiful part of yourself – the part
you won’t find reflected in a mirror or in a store’s glass window – and ask
that part of you what will bring you joy.
Not results or outcomes, just joy.
Whatever answer comes back, that’s what you should dedicate more time to,
not as a resolution or as some line in the sand but simply as a gift to your
own soul. That’s why I started writing again;
that was the answer that came back for me.
Since I shared about
some of the misguided tough love I received from my parents as a child, I’ll end
by sharing something they did that was just love. They had a beautiful tradition on Three Kings
Day, which for many Catholic households marks the close of the Christmas season every January 6th. Santa
Claus would take away our tree and all the decorations overnight but, in their place, he left behind one final gift each for me and my siblings. It always eased the sadness of Christmas
ending and all that glitter fading.
Maybe that’s a way we can reframe the dreaded new year’s
resolution. Instead of drawing a line in
the sand and catapulting ourselves out of the holidays and into some self-imposed
punishment, what if we just gave ourselves one last gift? One more wish? Something that soothed our souls and eased us
out of the holidays and into long-lasting joy.
And if you are (or
think you might be) someone struggling with an eating disorder or gender
dysphoria, or for that matter any other physical or mental health challenge, give
yourself a second gift and seek professional help. Friends and family can be important sources
of support, but they are out of their depth here and good intentions (like
tough love) don’t always translate to good advice. These are medical issues that require medical
intervention. If you don’t currently have
a doctor or therapist, The National Eating Disorder Association
(NEDA) has a terrific website (nationaleatingdisorders.org) and helpline
(1-800-931-2237) to start exploring resources and referrals. Overeaters Anonymous has meetings that embrace
not only overeating but the full spectrum of compulsive food behaviors (meetings
can be searched online by zip code at oa.org).
If your city has an LGBTQ+ community center, most provide free or low-cost
counseling either on site or through referrals.
If you don’t have one nearby, the LGBT National Help Center has a website
(lgbthotline.org) and hotline (1-888-843-4564) to assist anyone of any age who
has questions about sexual orientation or gender identity. For anyone with general mental health
questions or concerns, try The National Mental Health Hotline’s website (mentalhealthhotline.org)
or their call center (1-866-903-3787). I
know that it can all be overwhelming, but we don’t have to suffer alone. As someone who is learning to face these
challenges relatively late in life, if nothing else I hope I am an example that
it’s never too late to choose love over fear.
No body is ever
wrong, but sometimes everybody needs help.