Keeping Everyone Happy

disappointment

For someone who has struggled in the past with feelings of inadequacy, extremely low self-esteem, the need to be perfect in order to be good enough, and struggling with food addictions, it’s sometimes hard to stop these feelings from returning.

I told a little of my story before in my post, When Food Consumes You, and I mentioned that I was always tiny until college. That was me as it was everyone in my family. However, looking at the history of those in my family, it seemed that once adulthood hit I would inevitably gain weight.

I remember when I gained so much in college, and I constantly heard comments from loved ones.  They would say “You look like you need to jog around the block a few times,” and “Are you going to keep on until you look like your sister?” (Yeah that was a jab at both of us), or “How much weight are you planning on gaining?” Of course, these are just a few of the things I heard.

You see, many members of my family don’t have filters.  They say whatever is on their minds regardless of how it might hurt the other person.  I was the same way until my early 20s when it was brought to my attention what I was doing, and sometimes I still struggle with not saying the first thought that pops in my head.

I Can’t Win

For the first time in my life I am exercising and focusing on my health.  Yes, I was very active in high school as a cheerleader, but I never was one to go out and “exercise.”  I didn’t even step foot in a gym until college when I took a kinesiology class only because I had to.

Once I started really exercising, my metabolism went crazy again just like way back in the day.  I ended up losing about 10lbs more than I had set my goal to be, and I’m doing everything I can to gain more.  I’ve even been eating more junk food in the past few months than I’ve had in the entire year.  Nothing is helping me gain, and I know I’m the healthiest I’ve ever been.  If you’ve seen me in person you can see even my bones are tiny.  My fingers are tiny.  My little fingernails look like someone in elementary school.  It’s the way God created me.

I visited family this weekend, and those same people who made the comments above had other things to say to me.  One in particular I know was out of love, but that doesn’t make the words any easier.  “You look anorexic,” and “You are too skinny.  You look unhealthy.”  “You look poor. You need to stop losing weight,” and my favorite, “How much weight are you going to lose?”  That last one is interesting because it’s from the very same person who asked me several years back, “How much weight are you planning on gaining?”  Keep in mind I’ve lost nothing in a year.  I’ve actually gained a few.

If I’m living to please others, this is proof that I can’t win. I’m thankful I don’t struggle the way I used to, but boy is it hard when those are comments I hear first thing from my loved ones.

Today I find my identity in Christ.  I don’t struggle with my self-esteem because I came to the understanding that I’m fearfully and wonderfully made by the only one who knows what beauty and perfection are.  I’m living for an audience of one, so if someone doesn’t like me for who I am, there’s nothing I can do about it, and there’s no reason I should feel I have to do anything about it.  I don’t struggle with food anymore.  I don’t count calories or weigh myself.  I don’t even own a scale.  I do sometimes struggle with perfection, but that is something I continue to work on.  I’m so imperfect, and I know I can’t make up for it by being perfect in other areas.

I’ve grown.  I’m thankful, too, because this weekend could have easily sent me into an emotional downward spiral.  I love who I am.  I don’t understand why those I love most feel the need to point out what they think is wrong about me, and it’s by no means easy, but it’s something that I don’t need to spend my time dwelling on.  This is the extent of me dwelling on it—writing this post.  I’m speaking out for those of you who have gone through a similar situation.

How You CAN Win

Do NOT allow the words of others, harmless or otherwise, affect you in a way that is not healthy.  You are beautiful and perfectly made.  There’s a difference when someone knows that you are doing something unhealthy to yourself and someone who just feels the need to be critical.  Discern which voice you’re hearing.

Most importantly, remember you are to live for an audience of one.  If you try to live your life in a way that keeps everyone, you’ll quickly feel like you’re juggling your life unsuccessfully.  That’s the easiest way to make yourself feel like a failure.  Trying to please everyone is not possible, and you will fail.  Don’t do that to yourself.

Related Post: Why I Get Fit

From the Mind of the Hurt

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Last week I mentioned how thankful I am that I’ve kept journals over the years.  I’ve enjoyed going through them over the past week, and I’m amazed at the person I once was compared the the person I am now.  God hears our prayers.  Let me change that up a little: God hears YOUR prayers, so never give up on praying about anything.  God’s timing is perfect, and he wants to do something great inside of you.

One of the reasons I’m so focused on girls being confident and being certain of their identity in Christ is because I didn’t have that.  Honestly, I didn’t even know what “identity in Christ” meant.  I had never heard those words until college.  I was extremely lacking in confidence, which is probably one of the reasons I pushed myself to be the best at anything I ever tried.

I was not someone people enjoyed hanging around with because of my lack of confidence.  I know that sounds strange, but if someone around me showed a hint of confidence, I guess I felt the need to point out flaws in them in order to bring them down to where I was.  And I didn’t do it in the quiet.  I made sure to point things out when we were in a group of people.  I was a miserable person and wanted others to feel the same.  I didn’t have many friends, and I honestly don’t know how I even had the ones I did.  Bless those people!

All the times I’ve written and spoken to people from all over, I knew my earlier years had been filled with a low perception of myself, but I don’t know that I remembered how mean-spirited I was during that time.  God reminded me through these journal entries.  It appears 2002 was a year of great transformation within myself.  Although you may not know me personally, if you’ve followed anything I’ve written,  you know me well enough that you might think these entries were written by a completely different person.  I was a completely different person back then.  I’m amazed to see that God turned me into the person I asked to become.  Not only that, but I’ve written blog posts with tips on not being negative, and I’ve said some of these exact words without realizing I once prayed to have those same qualities myself.

These are just snippets from my prayers and notes from study groups that really stood out to me.  Can you relate to these thoughts? 

Journal Entries

May 5, 2002
Today I began Just Like Jesus by Max Lucado.  I want to change!  I hate how my thoughts of others are so judgmental.  It’s not just some people sometimes.  It’s all people all the time.  Lord, please help me to love myself enough to not feel the need to judge others.  I have such a lack of self-esteem that I feel I have to judge others and bring them down to my level.  Please take this away from me.  I want to be a person who looks at everyone the same and lift them up.  I want to praise them for their achievements, and I want to be happy for them when they’ve accomplished something.  Please take this immature jealousy and negativity away.  When I see the bad things of a person, please emphasize the good things so I can see them more clearly than the others.  I truly want to be more like you!  Thanks!

 **God loves you just the way you are, but he refuses to leave you that way.**

Aug 8, 2002
We need to learn how to accept each other the way God made us.  We are all different, so accept all of the differences.  We don’t have to understand the differences, we should simply accept them.

Who I am in Christ:
*I am a child of God
*I am accepted
*I am Christ’s friend
*I am justified
*I am one in spirit with God
*I am bought with a price
*I am saint
*I am adopted
*I am redeemed and forgiven
*I am complete in Christ
*I am secure
*I am free from all condemnation
*I am assured all things work together for my good
*I cannot be separated from the love of God
*I am established, anointed and sealed by God
*I am given a spirit of power, love, and a sound mind
*I have grace and mercy
*I cannot be touched by the evil one
*I am significant
*I am a minister of reconciliation
*I am God’s co-worker

Aug 15, 2002

Eph 2:10
For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things he planned for us long ago.

Understanding our identity is essential.  Change your perception of yourself by believing the truth.

What is my perception of myself?
I know that how I perceive myself is not of you.  My weight has been bothering me for a long time, and I ask you to please take this perception of myself away from me.  I know I’m beautiful inside and out, although I don’t always think that way.   I do see myself as a person who shuts people out often.  Please help me to not do that anymore and to see myself as a friendly person who is open for anyone who needs me to be.  Thank you, Lord, for creating me the way you did – in your image.

 

Oct 17, 2002
Identity and sense of worth are not determined by your qualities but by your character and identity in Christ.

Related Posts

You might enjoy some past posts related to this topic:
Rid Yourself of Negativity Once and For All
Our Differences: Not a Reason to Be Jealous but God’s Fingerprint on Us
Every Moment Was Laid Out

Confidence – Own It!

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I was speaking to a group of teen moms the other day when I realized my self-image topic turned more into a confidence topic.  Sure these two sound one and the same, but are they really?  It wasn’t until a young mom came to speak to me after the session that I realized they are two totally different entities.

Self-image is the way one views herself while confidence is the effect that comes from having a positive self-image.  Do you follow?  A person simply can’t be confident in who she is if her self-image is poor.

As I spoke to these ladies, I realized most of them have heard about having a positive self-image and have heard that they’re beautiful, but most of them haven’t heard that it’s okay to be confident in themselves.

Confidence is like a magnet drawing people near.  People look at a confident girl and see something different, and although they don’t know what the difference is, they are drawn to her in hopes some of it rubs off on them, too.

What Confidence is NOT

  • Superior-thinking: a confident girl is not someone who thinks she’s better than everyone else.
  • Popularity: just because someone is popular at school doesn’t mean she’s confident in who she is.  A confident girl could care less about popularity.  She enjoys the true friendships she has.
  • Shallow: a confident girl knows there’s more to someone than what the world’s image of beauty is that’s splattered across magazines and billboards.  Beauty has many facets.
  • Mean-spirited: a confident girl doesn’t feel the need to put others down or intentionally harm others.

Confidence is beautiful.  God created you with great thought and detail and he delights in your beauty.  He wants you to be confident in knowing his creation is absolutely perfect.  You are his creation, and every part of your being was created by him.  Stand in confidence.  Don’t doubt who you are.  Own it!