When I was a
little girl, I once went into one of those carnival funhouses with the mirrors.
It was the one and only time I did so. I remember I didn’t get very far. I took
one look at my distorted series of reflected images and high-tailed it out of
there so fast, you could probably see my streak marks hang in the air.
Festive.
Cut to about
fourteen years later: I was nineteen or twenty years old when I was, once
again, standing in front of multiple mirror images. Only this time, there was
no carnival- and certainly, no fun. It was, instead, just me, choosing to stand
and scrutinize myself in front of my three-way mirror, picking myself apart,
via my disordered eating and body image behaviors.
It was often
during those times that I would ask God why He made me in the first place. What
was the point? Was the torment of
eating disorders all there was? Were the constant weight and food battles all
there was to me? I hated what I saw so much of the time, regardless of where I
was on the scale. At my thinnest, I hated what I saw; at my heaviest, I hated
what I saw. Did God see me the same way?
“Do you have eyes
of flesh? Do you see as a mortal sees?”
Job 10:4
Yeah, I was
certainly living a Job kind of existence. It’s not a “skip to my loo” kind of
approach. But no, God doesn’t stop at surface appearances- thank God! He looks
deeper…
“…God does not see as humans see. Humans look
at outward appearances, but the LORD looks into the heart."
1 Samuel 16:7
And, isn’t
that one of the problems for those of us dealing with eating disorders and body
image issues? The old adage states there’s no reality, only perception. So,
some of us perceive ourselves to be ugly and worthless. But is that the truth?
Scientific
studies state that there is a chemical disturbance in the brain function of
many who suffer from eating disorders like anorexia and bulimia. Simply stated,
the brain wiring of these individuals prevents them from seeing their physical
bodies as they actually are. Instead, they only see themselves as the distorted
“funhouse mirror” version of themselves. You know the saying, “seeing is
believing?” Well, I guess that’s what can happen if the brain can only register
one particular perception, even if it’s an inaccurate one.
I believed
that inaccurate perception for a long time.
And, as
years have passed, I’ve also had a spiritual reawakening as well concerning my
disordered eating and image issues. Eating disorders, at their core, are
spiritual matters. For my own situation, I had to recognize and confront how I
let my own eating disorder behavior become some form of idolatry.
Pleasant,
isn’t it?
According to
“The Oxford American Desk Dictionary and Thesaurus Second Edition,” the
definition of idolatry reads as follows: “the worship of idols, great adulation. The image
of a deity, etc., as an object of worship, the object of excessive or supreme
adulation, a graven image icon, effigy, symbol, fetish, totem, god, hero or
heroine, star, celebrity.”
Yeah, that
covered it for me. Whether or not I knew it, my image desires and eating
disorder behaviors were idols. I thought I was in control. But, before I knew
it, all of my “little idols” turned into razor-sharp funhouse torture mirrors,
mocking and threatening me. I had lost sight of my one true God.
“I am
the LORD thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the
house of bondage. You shall have no other gods before me.”
Exodus 20:2-3
And by
disobeying that very first commandment, I had opened myself up to unnecessary
pain. My eating disorders were not God’s Will or God’s fault. And, while it
would be all too easy to blame myself here, I had to accept the fact that I was
not completely hopeless; I still could make another choice. No matter how low I
went with my eating disorders, there still was a way out: God.
“No temptation has overtaken you
except what is common to humanity. God is faithful, and He will not allow you
to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation He will also
provide a way of escape so that you are able to bear it.”
1 Corinthians 10:13
Like that
childhood experience of the funhouse mirrors, I had a choice about what I could
do. I could continue to stare into the scary, inaccurate reflections, or I
could leave them and shift my view elsewhere? So, where- or more accurately,
who- is that elsewhere?
Three letters-
starting with a “G…”
“The name of the
LORD is a strong tower; a righteous person rushes to it and is lifted up above
the danger.”
Proverbs 18:10
What’s your
funhouse mirror? Is it an eating disorder? An addiction? Some other
self-destructive behavior? Are you choosing to stare into that hopeless,
futureless and lifeless reflection or are you choosing to look for God?
If the
funhouse isn’t so fun, then what? What will we do? We do have a better option
out there. There is a better reflection, waiting to look back at us: God.
And He’s there to help us...
“Your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, This is the
way, walk in it, whenever you turn to the right hand, and whenever turn to the
left.’”
Isaiah 30:21
“I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go:
I will guide you with My eye.”
Psalm 32:8
God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in
trouble.
Psalms 46:1
Will we
choose that reflected option?
Copyright © 2018 by Sheryle Cruse
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