“…there is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or
hidden that will not be made known.”
Matthew 10:26; Luke 12:2
This time of
year, with its county and state fairs in full swing, I’m reminded of an eating
disorder memory.
The summer
before my sophomore year of college, I was at my lowest weight, riddled with
anorexic beliefs and behaviors. I weighed a two-digit weight and my condition elicited
concern from numerous friends and family members. Still, I was determined to
let nothing and no one stop me. I was solely fixated on my goal of being thin,
to an emaciated degree. I wanted no one interfering as I went about my daily
life.
And I
thought I would achieve that as I decided to go to the Minnesota State Fair in
late August.
Not so fast.
By now, my
disordered eating tendencies felt as close to my normal routine as they could
be. I got up early that morning, engaged in my punishing exercise, non-eating
and grooming routines. I wore a “normal” white t-shirt and jean shorts. There
was, to my knowledge, nothing attention-grabbing about my presence.
But my
fair-going experience would quickly show me otherwise. For, as I walked the
long stretch of the fair site, I noticed peoples’ stares. I seemed to run into
families with young children. And children, as filter-less as they are, gawked
and pointed. Although I could not hear the interactions, I suspected they were
asking their parents what was wrong with me. I saw disgust on the adults’
faces. They could not get away from me fast enough. I had at least three of
these encounters.
I wanted to
convince everyone, even in this fair setting, I was “fine.” And it irritated me
that people seemed to “know,” to be bothered, appalled or fearful about my
presence. I wanted to believe I was doing well; I was not out of control. I was
not sick. And, in this anonymous circumstance, strangers were disputing my
well- being. I believed, sure, my family and friends who expressed their
concerned thoughts were one thing; they could operate in a personal agenda to
hurt me. But total strangers?
And here’s
where, unknown to me then, I encountered the powerful impact about two or three
witnesses…
“…In the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be
established.”
2 Corinthians 13:1
“But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of
two or three witnesses every word may be established.”
Matthew 18:16
I was a
walking skeleton. Dressing me up for fun at the fair did nothing to change that.
Neither did my desire to persuade others I was “normal.”
Still, I was
thoroughly convinced I could blend in and not appear like I had a problem.
So, I
decided to look like even more of the festive fairgoer. I bought one of those
huge stuffed panda bears and proceeded to walk around with that sucker for the
rest of my experience. Hey, c’mon. Look how happy I am; I have this gigantic
bear!
I know.
But my panda
strategy backfired. For now, peoples’ attention weren’t just pulled to the
walking skeleton, but to the exaggerated
image of a walking skeleton lugging an enormous stuffed animal around on a hot
and humid summer day. And make no mistake about it, that panda became quite heavy very quickly.
But I still
clung to the delusion I could hide behind its cuteness. I believed it would
camouflage my unflattering reality. Throw a huge bear at it- exactly!
And, I was
oblivious to the Truth, bear or no bear: secrets get exposed.
“For nothing is secret, that shall not be made manifest;
neither anything hid, that
shall not be known and come abroad.”
Luke 8:17
“For whatever is hidden is meant to be disclosed, and
whatever is concealed is meant to be brought out into the open.”
Mark 4:22
And, since
eating disorders are all about secrecy, they’re up to the same fate as anything
else is.
Yikes.
It’s been
years since this experience. I still have the panda bear. But, more than that,
I also have the revelation of eating disorders and their insidious, sick
thought processes, some of those including…
I know what I’m doing.
I’m in control.
I’m fooling everyone.
I don’t need help.
No one knows what’s really going on.
What are you
hiding behind? Perhaps it’s not a humongous teddy bear, but it is something,
isn’t it?
For those of
us in recovery from food and body image issues, the challenge is to identify
the need to be presented in a particular light. And then, from there, we need
to confront our chosen props created to distract, to deny, to lie and to hide.
Often, we
can get so consumed by that obsession, we completely bypass the liberation
which waits on our decision to embrace it…
“…the truth will set you
free."
John 8:32
So, let’s come out from the dark and walk in empowering
light!
Copyright © 2021 by
Sheryle Cruse
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