JLG
I've made it a goal to become a better writer. I read some of my blog posts from the past and realized that my minimal writing skills have diminished since college. I wasn't a good writer then, so I can't really afford to lose any more of my writing skills.

While most of my writing is done by hand, I felt compelled to really write part of my life story. This story is a long one. It is one that goes back more more a decade and is filled with so many major events. It is a story that is still unfolding today. It is a story that needs to give me the ability to quickly edit, copy, and paste until it feels just right. And it is a story that I may need to tell to a student or my children. It is best when it is somewhat thought out and organized.

And it is a story that will be told in many parts. The pieces I post here are works in progress they are a road to healing and recovery. It is rough draft to what will become just a small piece of my story. And here is where it all begins . . .

As I sit here tonight with my throat a little sore, my voice a little hoarse, and my heart a little pained, I realize that it hasn't even been 7 years since I last sat in this same position. It hasn't even been 7 years since I last found myself questioning how my past is my present. How did I let this happen again? How did I let this happen in the first place? Just under 7 years ago I was willing to drive to McDonalds, eat in the car, and throw up In a plastic bag on the way to work. Just under 7 years ago I ate less than 400 calories a day.

Maybe it is time that I actually face the situation for what it is. Maybe it is time that I dig deep into my memory and piece together the past I have worked so hard to forget. Maybe. At least it would be a start.

I had to be just a little younger than 13. I had a lot of social anxiety. I had the need to be perfect. I had the desire to feel wanted and loved. Above all else, I had the need to be in control.

I had a plan: find a way to be popular, beautiful, and smart. I knew that the end goal was to have it all, and I would stick to that plan. Until the plan quietly started to consume me.

I didn't see it coming. I didn't notice the plan starting to mask the person I was. The changes were really subtle at first.

I was always observing people. I was really noticing things. I noticed how the girls that were cool wore specific clothes. I noticed how the popular kids talked. I noticed how even though I was in the popular crowd, I did not have a best friend in the crowd.

These were things I could change. I worked so hard to fit in. I worried about every sound that left my mouth and how it would be perceived by the others. I was careful to spend all my money on various colored polos and branded graphic tee shirts from popular stores. I even played soccer since everyone I hung around with did it to.

These things seem normal for a teenager in middle school. And they are.

What isn't normal is what happened later.

At the lunch table I couldn't just eat. I had to hear about how all these girls were upset that they couldn't fit into their size 12 clothes. They were not talking about size 12 in women's. They were talking about the girls' size. I was not a size 12. I had not been a size 12 for at least a year.

To hear these skinny girls talk about their bodies in this negative way, like there was something actually wrong with the way they looked, was devastating to my self-esteem. I adored these girls. I wished I could be as beautiful as these girls. If they didn't look good enough, I, for sure, didn't look good enough.

From the moment I first heard the girls hate their bodies, I began the long journey of what would be referred to as ED. To say the words eating disorder was too much. I know I've not really recovered because I still can't say those two words out loud.

Back in my middle school cafeteria, I could no longer sit at the lunch table and feel comfortable eating. I felt like all of their eyes were watching me. I was sure that they saw me eating and were disgusted by how much I put into my mouth. I was sure that they were wondering why the fat girl was eating so much. I was sure they noticed all the minute details of my lunch habits.

While these thoughts swirled through my head every day, I was becoming better at hiding in the crowd. The plan to be popular and beautiful was still in place, but I was going to have to try and lay low for a little bit. I needed to lose a little weight and maybe a chin. I couldn't be beautiful with those rolls on my stomach, and there was no way that I could be popular if I wasn't beautiful. Obviously that wouldn't make any sense.

While I won't go into many specifics, I quickly and unintentionally started sliding down the icy mountain of food restriction. I only ate specific food at specific times. I ate less and less in front of people, and in reality, I just ate less and less. I found ways at lunch to hid the amount I ate by taking a few bites of everything very slowly. By the time everyone started packing up to go to the gym, I just needed to throw all the food I didn't eat away.

This was really working out for me for quite a while. No one ever noticed that I was hardly eating, and everyone started to pay attention to  me a little more. I was complimented by the other 12-13 year olds on my weight loss. In hindsight, 12-13 year olds shouldn't even notice weight loss in their peers. But their compliments only fueled me and my plan to become beautiful.

As my social life was thriving, I knew that popularity was ever changing. I couldn't just sit by and enjoy my friends, I needed to constantly work to better myself so that people would continue to like me. And it is right about here that ED felt so controlled and yet began to really control me.

I maybe at 50 calories at lunch, but this was too much for me. I had to eat dinner at home because it was easy to hide parts of my lunch at school, but it wasn't easy to hide my dinner in my lap at home. My parents would not approve of their nearly 13 year old trying to diet. I had to find a way to reduce my calories again.

Because I was already active and involved in sports, exercising didn't feel like a realistic way to lose more weight. Instead, I discovered that I could easily purge some of my calories in the girls’ bathroom.

Deep in my soul, I really wish that this was the one thing I never attempted. This has really affected my life beyond weight loss. Purging is the one thing that sends a calming effect throughout my body as soon as it happens. It is also the reason that people rarely notice when I relapse. It is also why I have continual problems with my teeth. It is also why I will always have problems with acid reflux.

So that's where it all started. It's scary to see how normal it all began. It makes me worried about my little girl. I worry that she will be susceptible to similar problems that I was. I don't understand genetics well. I don't have much to base my own genetic disposition on. But now, I fear for my daughter. I pray that the things I dealt with will keep her safer than I was.

I worked so hard to forget so much. I almost forgot how innocent ED was when it came into my life. I don't even know what this means now. How has my past become my present again? When will it stay in the past?

JLG
I say it all the time, "I'm back!" Sure I'm coming back to blog again... but it has been SOOO long.  Well, here's the super fast update:
1. I almost didn't get back in to Alger MS.
2. I did get back in to Alger MS.
3. I taught summer school at Alger.
4. I left the family I love to teach closer to home.
5. I teach high schoolers.
6. I'm still working on an Elementary endorsement.
7. I want to get back in to art and design.

So... because of number 7, I'm opening up my blog again to try and post some photoshop/picnik stuff here.

Here we go!


JLG
I just noticed that I had a follower on my dashboard (yeah, it's been a while since I've posted...) I was like, "Why can't I see my follower?"  I think it's me!  How ridiculous am I?

Anyways, I'm feeling slightly out of control.  All my life I've wanted and needed to have control in my life.  I don't feel like I have any control anymore.  This job has taken a lot out of me.  I've lost a lot of my life, and I have mentally aged a good 10 years.  I'm exhausted.

Is this burn out or the position I'm in?  I think it could be both...

What to do?  I'm going to have to figure something new out.  I'm just falling apart physically and mentally.

Soon I hope to get back to my ONIB books...  Soon.
JLG
So... it's been a LOOONG time.  My bad.  I've been busy and all with the teaching position.  But here's the thing: my life has ONLY been about my job since September.  It has really taken a toll.  The school has given me a co-teacher, and I have had my tight little grip around my territory!  The poor new teacher not only has to deal with transitioning students, but Jessi is an additional battle.

Well... I surrender to this battle in order to gain in the event of new life.  Me and Jesus?  We've been struggling for a few years now.  Camp Geneva some how made me a little bitter toward Christianity.  I never wanted to be the girl who left people out or was intolerant.  I didn't even want to be associated with them.

Times change.  I need a Savior, and it has to be Jesus.  There is so much of me that I have forgotten and ignored since starting this job.  I hardly remember who my friends are and what it's like to just hang out.  I don't know what it is to sleep at night and not dream about school.

I've set some new "resolutions" for myself.  They aren't really for the year, so I don't want to refer to them as resolutions.  These goals are the start of a new chapter in my life.  I'll try and come up with a name for this new journey later... but excuse me while I figure out how to be at a meeting until 4 and at my school by 3:30...
JLG
So, I had this goal of reading 50 books by September 1... that's going a little bit rough, but I'm currently reading the Alchemist and LOVING it.  It's so beautiful and philosophical.  Anyways, that post is coming, don't you worry.  I am only at the part where the boy meets the alchemist.

Anyways, I always have these big dreams and big ideas.  I don't really like to do small... so, the new big thing is exercise.  I am looking into getting certified in Group Fitness.  It's super expensive, but I think once I'm teaching I'll appreciate a side gig kind of like that.

If you have any suggestions on how to make it less expensive or words of encouragement, please send them my way!

xoJLG
JLG
So... back from the Cherry Festival.  I had SO much fun with the kids I was staying with.  There was Tubby, Chunk, Jumbo and Lumpy.  None of us particularly large, but we all have fat names anyways.  I love it!  When I said earlier that Lori and Tom were husband and wife, what I meant was Lori is WAY too smart to marry Tom! :)  At least, that's what I hear. 

I just finished Lisa Whelchel's book on friendship last night.  I said I was going to walk everyone through the book, but as it turns out, the book is a little like a self journey.  Instead I'll just cover it in one post.

Cherry Fest pics to come REALLY soon!  I promise

xoJLG
JLG
So, we have done three days of the Cherry Festival.  Everything is going fairly well, and we are certainly having a lot of fun.  There are, of course, stresses that come with the job, but people are very pleased with the product.  We are serving the new Bacardi Torched Cherry with lemonade and Pepsi.  I really like the lemonade. 

I promise that I will have a ton of pictures to come, but until then you will have to settle for a story or two.  So, I don't know how well the people of Traverse City really like us!  I mean, we have been scolded by small children for things that we were actually doing correctly (i.e. using the service entrance to the beer tent), servers and bartenders have flat out ignored us or forgot about us, and some lady yelled (and, boy, do I mean YELLED) at us for something that was totally out of context and none of her business.  Then the woman had the nerve to ask me for a t-shirt.  I gave her one because I am a bit of a pushover, but I was not happy.

Anyways, other than that, we are making new friends all over the beer tent and the festival.  Some of the volunteers are really fantastic and friendly.  My favorite couple is Lori and Tom.  Lori is hilarious and has great stories to tell.  She is so kind and inviting to those that are stopping by our tent.  She should be getting paid for all the selling she is doing!  Her husband Tom has the system down.  He set it up the first night and then it hasn't changed since.  He knows what works the best for efficiency and appeal.  He's friendly and a big warm teddy bear type of person. 

Then, there is Beer Tent Shirl.  I love that woman.  She is all about making everyone that is working or volunteering in the tent happy, while still following the rules :)  She keeps me informed of what we should do or where we can find things.  She can always hook us up with the person who can drive us to our storage or get us some power for a light when it's dark outside.

These people are so much fun and really make the unwelcoming gestures seem out of the ordinary for the lovely people of Traverse City-- but I'm still concerned that we are not liked by many of those who have never even met us!

Later this week, I will upload the pictures to my computer and post a few of them here.  So, go out and get that Bacardi Torched Cherry rum for your next summer cocktail!