Hi Thrivers!

The time-change hit me harder this year. My sleep schedule is way off.

Let’s go:

At this moment, there are four different kinds of ice cream in our freezer.

You see my problem.

Back when I ate right along with my scarfer – and ballooned to my highest weight because of it – I had to put serious planning into how to coexist with someone who eats like a fifth grader.

I often think about Elizabeth Kubler-Ross’s grief scale.

You can use her scale on large sweeping topics like overeating:

It’s fine to eat two chocolate croissants. There’s no problem. Everything will work out in the end.

I was angry with him for not being willing to change his scarfer-ways.

I tried to talk my scarfer into joining me on the smart eating plan If we were both into smart eating our kitchen wouldn’t be full of junk-food.

I’m fat and ugly and I cannot seem to make living with him and his food habits work for me.

Acceptance isn’t about liking the reality; it’s about coming to terms with what-is. Its when you realize that he’s committed to the scarfer lifestyle and isn’t going to change any time soon.

I understand that as I go further into the smart eating world, my scarfer won’t be joining me. In fact, he’ll always have junk-food at the house. That’s just how he rolls.

Bargaining: I overeat ice cream, but I work out like a wild-woman!!

Acceptance: It’s a high fat, high calorie, high sugar food. Most importantly, ice cream is at the very top on the “soothing” scale. Ice cream is a comfort-food. Nevertheless, I need to figure out how I’ll manage when my scarfer brings ice cream home.

In the beginning I asked my scarfer to buy flavors I didn’t like. And also asked him to put the ice cream on the bottom shelf – in our freezer, it’s kind of dark and I don’t tend to bend down low – maybe wrapped in a brown bag or something like it.

Some women ask their husband to keep the ice cream out of the house, and eat it on his own time.

Eighteen years into the maintenance/preservation stage, I still ask my scarfer to keep it as out of sight as possible.

Speaking of ice cream, in the last few days I’ve struggled with, “oh, a bowl of ice cream sounds good right now.” (Say it in a whiny tone to really immerse yourself in my experience.)

In response to finding that I was looking long and hard at the freezer door, (yes, it happens). I realized that I needed a new reframe asap. One day it just magically appeared. I know where milk comes from, but when I said to myself that milk and all milk-products – ahem, ice cream? – are meant to fatten baby cows, now you’ve got my attention.

I love baby cows. I just don’t want to look like one.

The upkeep on this 59-year-old body is getting kind of pricey. Either that or I’m falling apart faster than everyone else. Yesterday I went to an ENT (ear, nose and throat doctor), but before they’d do my audio test, they had to first clean out my ears. Which sounds gross, but apparently everyone needs their ears cleaned.

It was scary when the doctor started sticking things into my ear, but happily no pain. So, guess who needs hearing aids? No surprise there, my hearing has nosedived over the last two years. I’m so tired of saying, “excuse me, can you repeat?” all of the time.

I have to keep reminding myself, “We are not our bodies. We have a body” and we need to take care of her.   

As you go forward remember: never starve your body. Don’t call yourself mean names. And don’t put off the important health appointments (she writes as she puts off her mammogram and colonoscopy.).

All the Broken Places by John Boyne (love this author) details the lives of a mother and older daughter, Gretel, fleeing Germany immediately after WW2 ended.

The high-ranking SS husband/father has already been hanged.

In the beginning, we meet Gretel at the age of 91 living in a tony end of London in current times. In a parallel story we see a young Gretel who at aged 20 is trying to come to terms with feeling complicit in the war crimes. While her mother seems to have learned nothing, Gretel was waking up to the horror that, was their lives.

This is the same author who wrote, Boy in the Striped Pajamas.

Perfect book-dessert. This is an amazing writer not to be missed.

“The most common approach is very seldom the most effective and most efficient.” Tim Ferriss

If you missed last week’s post it’s right here. And I’d love a follow on Instagram and Facebook.

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4 Comments

  1. I ‘hear’ pun intended on Pearl 3 I did not want to admit it to myself (hearing loss) but when I came to terms with this fact, (now 15 years ago) and go hearing aids, the world changed for me.
    As for weight loss, well, I am at this very moment on an awesome journey, and it’s hard to be happier.
    I visited you via Life and Linda: Love Your Creativity Link Party #247
    My links: 122+123. We will be delighted if you share your blog post links M-S with us at SSPS. Link under BLOGGING

    • Yes, I only got them today, but I can already tell they work. They such little pieces, do you worry about losing one?
      “On an awesome journey and it’s hard to be happier.” This the most wonderful sentence ever.

      I’d love to post, when open your link party?

  2. Love your tips and info for losing weight! Visiting via Senior Salon Pit Stop… We’d love you to join us each week at Tuesday Turn About… the guidelines will be changing this week to include anything home and family. So feel free to join us, via My Wee Abode!

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