The speaker at my meeting this evening talked a lot about the steps. He expressed something that resonated with me: he couldn't start the program until he was willing to take the first step. Of course, he was referring to the actual First Step: We admitted we were powerless over food - that our lives had become unmanageable.
While in a step study meeting focused on the Sixth Step (were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character), one speaker stated that we are always ready to have the consequences of our defects removed if not the defect itself. We cling to our defects like treasured friends. So too do we cling to the notion that we are not compulsive overeaters. We may want to have the symptom removed - our excess weight - but we are often not ready to admit that the excess weight was brought on by our powerlessness over food.
I have heard the road to recovery begins when you take that step into the door of your first meeting. But the fact remains that recovery simply will not happen until you are able to admit that there is something you need to recover from. As the Big Book says, "Some of us have tried to hold on to our old ideas and the result was nil until we let go absolutely." (Page 58)
I walked into my first meeting to be moral support for a friend. A very clever friend who knew exactly what I was even if I didn't know it myself. At the end of the meeting, I was able to declare with absolute certainty that I was a compulsive overeater. I marched up to the speaker and asked her to be my sponsor that very same meeting.
The problem was, I didn't necessarily believe that I was powerless over food, and I most certainly didn't believe that my life was unmanageable! I had done quite well for myself - or so I believed. All I needed was someone to help me with a food plan and to give me accountability. Then I would lose my weight, keep following my food plan, and not need to worry about silly things like meetings. You see, I had it all figured out.
Every time I asked my sponsor when we would start doing step work, she would tell me that we were: we were working on the first step. I would protest, "but I already admitted I was a compulsive overeater." She would just smile and tell me to trust her. So for months I was performing exercises designed to show me that my life was unmanageable. I just didn't realize that was what we were doing.
The exercise that caused me the most pain and suffering was so innocuous that I never suspected what I was in for. I was told to perform one simple task: write down three things you love about yourself every day. I rolled my eyes at this task, but when I sat down that first night to write down my three things I was in a quandary. I couldn't think of a single one! So I tried to go through my laundry list of achievements. But no matter what achievement I looked at, I found a way in which it wasn't good enough. I should have done better. In the hour I sat there, I turned every last accomplishment I'd ever had into a personal failure, right down to my first place trophy for my seventh grade basketball team's undefeated season. (Yes, I was digging that deep to find something to be proud of that I could love about myself.) After running out of accomplishments, I then went to tear down every aspect of my physical appearance, from my wild curly brown hair to my big ugly feet.
That was the moment I made my first outreach call to a woman named Diane. Looking back I almost feel sorry for that poor woman. As soon as I verified who I was speaking with I broke down into a loud wailing sob and announced "I don't love anything about myself!" It is to her credit that she didn't even miss a beat. I can't remember what she said that day, but it was apparently exactly what I needed to hear. After getting off the phone I sat down and came up with my three things I loved about myself. 1) My purple sparkly toenails (I usually have my toes painted). 2) The three freckles on my left foot that form a straight line diagonally across my foot. 3) The way my wrists pop and I can make little popping sound music with them. The next day, the cluster of freckles on my right leg that look like they could make a smiley face if you connected the dots was at the top of my list. Of all my accomplishments, these were the things that I could identify as something I loved about myself.
Not once during the time with my first sponsor did I ever reach a point where something about my personality or my accomplishments was found on that list. Yet still, I didn't see that my life was unmanageable. I left program ten pounds lighter but no better off emotionally. I got married. Had a baby. Lost the baby weight while nursing. Then within a matter of months gained almost all of it back. To put this in perspective, I weighed 230 when I got pregnant. I weighed 290 when I gave birth. I weighed 220 when I stopped nursing 6 months later, and 250 when I went back to OA 3 months later after having been completely incapable of keeping that weight from coming back.
Yet still, I wasn't ready to let go. I thought to work the program on my own, and for two months I was able to maintain a personal abstinence while not getting any healthier mentally or emotionally and while only losing five pounds. I realized I had to do something. So I sought out my current sponsor and asked her to take me on. As I discussed in my earlier post (here), I allowed myself to go off the deep end.
I can remember the exact moment that I realized both my powerlessness and the unmanageableness of my life. My husband and I were in Honolulu. We had just eaten dinner and were walking back to our hotel. I was quite full, but we had discussed getting Coldstones on the way back from dinner. I didn't really want the ice cream, but seeing as how we'd already said we were going to get some I didn't feel up to backing out. So I walked into the store not wanting the ice cream. I ordered the ice cream - and not the smallest size either - thinking I would rather not have the ice cream. Then, I proceeded to finish that ice cream while still thinking I don't want this. I didn't enjoy the ice cream, I didn't want it, but I couldn't stop myself. I ate it anyway.
That night I stared up at the ceiling, unable to sleep, and thought. The middle of the night is a terrible time to be alone with my brain. I realized that I was going to die unless I could find some way to stop eating. As the Big Book words it, I was finally licked. That night I waved the white flag and knew hopelessness and despair like I had never experienced before.
I had finally taken the first step.