Last April my family and I, all eighteen of us, spent a week
together in a house in Destin, Florida, to celebrate my parents’ 50th
wedding anniversary. My sister Kellie is creating a photo book to commemorate
the trip and my parents’ accomplishment of sticking together all those decades.
Kellie called me last night. “Jodie, I barely have any
photos of you from Destin. Were you hiding from the camera?”
“Well, mostly, I was the photographer, but I’ll take a look
at what I’ve got on my phone.” I hung up with her and turned back the clock
seven months.
First, I saw what appears to be a collection of “before”
pictures. Before my diagnosis. Before treatment. Before forty-two pounds and
the most stressful year of my life melted away. Before I reclaimed creativity.
I hate every picture of myself from that trip. But, not for
the reason you may think.
I hate those pictures because they show a woman I never want
to be again.
Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) had robbed my body of its
ability to use insulin and brought with it a nasty cocktail of anxiety and
depression to poison my mind. Unknowingly, I had struggled with this for over
two decades, but always had writing to depend on as my way to embrace the world
or rage against it.
However, for the year leading up to my diagnosis and
treatment, I feared I had lost that coping mechanism. Most days, I struggled to
write at all, much less anything worth publishing. I stopped listening to my
instincts on writing, allowing others too much influence over my writing style,
stories, and characters. Then, I just stopped writing at all.
I had lost my ability to be creative, authentic, and brave.
Then, a succession of miracles occurred.
First, a doctor listened to me and forced me to face the
reality of anxiety and depression. She did this by asking me if I was still
writing. I told her, “No.” She responded, “Jodie, that’s not good.” She also
said the words PCOS and pre-diabetes. The latter was terrifying.
The second miracle was the treatment for my PCOS and insulin
resistance. Within a week, I could feel the positive effects of the medication,
healthy eating, and increased exercise. I felt hopeful. The constant fog in my
brain began to lift. I began to like myself again. And, the scale began a
nosedive.
The third miracle came via my husband and an overdue
heart-to-heart. He told me to stop coddling him, worrying about him, trying to
control him. Now, seven months later, I know this was the miracle I most
needed.
By ditching my need to control everything and everyone
around me, I freed my mind to write. One month into my new lifestyle of letting
go, healthy eating, and rigorous exercise, I began a new work-in-progress, one
I never thought I was capable of writing.
As for the “before” pictures, I printed one out, but it is
not displayed where you might think. It’s not taped to my mirror or stuck on
the fridge. It will now live on my desk as a constant reminder that if I continue
to live healthily in body and mind, I can be my best creative self.
3 comments:
Thanks for sharing your journey. Sending prayers for continued good health and success with your writing. (Marilyn)
Jodie this is great news. I hope you and your family are doing well.
Thank you for sharing this...especially in times when we need to do our own physical and emotional healing.
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