Failure is a familiar concept for most of us! How many times have we made a commitment to ourselves only to find ourselves falling short of that commitment and feeling like a failure? Come on, now, be honest with yourself. January 1 just passed and the largest majority of us have already failed at something we committed to just mere weeks ago.
I’m no stranger to the crushing guilt of failure and I’ve shared that with you all previously on this blog. Unlike last time, though, this time the failure is my own. I fell short of my goals this week. Sitting in this chair last Sunday, I made a commitment to add a Wednesday morning blog post and I missed it on my very first week!
When I was contemplating the creation of this blog, the one thing I read over and over again was the importance of consistency. Every successful blogger stressed the importance of consistent posting and following through on commitments. I’ve butchered that this week. I could outline all the excuses that I have for why I missed my commitments, but I feel that it would be a waste of time and energy.
While I’m on this topic, I felt like it would be a great time to share how failure has impacted me. Several months ago, I was in a therapy session with a teenage boy when I realized my words, while amazing, were kicking me right between the eyes. In that moment, it literally dawned on me that my weight was nothing more than an externalization of the internal feelings I had about myself. I hated myself. I felt like a horrible failure. I wasn’t good enough. I wasn’t strong enough. I wasn’t man enough. As a result, I had punished myself and literally buried myself under 250 pounds of excess fat. I had become the very physical representation of the thoughts I had about myself every day because I viewed myself as a failure at life.
It wasn’t until I faced that very difficult reality that I was empowered to begin the process of change. You see, losing weight has been so much more of a mental journey than a physical journey. Before I could truly be successful at losing weight, I had to be honest with myself about the problem and face the reality of the situation I had put myself into. I had to drop the inner defenses I had built to protect my ego from the crushing reality that I weighed 450 pounds. It was only after I had this moment of self-awareness that I was able to fully grasp the problem and begin the process of planning and pursuing change.
How many times do we deal with our uncomfortable feelings through an unhealthy outlet? For me, the weight problem was the culmination of multiple issues: eating to improve my mood, using my weight to hide from others and attempt to hide from uncomfortable life experiences, and the externalization of nasty and hateful opinions I held about myself. Despite having a life filled with success, I had a failure identity forged out of my failure to properly acknowledge my successes and an unhealthy commitment to cling to the life events where I had missed success.
Taking on the goal of losing 250 pounds of excess body fat takes a large degree of self-confidence and self-esteem. Before I could be successful at that goal, I had to face down the issues that kept me mentally paralyzed and had created the issue in the first place. With this round of weight loss, I originally committed to beginning the weight loss journey on January 1, 2016, but I didn’t actually start until September 11, 2016. Why? Because it is impossible to find it in yourself to form and succeed at a goal like weight loss if you have no inner resolve or self-worth to enable such a journey.
It took that extra time for me to begin the journey of identifying and unpacking the life circumstances and thought patterns that had forged the failure identity that was keeping me buried. This process took me from January to September to complete enough to be empowered to make this change, but I still have to fight this battle every single day. Despite the fact that my wife and I are both mental health counselors, this change was not easy and it took a LONG TIME. Unfortunately, this new way of thinking and living is NEW and UNCOMFORTABLE. It fits like a glove that is too small and it doesn’t happen for me naturally. I have to FORCE myself to live within my new life choices.
Therefore, despite my overwhelming failure with my goal on this blog, I experienced overwhelming success in the area that I put my attention and energy: walking. Last week, I was excited to announce that I had walked over 10 miles. This week, my wife and I walked much further and even seen our best pace ever. Thanks to another friend of mine, I had been challenged to work up to five miles in a single walk prior to February 1, 2017. Yesterday, I met that goal when I walked five miles in a single walk and achieved my best pace to date: 19 mins, 43 seconds per mile.
So, as I sit here relaxing on this beautiful Sunday evening with Stress Away rolling out the top of my diffuser, I turn my eyes to another week without any unnecessary guilt or inner turmoil over the areas I fell short this week. I call them unnecessary because they won’t fix the problem, but keeping those emotions around could definitely create a failure identity that keeps me trapped. Rather than allowing my human condition to create an atmosphere of failure and defeat, I am celebrating my successes and looking only to build upon them in the coming week. I will reach my health goals and I will succeed at building a place here that inspires others to find their own path to wellness.
For now, though, it’s back to taking my life back…
- September 11, 2016: 450+pounds
- Today: 364.8 pounds
- Total loss 85.2 pounds (31.9% of my total excess body weight)
Find me on social media:
- Facebook @250pounds2forever
loss competition that I have entered. Unlike everyone else, I’m well into this process and I’m not getting those impressive first week numbers. I’m losing at a steady pace and the introduction of the weight loss competition went almost unnoticed. This also led to a rather passive participation in the competition. Maybe I didn’t really believe I had a shot since I won’t be losing those big numbers.
tell you how miraculous the results are, but I haven’t dropped any impressive numbers. I can, however, tell you the increased level of energy and the joy of accomplishment I have felt as I racked up 10.59 miles on the road this week. To ensure that I continue to work at this goal, I have registered in my first 5k run. It is in Springfield, MO, on April 22, 2017, and I would love for anyone to come out and join us! Message me if you’d like to join our team!
weigh in and discovered that I had officially lost my 75th pound. However, I wasn’t overtaken with joy or pride. I felt discouraged. As I made my breakfast, I knew that what I was FEELING was out of sync with the realities of my weight loss situation. Determined to get myself out of the funk, I opened my favorite music app and pressed play. It resumed with the song I had been listening to on the way home the night before: Last Hope by Paramore.
your FEELINGS. If we are not in control of our emotions, our emotions will be in control of us. This week, it would have been so easy to backslide and play the victim to the FEELINGS that I was having. It is so crucial that we choose to live our lives based on what we KNOW rather than how we FEEL. If our lives were like a car, our knowledge and choices need to be the front wheels of our car and our feelings and physiology (the way we feel inside our bodies) need to be the back wheels. The back wheels, though crucial, have no turning power. Despite their necessity for the functionality of the car, they are only guided by the front wheels to where they need to be.
Back in November, I asked a group of friends if they would be willing to listen to a co-worker share her passion for essential oils. My goal was simple: be a supportive friend for someone I care for deeply. Honestly, I sat through her sharing quite critically and spent the entire time looking online for information to debunk the things my co-worker was sharing with our group. Sorry Jenni 😉
Greetings from a depressingly normal Southwest Missouri. It didn’t feel much like Christmas this year as all my favorite Christmas traditions got thrown out the window and the weather only rarely dropped lower than 50 degrees. I miss the snow. I miss the kids outside playing. I miss the mental sleigh ride I take across the gloriously white countryside with my wife and a cup of hot cocoa. I miss the magical WINTER of Christmas… but Christmas is over and I just feel robbed.
Also, during the holidays, I didn’t do a lot of other things, either. I didn’t blog and I didn’t weigh. Blogging has been a hobby for me. This is a place where I share my journey and I wasn’t sure I wanted to stop the holiday train to spend the few hours it takes to type out a blog post. This is starting to sound like we committed lifestyle change homicide, but we didn’t. Thanks to the power of making informed choices even in settings where we weren’t tracking calories, both of us CONTINUED TO LOOSE WEIGHT.