The Power of Six

Thanksgiving week is upon us and with that comes an abundance of gratitude and an abundance of food.  Thanksgiving easily becomes the eating holiday instead of a time of grateful reflection.  Holiday weight gain is real.  Research from Cornell University revealed that the extra pounds most people gain over the holidays actually begins with Halloween and lasts ten days after Christmas.  This equates to at least ten pounds and can take more than five months to lose!  The key for me this holiday season is to focus on family and friends, not food.  I vow to still track my calories and stay on the wagon because I have worked too hard to turn back now.  This is my internal pep talk because, quite frankly, lately I’ve been scared of blowing it.  Thoughts of failing sneak into my mind and that’s unacceptable.  I feel like I’m just going through the motions.  I need a true and real transformation. The last several days thoughts of the 12 steps trickle into my heart and the mantra of “one day at a time” plays in my mind.  This week my focus is on these actual 12 steps used in recovery programs.  What exactly are they and what can I learn that will help me? 

I feel that in a natural progression this blog seems to cover the beginning steps.  I admitted I was powerless over food and things were unmanageable.  I believe in God and turned my addiction over to Him, which led to doing this blog.  The weekly soul searching process in writing the posts makes me reflect on my “moral inventory.”  My weekly process involves a lot of prayer, continually turning it over to God, and revealing my internal struggles in my writing.  I seem to get stuck half way through the process on step 6 with having God remove all of these “defects of character.”  I realized I’m only going through the motions to this point.  I haven’t made the all-important turn of humbly and honestly asking to be transformed in a specific uniquely personal way by God.  

The 12 step program talks about character defects that can potentially manifest in our lives and create the unmanageable part of any addiction or cause us to derail in the recovery process.  The program requires you do a “fearless moral inventory” of yourself to find out what you have and what you need to get rid of. The fearless part requires you to be rigorously honest.  I did this exercise this week and journaled my wrongs in the past and now.  This was not easy, painless or pleasant.  I felt like I was reliving a lot of negative things from the past that I thought were already behind me.  A pattern quickly emerged of the same characteristics from before and still now.  The purpose isn’t to go over all of the individual situations but to use this heart exploration to identify the “defects of character” that caused them.  The inventory is of these character defects.  The problem is, as revealed in my exercise, the same character defects are still present.  I realized this could be the reason why I often feel I’m one Thanksgiving sized meal away from gaining it all back.

There’s an anonymous quote that reads, “Our defects of character are the bars of a cage.  The central point is not to study the bars, but to get out of the cage.” A guide to defining if a characteristic is considered a “defect” is to ask a simple question.  Would I want to teach my nieces or nephews to behave like this or to believe this?  Would God want me to do these things?  Clearly I knew the answer to these questions but wasn’t exactly sure what to do next. 

Sitting at my desk I gaze out the window, watching birds fly by, and wait in the stillness.  Sometimes the answers come to us when we take a moment to just sit still.  I sat there and started to write allowing whatever came into my heart flow onto the page.  I wrote about all the times my life went off track, which seemed to be in direct correlation with the yo-yo number on the scale.  The key discovery for me was realizing the same negative self-characteristics and thoughts that got me into trouble with food are still present.  I’m just not acting on it.  This exercise was a true eye opener.  Perhaps this discovery is the key to healing and the way to find freedom from feeling trapped on the diet roller coaster.  Could this be the source of my fear?  Could this be why I feel like I’m going through the motions? 

I bow my head in prayer.

Dear God, Please show me the way to remove these “defects of character” that are holding me prisoner in my own mind.  I want to truly transform in this process.  I want to learn what I need to learn so that I can continue to help others find their path to healing.  In Exodus 15:26 you say you are the Lord that heals and I am in need of healing.  Psalm 147:3 says that you heal the brokenhearted and bind up their wounds.  Please bind these defects and remove them from me.  I trust in your word and your promises.  In Jeremiah 17:14 your word says, “Heal me, Lord, and I will be healed; save me and I will be saved, for you are the one I praise.”  May this be so, Lord…Thank you, God.  Thank you for your healing, thank you for this journey.  Thank you!  This is my daily prayer.

...Then God gave me this vision.

My Guardian Angel is taking me on a journey.  We are floating in a hot air balloon named Recovery traveling to the land of Serenity.  Our trip together, in this big red Recovery balloon, launched when the blog launched.  We gently float above the trees, slowly and steadily making our way to Serenity.  I can see the breathtaking beauty of the land of Serenity just beyond the horizon.  I start to lose weight on our journey and notice sand bags appear on the side of the basket.  The more weight I lose the sand bags grow larger.  The balloon starts to lose elevation and is struggling to stay afloat.  I fill with fear that my journey will end before we reach our destination.  My Angel tells I must release the sand bags to stay on our path.  I look down at the sand bags and notice they are all labeled.  I read each label as I cut the ropes loose.  I watch the bags fall away disappearing into the air.  The first bag reads fear, self-pity and self-justification.  The second bag says self-condemnation, guilt, false pride, phoniness and denial.  The third bag’s label says lying, evasiveness, dishonesty, laziness and procrastination.  The last bag reads negative thinking, perfectionism, criticizing and gossip.  Freed of the heavy and useless weight, the Recovery balloon effortlessly rises and gracefully floats onward.

Results for the week:  - 0.0 lbs lost; Total Lost: 29.8

D.O.W. = 140

Starting weight:  182.0; Current weight: 152.2

Comments

Curlcutie said…
Congrats on your weight loss journey so far Sandy...very impressive!! You may have a leveling off but keep on truckin; your body is challenging you. Can't wait to meet the lady who inspires Dan. I am one of his clients and also competing at the meet next Saturday.

Laura
Sandy Wade said…
Laura - I've heard so much about you! Thank you for your encouraging words. I look forward to meeting you next weekend as well! Good luck next week!

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