Pretend with me a moment: I’m standing here with my friend Emily, at a microphone and I’m introducing her to you. You may know her, or maybe this is your first chance to say hello. If so, I must tell you that Emily being on this stage is SO important, especially for those of us with daughters. We also need to hear from Emily and her co-author because we struggle to like ourselves in our own skin, especially if doughy under the surface. I keep trying to tell myself that my body has done miraculous things, but I see other women and compare me to them and wonder how they look “better” in so many ways. I admit that, even though I know it’s not making me sound all that confident. How do we “get there”? To the place where we learn to love all our parts, doughy or not?
I give you, Emily….
By Emily Wierenga
I never wanted to be known as the girl with the eating disorder. And now I’ve got a book with chapters and paragraphs and sentences stating that I am that very girl, the one who starved herself from the ages of nine until 13, and nine? People ask. Why so young?
But I tell them, I didn’t feel nine. I felt very, very old.
And sometimes it’s hard to remember (as I put down words like Hospital and Calories and Mirror), that I am more than that now. That I have always been more. That we are all more than our reflection.
But you couldn’t have told that to the girl with the mushroom cut and the big plastic glasses who stared into the long mirror in the dim-lit hallway while Dad typed away in his office, the door that was always closed because he was a pastor, and why do churches keep their entrances locked?
And Mum in the kitchen cooking supper in her apron.
I really don’t think it had much at all to do with eating, and does it ever? Do we sneak bags of chips or cookies or bowls of ice cream because we love food? Or because we hate ourselves?
And I think it’s because as women, as, mothers, we put ourselves last so often, that we don’t believe we deserve goodness. We feel we don’t deserve beauty or gifts or to sit down and enjoy a good long meal with a glass of wine because there are children to be bathed and put to bed, and clothes to be folded and toys to be put away and, and…
And this is what I saw stretched across my mother’s face, as she stood weary by the stove in her apron. And she tried to love us the only way she knew how: by homeschooling us and dishing up heaping plates of food and sewing us clothes, but all I wanted was for her to hold me and tell me
I was beautiful.
But she’d never had anyone do that for her, not her mother nor her father nor my father.
We all need someone to be love, incarnate, , so we can put our faith in it.
My husband leans in on the pillows and I ask him to tell me, just one more time. “But why?” he says, this farm-boy that walked me through my relapse when I was 23.
“Don’t you know?” I shake my head.
“Tell me again,” I say.
“I love you.” He pulls me close. “I’ve never stopped loving you,” he says. “And I never will.”
I let him kiss me then.
And I’m learning to stand up for myself this way, to treat my body with kindness. And I know it has nothing to do with me. I know it has everything to do with me being a product of God’s genius. His hands molding dust into skin into breath.
He’s the one who makes me beautiful. So I sit boldly at the kitchen table in the afternoon light and eat a bowl of ice cream, my sons beside me, eating theirs, because we need to do this together, this life. This learning to eat, this learning to be gentle with ourselves and others.
Because lies can’t grow in the light.
And light is love.
***
I’m giving away a hard-cover copy of my new book today, Mom in the Mirror: Body Image, Beauty and Life After Pregnancy, co-authored by Dr. Dena Cabrera, and foreword by supermodel Emme.
Here’s an excerpt from the book:
Giving birth produces life in more than one sense. It’s the baby powder, milky-breathed spirit found in the softest limbs you’ve ever felt, and it’s the respect a man feels for his wife as he watches her give up her body for another.
And it’s the deep-rooted soul satisfying feeling of knowing you were born for more than
the mirror. That you were born to see the face of God in your child, and to know, you yourself
are a miracle.
I want you to have this book! Tell me ONE thing that you love about yourself, and you’ll be entered into the drawing through random.org!
Otherwise, you can order it through the book’s website, here:
www.mominthemirrorbook.com.
:::::
Emily Wierenga is a mom to two beautiful boys, wife to a handsome math teacher, and
author of Chasing Silhouettes: How to Help a Loved One Battling an Eating Disorder
(www.chasingsilhouettes.com) and Mom in the Mirror: Body Image, Beauty and
Life After Pregnancy (www.mominthemirrorbook.com). To learn more, please visit
www.emilywierenga.com.
{ 28 comments }
I love the color of my eyes.
Molly Roy recently posted..Simple Joys Sunday: MommyCon Austin
My heart!
Oh this book sounds like it’s meant for me to read – so I’ll buy it even if I don’t win it. I love my legs. xo
tracy@sellabitmum recently posted..Listening To Your Mother – A Recap
I’m so glad it spoke to you, Tracy… I love that you love your legs. Bless you. e.
emily wierenga recently posted..On how to blog, and live, in a holy kind of way
Going to have to check this book out – sounds like an excellent read. I love my eyes, and my freckles. :)
Thanks Kaycee! I loved writing it. I really like my freckles too… they make me feel young and alive! Bless you. e.
emily wierenga recently posted..On how to blog, and live, in a holy kind of way
Lies can’t grow in the light. Amen! Thank you for your post, Emily.
anna whiston-donaldson recently posted..In the Weeds
Thanks Anna, for your encouragement! Bless you, friend. e.
emily wierenga recently posted..On how to blog, and live, in a holy kind of way
This book looks awesome! I love my laugh.
thanks so much Lauren! isn’t the gift of laughter wonderful? bless you. e.
emily wierenga recently posted..On how to blog, and live, in a holy kind of way
I like my eyes. And I’m slowly learning to appreciate my stretch marks.
yay! often this learning to love ourselves IS a slow journey… but so long as we’re moving forward, and striving to see ourselves as God sees us… bless you Carol!
emily wierenga recently posted..On how to blog, and live, in a holy kind of way
I love my eyes and my hair. I have fantastic red hair, and bright blue eyes. Thanks for this giveaway! I’m excited to read this book, one way or another!
“fantastic red hair”… oh Kristi, this just makes me so happy! i LOVE how beautifully you are embracing yourself here!
emily wierenga recently posted..On how to blog, and live, in a holy kind of way
i love my hands. i will eventually read this book, em, but winning one couldn’t hurt, either. love.
lol you’re awesome Misty! i agree, winning one couldn’t hurt! bless you lady. e.
emily wierenga recently posted..On how to blog, and live, in a holy kind of way
Like looking in the mirror, reading this post…
Thekitchwitch recently posted..Another Adventure
may you find LOVE reflected in that mirror, friend. bless you! e.
emily wierenga recently posted..On how to blog, and live, in a holy kind of way
I love my smile. And its frequent use.
Sherry Carr-Smith recently posted..Book Review: Raising Digital Families for Dummies
i love that you frequently use it friend :) e.
emily wierenga recently posted..A letter from a former anorexic to the CEO of Abercrombie and Fitch
I love my mind with my sense of humour, willingness to question and ability to see the possitive.
what wonderful characteristics friend! e.
emily wierenga recently posted..A letter from a former anorexic to the CEO of Abercrombie and Fitch
My ample calves : )
My goofy sense of humor…
You’re making me cry. I grew up in a home with eating disorders and depression, none of it diagnosed or acknowledged. I needed this message today.
I love how I tell stories…and I love my eyes. *grin*
Aunt LoLo recently posted..The Latest in Poultry Care Wear
I am so thankful that this was shared here on EO. I struggled with an eating disorder in college and the interesting part was the compliments I got when I was under 100 lbs…looking back at that horrible time I now realize how motivated I was by those compliments, now I compliment women whenever I can, but not about their bodies. I thank them for their joyful laughter that they shared, their honest humor, their ability to warmly welcome others into their homes, their intelligence…whatever I can honestly point out as an incredible attribute. I do this for myself, too. I know it sounds harsh, but I just don’t think much of my looks, not because I don’t think I am beautiful, but I have learned the long hard way that the inside is truly what is beautiful. So, when I write in my gratitude journal I remind myself that I love my heart, my ability to empathize with others, and my desire to serve with honest integrity, I find ways to keep reminding myself that beauty is within all of us. :)
Don’t know if I’m too late for this, but I hope not! Definitely sounds like a great read.
I love my dimples and compassion. :)
Sara recently posted..Dear Izzy: Week 35
Good morning! I am new to this blog as of about an hour ago, and this post made me cry, ugly cry, sobbing tears…I love the excerpt you included. It spoke powerfully to my heart. Thank you!
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