Wombooty Warrior 2: On the path to body acceptance 

Guest post by Sarah

  
This is a body that is up 28lbs from my lowest weight when I was starving myself thin and still about 40lbs lower than my highest weight when I started this entire weight loss/fitness journey. I thought I’d find happiness at a number on the scale, and realized that is impossible because that number literally means nothing. To have lost 60+ lbs and then purposefully begin gaining weight back, even though I know it will eventually give me the physique I want, is… difficult. On this bulk phase I’ve gained back almost 1/2 the weight I worked so hard to lose and it is scary, and that’s ok. Being scared doesn’t mean you stop. It just just means you dig a littler deeper and put on your brave face some days. It’s not always sunshine and rainbows, but it is always forward progress although perhaps down a winding road at times.

  
The best part though… I eat with my family, I laugh sooo loud and often, I lift everything and really surprise myself with my strength sometimes. I like the shape my body is starting to take. Yeah. I LIKE IT. It looks stronger. It’s not as small and whatever society thinks is more ideal as it was before. My belly is softer than it was when I was starving. Things are certainly rounder. Me and a six pack probably aren’t ever going to be friends. Maybe not even neighbors. But I don’t go to bed hungry anymore, I don’t feel weak and deprived and shameful. Most importantly, I don’t ever want my daughter to think she has to be anything less than what she is and whatever the hell she wants to be and I know that starts with me. So I’m just going to do and be whatever the hell I want, unapologetically.

What Is Wombooty, Part 2: Avengers Edition

Although reading the original “what is wombooty” post is recommended, here’s an abbreviated pictorial explanation.  

 
Wombooty is also defined at Urban Dictionary. For added, wombooty goodness, here’s Fatso the Fat-Arsed Wombat from the Sydney Olympics. 

  
Keep spreading the wombooty love!  

 

Angry Wombat Rant: No, you don’t need to do a juice cleanse

A fairly common complaint in pediatric offices is toddlers’ diarrhea, which is often caused by overconsumption of fruit juice.
  

Some enterprising soul found they could market this childhood ailment to women by calling it a “juice cleanse” and making spectacular health claims:

“A juice cleanse will jump-start your diet!”

It’s hard to imagine a more effective way to sabotage an exercise program or eating plan designed to create a small, sustainable calorie deficit, than by kicking it all off with a period of profound undernourishment that will leave you starving and weak.

“A cleanse is a great way to get back into healthy eating habits”

Fasting requires the mental fortitude to suppress hunger. Mindful eating requires enhanced awareness of the body’s hunger and satiety signals. These are entirely opposite disciplines; fasting is not a shortcut to healthy eating habits. Also, purging is purging, whether it comes from the produce section or the laxative aisle. Vitamins and chlorophyll and superfruit labels don’t make it any less disordered. 

  

“Juices boost your immunity!”

Look, fruits and vegetables are unarguably good for you. But you know what’ll suppress your immune system? STARVATION.

“blah blah blah detox!!”

Just stop talking. Unless you’re currently hooked up to a dialysis machine, your liver and kidneys are doing a perfectly admirable job of clearing toxins from your bloodstream. The liquid torrent pouring from your anus isn’t removing stored toxins from your body; you’ve just confused poisoning with constipation. 

If you like juice, go ahead and drink it, but eat some food too, in appropriate quantities for your level of activity. If you’ve overeaten and feel bad about it, juice cleansing only propagates the binge-and-restrict cycle. You don’t need to do penance for dietary sins by sucking down (and then excreting) gallons of green liquid; just use the energy you’ve consumed to engage in some exercise you enjoy, and make better choices tomorrow. And if you still have the urge to indulge in a common childhood illness marketed as a heathy-living purification ritual, can I interest you in artisanal lice hand-harvested from organically raised Tibetan yaks? You’ll burn tons of calories vigorously cleansing every human, animal, and surface in your home for days on end. But at least you won’t be hungry.  

Learning to love “During” in a “Before” and “After” world

The diet and fitness industry thrives on selling the dream of quickly turning our flabby “before” selves into chiseled “after” specimens. Depriving myself of foods I enjoy or enduring exercise I hated were simply the price of the transformation I sought. Yet after completing any number of diet and exercise programs, I would always poke at the soft places on my newly-thinner body, tell myself “you still look like a ‘before’ picture”, and the cycle would begin again.  

 
Everything changed when I stopped trying to whittle my body down to fit an impossible ideal look, and instead focused on expanding the possibilities for what it can do. I’m not talking about “strong is the new skinny” fitspo bullshit, where strength is only valued in women who are also skinny, and not so muscular as to be threatening to the average gym bro. I’m talking about approaching fitness as an adventure where I discover what my body is capable of, rather than a punishment for falling short of an arbitrary aesthetic standard. 

  

Here is a picture of me squatting. My squat is my weakest lift and the one I’ve worked hardest to improve. Two years ago I would’ve recoiled from the cellulite and the sheer size of my thighs and resolved to never wear shorts until I lost ten pounds. But when I look at this picture I see an upper back made straight and strong through months of dedicated work. I see balance and poise under a weight I would have been afraid to unrack last year. My body is becoming a physical representation of the work I’ve done, of the hours I’ve spent with the iron in my hands, and I find beauty in that even though I’ll never look like a fitness model. When I look at the calluses on my hands and curve of my shoulders and the heft of my thighs, I see dedication and power and perseverance. I see a body that can do things that were impossible last year; the dimples and flab that used to bother me so much hardly register anymore. I’ve let go of “before” and “after” and am learning to embrace my “during”. Yes, I want to get stronger and leaner and tighter, but there’s no endpoint I’m working toward. I’m learning to find contentment in the pursuit of my goals, and that self-love and a sense of accomplishment can come from the journey, not just the destination. I’m done with enduring periods of deprivation in pursuit of an “after”, and with berating myself for looking like a “before” picture, because my body and the present moment are deserving of being appreciated and enjoyed as they are. Today. During.