- Oct 27, 2023
- 5 min read
For years, fitness has been the foundational piece in which I take care of myself. It started long before having children, and honestly goes way back to when I was 14 years old and found my inner strength by working on my external strength with a consistent gym routine.
But, I haven't always had a healthy relationship with my body and as a result, food.
While I enjoyed working out, I found myself working out from a place of “have to” instead of “want to” and I internalized a dialogue of self-criticism towards how I looked (or didn’t look) and figured the best way to combat the hyper-critical voice inside of my head was to meticulously control every piece of food that went into my body.
I want to pause here for a second and share this message that took me decades to learn:
You will never shame yourself or hate yourself into a loving relationship with yourself.
I tried it for quite a while and the data is in. It doesn't work.
Now, back to the fitness journey.
Over the last 20 years, I’ve trained for a variety of reasons. I trained to “get skinny” (barf), I trained to feel strong, I trained to assist in the other sports I played, I trained to take care of my mental health, I trained to compete, I trained to build muscle, I trained to lose fat, I trained to improve strength and performance,I trained to build community among friends, and I trained to take care of myself during pregnancy and most recently, I've trained to rebuild my strength and sense of self after having children.
While the activity of picking up the weights was the same, the reason behind it has morphed and changed several times over the last two decades.
Now, over the last 10 years, I’ve tracked macros for a variety of reasons, too. I’ve tracked macros to fuel better for workouts. I’ve tracked macros to assist in workout performance. I’ve tracked macros during my competition prep to get stage lean. I’ve tracked macros to earn a more flexible approach to food and fitness. But at the root of all of it, I’ve tracked macros to maintain some sense of control over what was going in my body, because if I was able to control that, I could control how I look.
And if you want to get even deeper than that, if I can control how people look at me, I can control their perception of me.
While I can polish up macro tracking in any way to make it sound like I did it “for the health of it”, if I’m being really honest about my shadows, it was all about approval.
Approval of what society says I should look like. Approval from others on what it means to be that disciplined. And, deep down, I was begging to approve of myself.
Now, this doesn't mean that every single time I’ve tracked macros I’ve had a negative association with it. In fact, prior to my pregnancies with my girls, I’d say I was at one of the most healthy physical AND mental places with food and fitness, and I can’t really say those two roads have ever intersected in that way before. I tracked when I wanted to and it felt empowering to me, and I didn’t when I didn't want to. It felt like a good balance.
But the idea that I “needed” to track macros to not just look good but ultimately achieve the acceptance that I clearly was after never really went away. The negative self talk got louder and louder during both of my pregnancies when I gained 70 lbs with both. I vowed to “bounce back” and prove to the world what I was capable of, because thats where the world placed my value.
With Scarlett, the weight fell off. I was navigating some pretty deep postpartum depression, so turns out when you are afraid of literally everything, the thought of eating food isn't really appealing to you. So, that was easy enough. Plus, breastfeeding is a metabolic inferno.
With Nora, however, it didn't “fall off” the way in which it did with Scarlett. Probably because I wasn't in the depths of a depression and I actually could enjoy food.
That being said, I was still only crawling towards a goal of feeling comfortable in my skin again, where I would have rather sprinted.
After about 6 months, I hired a trainer again for weight lifting programming and reluctantly agreed to tracking macros again. And, I noticed something inside of me.
I downloaded the app and a pit in my stomach was born. With every meal and inputting of food, the feeling of shame crept in. Every time I put something in my body that I didn’t immediately track, I felt at war with myself.
And, my internal dialogue started to shift from one of awe and acceptance for everything my body had gone through to a mindset of stress and… “not good enough”.
It took me about 6 weeks of wrestling with the feelings of “not good enough” before I finally told my coach that I wasn't interested in tracking my food anymore, only my lifts. She met me right where Im at (as any good coach should..) and immediately stopped counting that as a metric in which we were measuring me. In fact, I told her I didn't want to measure anything about me, what so ever. I just wanted to work on showing up for me, and getting stronger.
What happened next shouldn't be surprising, but in the journey to trusting myself more, it was.
I enjoyed showing up to workout again. I didn't feel stressed around meal time. And most importantly, my internal dialogue which turned into a war started mirroring one of more self love and self acceptance.
Oh, and not that this is important, but my “results” started happening a lot faster, too.
I needed to let it go. The measuring, the comparing, the shaming. I needed to set myself free from the previous standards I had, and really any meaning that myself or anyone else attached to them.
It took me 10 years to get to this point. To know that there likely will never be a time in which tracking macros serves me ever again. I could list a million reasons why its important for me to show up the most healed version of myself around food and with self love, but I only need two reasons.
And those two reasons are Scarlett and Nora.
They will never witness their mom shame herself for what she eats. They will never hear “diet talk” in the kitchen or in our home. They will never know that food can be “good” or “bad”. They will never see me stressed over whether I ate enough protein or whether I ate too many carbs (according to myfitnesspal).
They will never be in an environment where my own failures to love myself rub off on them.
And if that means I never have shredded abs again, I consider the trade off well worth it.
I deleted MyFitnessPal, and I'm never going back.
Candidly,
Kate.
