Friday, March 23, 2012

The woman behind the picture - Part 5: Kyley Schmidt




After reading all these wonderful articles about beauty and learning to love yourself, I felt inspired to write down what I have learned about "being beautiful."

Society has turned the idea of beauty into something so shallow and superficial, something that can be only seen from the surface. The media rarely labels someone as beautiful for being strong, being kind, being selfless, healthy and inspirational. Even though these types of beauties in women are not always placed at the forefront of a magazine or a television show, these are the types of beauties that I have learned are eternal and are of the utmost importance.

Growing up I was never considered the "hot" one or the best looking one. I never really had real boyfriends and I never got asked to prom,  or other events like that. I was tall and struggled badly with weight fluctuation. Try being 12 years old and 5 foot 7 1/2, maybe even 5 foot 8 and weighing 150 lbs. I hated myself. Junior high school I developed a habit of binge eating and then starving myself, and I dropped my 150lbs to 120lbs, but it would go just up and down as I would continue to binge then starve. I would stand in front of the mirror and punch myself in the stomach at night,  because I hated my body and myself that much. It wasn't until high school I realized that I needed to stop treating myself this way, and learn to just love me for me. After I decided to focus on my inner beauty,  I found myself much happier and threw myself into discovering my other talents, and even though the boys still weren't calling I realized that that didn't matter so much. I had come to know that I was smart, kind, a self starter and determined, many qualities I wanted to have to feel confident. I also discovered that staying active helped me feel better. I still struggled with weight but I knew it was making me feel better about me and my body.

This mentality stayed with me through my first year of marriage but unfortunately I had lost my fervor for exercise. Then after my first son was born, my confidence in beauty, my body and loving myself was shattered.  It is amazing how much having a child can wear on your body. Not only did I have ugly stretch marks but I had a scar from my emergency c-section,  and had so much leftover weight. I felt so unattractive from the very visible markings, and I also felt like a failure. I felt my body had failed my son. He was born 2 and 1/2 months premature and I felt responsible. I suffered from severe pre-eclampsia and came close to a stroke and my son had to be resuscitated at birth and spent the first two months of his life in the NICU. I hated my body for what it could not do for him, and every time I saw those scars I was reminded.

When he came home, he was in isolation and the only place we could take him in public was outside.  So I joined an outdoor baby bootcamp. I begin to lose weight and feel healthy again, and I thought ' if I can keep this up, staying healthy then what happened to my first son will never happen again.' Unfortunately, my second son was also born via emergency C-section,  not as early but still due to high blood pressure. This threw me into my hating my body cycle. I was angry and disappointed. Six months later, I decided to get into fitness again. This process was started up once again to try and make sure I could get healthier so I could have more children. Since that journey started my reasons to stay healthy have changed a little bit.I am now trying to stay healthy not only for myself, but for my two children I am blessed to have and raise. I still have a chronic problem with high blood pressure, and have been told I will for the rest of my life, and even though this has saddened me it has made me realize that while I was trying to fix what I thought was my body being weak and frail, was really just making the strength I had already been given from these experiences stronger. I couldn't " fix" my problem , but I am building strength with the body I have been given and strength, not only physical strength but the whole human condition is what is truly beautiful.

So even when you look in the mirror and what you see physically isn't quite what you are looking for,  just remember that those bumps and bruises that made you stronger are what truly make each and everyone of us beautiful.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

What's your story???

This topic and the stories shared have received an incredible response and so I'd like to offer an invitation. 
I'd like to invite ANYONE interested to make a post on my blog about beauty/body image. My hope is that as we share our stories and experiences on this topic, we can learn from each other and reinforce the real truths about what makes us as women beautiful. 
I'm not looking for people who have it all figured out (let's be honest, none of us do) but for honest feelings and experiences on how you may have struggled and what you might be realizing and learning along the way. Let me know if you are at all interested. The more stories the better!



Want to read a great blog post about how wrecking the female body shouldn’t be cool anymore?  Go here.  I promise you that it’s worth a read!!!!  I just love the womanifesto at the end and want to adopt it for my own:

A Womanifesto

I solemnly swear to protect what is sacred through thought, word, and deed.  I have been blessed with a miraculous female body.  I was fortunate enough to be given that which was created last, whether God saved the best for last or not, I still believe that what I have is a most sacred gift.  

I will think only positive thoughts concerning my body.

I will say only positive words regarding my body.

I will do only things that build, strengthen, and reinforce just how precious my body is.

It is no longer cool to wreck the female body.  And I will no longer support that cause.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

The woman behind the picture - Part 4: Noelle Grant






I was never an athletic child. I hated gym class, never participated in sports, and was always the last person to be picked for a team…justifiably so.  As a young adult I joined a couple different gyms and would do different aerobics, step or weights classes that were offered. I really enjoyed this and I started to get a sense of my abilities in a more active way that I never knew were there before. I was 26 years old when I ran my first 5 km race. I didn’t love it but I loved the way I felt afterwards. The sense of accomplishment I got from finishing, and the feeling those endorphins gave me was amazing. From there I signed myself up for a couple more 5 km races and some 10 km races. When I was 28 years old I started training for my first half marathon. By this time I enjoyed running much more than I did when I ran my first race. I had built up my cardiovascular tolerance and I was able to go for much longer distances. As many runners are aware, people often get what’s referred to as “the runners trots” when running for long durations. I was no exception to that rule. On the morning of the race I took 2 Immodium in an effort to prevent my need to stop part way through the race, wait in line for a stinky port-a-potty, and lose a significant amount of time off my race as a result. Well, the race went great! I did really well for my first half marathon and I was soaring high running through my head what would be the next half marathon I would sign up for.

From the moment I finished the race continuing through the entire next week I was unable to have a bowel movement. I figured I really bunged myself up by taking those 2 Immodium. I felt like I NEEDED to go, I just couldn’t. That lasted a week and then the floods came. Not only was I able to “go” but my stools were entirely liquid and filled with blood. I didn’t know what was going on and I didn’t tell anybody as I figured it was a result of the Immodium and would fix itself with time. Well, it never did. The liquid bloody stools continued and increased in frequency. In addition to having increased stools, I also had false urges to go. You know the feeling when you just HAVE to go NOW! Take that feeling and multiply it by 100. There were times I felt I had to pass gas and ended up messing my pants. I had lost all control over my bowels. I was afraid to go for long walks or too far in the car for fear that I would need to go and wouldn’t have access to a bathroom. With all those trips to the bathroom I had a VERY sore tush. An additional symptom I struggled with was having severe abdominal pains that I couldn’t explain or pinpoint as to why, and I would simply hold my stomach and apply pressure in attempt to alleviate some of that pain.

Eventually, after about a month and a half of this craziness I went to the hospital emergency room and had the on-call Gastroenterologist (GI specialist) do a colonoscopy on me. The results of that test showed that my entire large intestine was covered in ulcers and I was diagnosed with an Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Crohn’s Disease, which is a chronic illness and an autoimmune disease. I spent 11 days in the hospital that first time as they tried to figure out what drugs would alleviate my symptoms and get me healthy enough to be released. I was super dehydrated from all the fluids I had been losing and they were pumping me full of fluids so fast I couldn’t keep up…I was on the toilet every 5 minutes peeing it out but I wasn’t getting rid of it quick enough. I blew up like a balloon…literally. I was so full of fluids that I couldn’t bend my legs. Eventually I was discharged but I was only home for 5 days before returning to the hospital with horrible symptoms at which time I was again admitted and kept for 17 days this time. Things in my intestines had deteriorated significantly.  Eventually I had to take a heavy drug called Remicaid. This drug is EXPENSIVE and comes with the risk of many very undesirable side effects. That being said, I needed SOMETHING so figured I’d give it a go.  It began to work almost immediately. I went from having close to 20 bowel movements a day down to about 10 instantly.

I was eventually discharged from the hospital and was able to see the bright side of things. I returned to work, returned to the gym, and started running again. I went with friends to Vegas to run the Rock & Roll Las Vegas Half Marathon with proceeds benefiting Crohn’s and Colitis research. I also signed myself up to train for a full marathon. I was so pumped. Yes I had Crohn’s and wasn’t really all that healthy but I was healthy enough to be active again and I was flying high. Part way through this training program I went to Mexico with my husband and some friends. When this was approaching I could feel a flare up coming on (I was having to use the restroom more and more frequently) and as such I made sure to go for my Remicaid infusion before we left for the trip. On Day 3 in Mexico my flare up took hold and I was running back and forth to the washroom from the pool and beach. The rest of the trip I spent the majority of my time in the hotel room bathroom, steering clear from pretty much all food. My trip was ruined, I was in pain, I was shackled to the toilet again and I was devastated that my miracle drug had stopped working for me.

I called my specialist from my hotel room and advised him of what was going on. I was directed to go directly to the hospital upon my return home and he would have me admitted. When I arrived at the hospital he did different tests and at my request we did another Remicaid infusion…this time a double dose. It didn’t work. I was out of options at this point as Remicaid was the heaviest and most effective drug to treat my symptoms and it was failing me. I was now faced with the decision to have surgery. Surgery involved having my large intestine and rectum removed, creating an ileostomy, and creating a j-pouch. An ileostomy is a piece of the small intestine that is brought to the surface of the stomach which is where I would then have my bowel movements from and I would have a poo bag attached to my stomach to catch the poo. There are no muscles to be able to control this so I would be incontinent and pooing basically all day long with no control. A j-pouch is also a piece of the small intestine that is brought down to the anus and acts as a reservoir or a manmade rectum. Surgery went well but I came out with staples going up my entire abdomen. I feared I’d lost my belly button, I was itchy from the anesthetic, I couldn’t move my lower body from the epidural, and I was really groggy. Oh, and I’d woken up with a poo bag attached to me that wasn’t there when I went into the OR. This was a lot to take in. For anyone who has had severe abdominal surgery they know that one of the things that must take place before being allowed to go home is you need to be passing gas and having bowel movements. Well, my bowel movements were completely different. For one, they were now coming out of my stomach and for two, well, the bowels get incredibly sluggish after surgery like that and mine just didn’t want to work. Same thing with passing gas. I now had no control over this bodily function and didn’t know if I was or I wasn’t (this also happens out of the ileostomy on the stomach). Eventually I started to hear gas being passed. It sounds basically the same as it does for a regular person. I was so excited. This was something that is celebrated on the colorectal unit at the hospital. It’s a milestone. Unfortunately it was never enough to please the nurses. I was stuck there still, waiting, willing my body to start doing its job. Well it didn’t. Days turned into weeks.

 I was having complications and becoming very sick. I started vomiting a horrible slimy forest green bile and was forced to have an NG tube put in. This involves having a nurse feed a tube up my nose that is supposed to rest in the stomach area. The idea is that all that bile comes out through my nose tube and goes into a container that is sitting on the wall. This was a horribly traumatic experience for me. I was so sick, in so much pain and discomfort and this was not going well. The tube going in was making me puke even more. I was filling 2-3 wash basins full of this green slime. The second attempt something went amiss and the tube went in my nose and out my mouth. I was gagging and panicking asking them to “help me” as I grabbed the tube from my mouth and pulled and pulled and pulled until it was out. A new nurse had to try as I had completely shot the confidence of the first nurse and her failed attempts. I hated this but to be honest, I felt soooo much better once that tube was finally in! Over time, eventually things started to work for me. I was passing gas and stool and was finally allowed to go home. The day I was to go home however nothing was coming into the bag…no gas and no stool. I had been in the hospital for weeks at this point and didn’t want to stay longer so I didn’t tell anyone that this was happening.

When I got home I started to feel really ill. My stomach was starting to distend and it was as though something was alive inside there. It sounded and felt like violent sloshing around of liquid. So loud in fact that my husband could hear it from across the house. But still, nothing was coming through into the bag. I was in agony and as much as I hated it I knew what I had to do. Back to the hospital I went. I was admitted right away but I’d lost my awesome bed with a view. More tests were done and it was learned that I had an infected abcess. I had to get a drain put in that connected through my butt cheek. Sitting was uncomfortable, laying was uncomfortable, rolling over was uncomfortable. This sucked. After a couple days, things with the bag began working again and I was feeling healthy and ready to go home. But I still had that darn infection and drain in that was keeping me at the hospital. I was dying in there. I had withered down to around 90lbs and was just a pile of bones sticking out everywhere. I wanted to go home and eat normal food and get back to exercising to gain some of my muscle back. I begged and pleaded with my doctor to discharge me but no luck for weeks. The infection was such that only a certain stream of antibiotics could kill it and they had to be administered daily via IV. I continued to beg to take out the drain and let me return to the hospital daily for my iv antibiotics. After a 6 week stay in the hospital my surgeon agreed with my plan. I was finally discharged. I had to keep my IV line in and it was with me everywhere I went which sucked. I was so frail that stepping onto the curb took my breath away and made me lose my balance. I couldn’t walk up the front steps or a flight of stairs without pulling myself up by the railing. This was awful and I needed to gain some strength. I set out to get me some xxx mass building protein powder and I started doing P90X in my basement. I was pathetic. I could hardly lift my own foot let alone a weight, but each day I got a little stronger and then a little more. Eventually I was going back to the gym and meeting with a personal trainer on a daily basis. I was strong again. I was gaining control of my health in ways I was fearful I never could again, and I was so happy. The only thing holding me back was that darn bag. I was dying to have that reversal done.

Life with a poo bag is not a glamorous one to say the least. I had to figure out what clothes I could wear that would hide the bag as it filled up, which was constantly. I had to empty the bag numerous times a day. With the fan on and the bathroom door closed we could leave the house for an hour and come home and still smell it. Sometimes it created a great deal of pain and discomfort as it was working to pump out stools. There were times when I would be out and I would have a major leakage and have to rush home to change the dressing. Speaking of the dressing, that would only last for 3-5 days before I needed to change it again. Each time seemed to be a little worse as the stool would erode the paste that made it stick to my skin allowing the stool to sit on my skin and burn through it with the acid. It was red, raw, stingy and painful, but I couldn’t allow it to heal because I was always pooping. And then there was the sleepless nights. Going from being a stomach sleeper to a back sleeper was not an easy one. I wanted to try to sleep on my side but was afraid I would roll all the way over onto my stomach and squish or burst the bag. And then I would be up numerous times in the night to empty the bag. You would think that when you go all night long without eating or drinking that the output would slow down but alas, it did not.

I was so excited the day I got a call from the surgeons office saying my surgery to have the reversal was booked. The only downfall was that my daily gym routine was going to have to be interrupted, yet again, and I would lose ground that I had gained. The surgery went well. I recovered much quicker from this surgery than I had from the first. The day after surgery they had already taken me off the IV and I was in the stairwell doing stairs in attempt to keep up with some form of fitness. Turns out however that life without the bag, being connected to the j-pouch and pooing out my bum again was not all it was cracked up to be. I felt like I was in a flare up again prior to my Remicaid days. I was on the toilet ALL THE TIME!  I guess when you have no rectum you don’t have the muscles to hold things in quite the way you once could. My surgeons advice was to hold it for as long as I possibly could and when I felt like I couldn’t hold it any longer, to hold it some more. I was laying in bed clenching my butt cheeks 24 hours a day and still going to the bathroom about 15 times daily on average.

Eventually I ventured out to get back into the gym but my workouts were constantly interrupted by the need to run to the bathroom. Life was constantly being interrupted and I was starting to think I should just camp out in the bathroom and never leave it. My bum was raw and in pain and I was hating life. One day I noticed some pain in my “lady area” while wiping after going to the washroom. I didn’t think much of it but that pain started to get stronger and stronger and I started to notice a lump growing. It got to the point where I was taking Tylenol 3’s with codene to manage the pain and even that wasn’t doing the trick. My husband called the ambulance and away I went to the hospital. After hours in the waiting room I was seen by the ER doc and then an OBGYN. It was determined that I had a Barthelone Cyst on my labia and I was scheduled to go into the operating room that night to have the cyst drained. When I awoke I was told that there was feces coming out of the cyst and was sent home. I begged the surgeon not to send me home as I could feel the cyst filling again and the pain was returning. He sent me home anyways, but I returned that same night. I was then seen by a different general surgeon who determined that I did not have a barthelone cyst, but instead I had a fistula. A fistula is an unnatural tunnel like connection between two parts of the body. Mine was an vaginal fistula meaning that a tunnel was created from where my poo was going and connected to my labia resulting in my labia filling with feces. I was taken back to the operating room and a seton drain was put in to allow for constant drainage and prevent the buildup of feces. This was great for relieving the pressure and pain down there, but it meant that I had feces dripping from my labia uncontrollably all day and all night.

Eventually I was sent home with the drain still in, still leaking feces uncontrollably from my lady bits. This was probably the most difficult time for me out of everything I had gone through up to this point. What was happening to my body was taking a toll on me emotionally. I couldn’t wrap my head around how the body can create a fistula and I couldn’t come to terms with the fact that I was pooing out of the wrong parts. I couldn’t walk the dog, I couldn’t go to the gym, I couldn’t go to the grocery store, I was house bound. I often would be lying in bed watching tv and would start to smell myself knowing it was time to go change my pad as it had filled with feces. I was a wreck and I started to become highly depressed. I would lay in my bed staring at the wall for hours, sometimes with tears streaming down my face, sometimes with no emotion or expression at all, and ALWAYS wishing I would just die. I would beg my husband, mom friends and doctor to just kill me. I thought if only we lived in a place where euthanasia was legal. Life was not worth living at this point for me and I would have sold my soul to the devil to have my life taken from me.

Four months of this house bound, depressive, labia pooing torture went by before my surgeon agreed to perform another surgery, this time to close up the fistula. I was ecstatic! He warned me that this surgery does not always work but I didn’t care, I thought if it doesn’t work I’m no worse off than I am now and at least there was a chance it could work. Well it looked like the surgery took. One day passed with nothing coming out of the stitched up fistula, then another. I was almost in the clear to go home when things burst and I had feces pouring out of my fistula like niagra falls. This was worse than the previous 4 months had been in terms of flow, I could barely keep on top of it. I was devastated. I did not want to go back living the way I had for the last 4 months. I couldn’t! There was no quality of life in that and I was seriously toying with ways to have my life ended without actually killing myself. I made the decision to have my surgeon give me my ileostomy back. I hated that darn poo bag for the 5 months I’d had it before. I hated dealing with the noises in public, finding clothes that would hide it, managing the awful smell while emptying it, the sleepless nights to empty it, the constant filling of the bag, and the pain it caused when having to change it and tear my skin off layer by layer. With all that being said, I at least had a quality of life during those 5 months. I could walk the dog, go on a plane, go to the gym, and live a normal life (in comparison with what I had just been doing for the previous 4 months with the fistula). So, I had yet another surgery, got my ileostomy back and I have had it ever since (coming up on 11 months now). As much as I hated it the first time around, I had the opportunity to experience life without it and I realized how lucky I was to have this back. I now love my ileostomy. There are days where I’m in excruciating pain, discomfort, irritation, inconvenience, etc. but I have my life back.

To take back my life I began eating healthy and started doing my P90X videos again. I needed to re-build my strength and get rid of the awful anorexic look I had yet again from yet another interruption in my fitness for my health and surgeries. I really wanted to get back to the gym but I felt completely lost. I began looking around online to find a program that I could follow. I knew I didn’t need a trainer, I just needed a program so I wasn’t wandering around aimlessly in the gym getting in peoples way who actually knew what they were doing. I stumbled across Jamie Eason’s 12 week trainer on bodybuilding.com. This program provided me with workouts, nutrition, and supplements. It was exactly what I needed and I was hooked. Once the program finished I started it again. I have had people in the gym come up to me on multiple occasions and ask me if I’m training to compete. I tell them I’m not and they are surprised that I work so hard. They then ask what I am training for. I tell them I’m training to be healthy and strong. I have posted pictures on my facebook wall and had people tell me I am an inspiration to them and have motivated them to get healthy again. People message me all the time asking me for tips or advice on how to eat properly, where do I get my motivation from, can I help them get started, etc. I’m always happy to help and do every time in whatever way I can.

So where has my motivation come from? I have had my health stolen from me. Not just once, but time and time again. And will continue to do so for the rest of my life. I have a chronic illness. There is no cure. This isn’t going away for me. There are areas within my body and health that I have absolutely no control over. They can sweep in and take control of my health at any given moment. Rather than laying back and accepting that I’m “sick” and tell myself I can’t, I choose to take a stand and take control of my health in every way that is within my control. I CAN! There are lots of people in similar situations as mine who are afraid to try, who make excuses why they can’t or shouldn’t, who accept that this just the way it is, it’s the cards they were dealt, and they use it as an excuse. They have beliefs that they hold on to that are crippling them, making them sicker than they need to be. I refuse to follow that path. This is MY body. It’s the only body I’ve got. It may let me down from time to time but I have the power to show it who’s boss. Yes, the reality is my training will be interrupted again due to illness and I’ll have to start all over from scratch time and time again. Is this incredibly frustrating? Absolutely it is. But it makes me that much more motivated and determined to kick Crohn’s ass the next time I can get back up on my feet again, every time striving to do better than the time before. I am not sick, my body is. But it is also incredibly healthy and strong thanks to the time, effort, dedication and hard work that I put towards it. My health is my number one priority. Am I training to compete? Yes I am, I’m training to compete with myself. To be better than I was yesterday and overcome my illness in every way that is within my power. My only hope and biggest dream is to get my story out there for the world to read. I want to help others. To inspire those who are in similar situations as my own and show them that it CAN be done.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Some things I've learned about beauty.


This morning as I showered at the gym I cried.  I cried because I felt so sad for all the women who struggle with accepting and also caring for their bodies.  I cried for the woman who wants to be healthy but doesn’t know how, I cried for the woman who feels embarrassed/discouraged about her body, I cried for all the women I know who struggle with their bodies.  I know what it feels like to struggle.  You might be thinking, “oh sure, you’re an ironman or you’re tall and slim, you have no idea what the struggle feels like.”  But I do.  I’ve felt the struggle deeply, at times, and then chosen to change. I have felt times of deep frustration and discouragement about my body and then time and time again I try to choose to be healthy and beautiful in the way I know best.  Along the way I have learned some things that I wanted to share. 

When all you see is the external appearance, it’s easy to judge, assume things and feel either superior or inferior.  When you give someone the benefit of the doubt and get to know them, all those prideful assumptions start to melt away.
I’ve learned this lesson time and time again throughout my life.  Recently I met someone who is a walking resemblance of Barbie.  Seriously, I’ve never seen a closer resemblance to Barbie in a real human being.  I gave her the benefit of the doubt and assumed that she was kind and good and real and because of this, I now have a good friend.  I never would have become friends with her if I would have let my assumptions put a barrier between us.
This is the main reason I wanted to have the women from the photo shoot share a bit of themselves with you.  It reminds all of us that there is more to a person than what you see at first glance. I sometimes have a wave a jealousy, when I see a beautiful woman.  It has helped me so much to remember that they are real people with a story to tell.

Our beauty is not relative, it is inherent and completely our own.
When I saw the first pictures from the photo shoot of all the women, I felt critical of myself (funny looking nose, looks a bit cross eyed, hair looks kind of weird etc).  I also felt like the other women looked gorgeous, which intensified my own feelings.  For some reason, I just really started comparing myself to the other women, as if my own beauty was only valid relative to the beauty of others.  Of course this isn’t true.  I am beautiful because I am a beloved daughter of God, created in His image and loved by Him.  You are beautiful for the same reason.

What we sometimes view as our physical imperfections, can actually be part of our own unique beauty. 
I expressed to Liz (the amazing photographer) that in one of the close up pictures, I didn’t really like my big smile because I was showing too much of my gums.  Liz responded with this, “you might see ‘too much gums’ but I see ‘happy Kim’.  I can hear your laugh when I look at that picture, and that makes me smile!”  Perhaps when I am being critical about something in my body, I am criticizing the very thing that others might love about me. 

True beauty has more to do with who you are, than what you look like.
The most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen in person is Julie B Beck (a female leader in my church).  I listened to her speak and felt like I was in the presence of a queen.  She was regal, elegant, confident, radiant and her smile was full of warmth, experience and had something of divinity.  I was enthralled and came home and wrote in my journal that I wanted to have THAT kind of beauty someday. 

This quote is from one of my favorite talks on the body called, “Sanctity of the Body” by Susan Tanner. 
“I am troubled by the practice of extreme makeovers. Happiness comes from accepting the bodies we have been given as divine gifts and enhancing our natural attributes, not from remaking our bodies after the image of the world. The Lord wants us to be made over—but in His image, not in the image of the world, by receiving His image in our countenances.” 

Our bodies are instruments, not ornaments.
Our bodies are gifts from Him, to be used for His purposes.  About 10 years ago I decided that I wanted to use my full life on earth to do God’s will.  I knew I would be capable of doing so much more if I took care of my body from a young age.  This motivation has stuck with me since then.  I want to be healthy so that I can do more good in the world throughout my life.  (see 1 Corinthians 6:19-20)

The weigh scale is a tool.  It should only be used if it helps you to be healthier.
What a strange obsession our culture has with humans weighing ourselves.  What are we, livestock ready to be butchered, that we need to know our weight?  It’s a little ridiculous I think.  I do think the weigh scale can be a helpful tool but only if it helps you to make healthier choices in your life.  If it just leaves you feeling confused, discouraged, desperate or having unhealthy behaviors like extreme dieting, than I think you should just set aside the weigh scale and focus on getting healthier.  You don’t HAVE to know how much you weigh.  In fact, I have a good friend who set aside the weigh scale for her whole pregnancy and even asked her midwives not to weigh her.  She felt better emotionally as she did that and I was so proud of her.

Becoming healthier, stronger, lighter, leaner, faster, and fitter feels AMAZING!
This process is not just for an ‘elite’ group, it’s for everyone.  I love my job (as a personal trainer).  My favorite part is helping people discover their “inner athlete”.  Most people feel nervous when they start exercising but then I see this confidence and joy in their eyes as they realize that they can do more than they thought they could.  Each week they get stronger and healthier and I feel so proud of them.

Being skinny can mean you are healthy but not necessarily.
I feel strongly that in the quest for being “skinny” or “weighing less”, we can lose sight of being “healthy”.   I feel so much more peace when I make being healthy my number one physical priority.  I believe that God wants his beloved daughters to learn how to care for the bodies that He has blessed us with.  We will become so much more in this process of learning to care for our physical bodies, than we would if we look for quick fixes.  Caring for our physical bodies is, in part, about building character.  It’s not just about the external results.  It’s about who you are becoming in the process of being healthy.

Our bodies are amazing.
We are created by God Himself and our bodies are incredible.  I take so much joy in exploring what my body is capable of doing.  It’s the most incredible machine in the world.  I love the feeling of movement, strength, power, flexibility, balance, coordination and speed.  I love that I was able to train my body to complete an Ironman.  I love that my body bore children.  I am grateful for this body God has given me.
Yesterday at the gym I was stretching my hamstring and had one of my legs up in the air, as I lay on my back.  I looked at that leg and was overcome with gratitude for what it had done for me.  My leg had pushed a pedal for 7 hours in my ironman to carry me across 180 km on my bike, followed by a difficult marathon.  I was teary and tenderly touched my leg and expressed gratitude for it.  Then, so as not to play favorites, I did the same with my other leg J.

If you are waiting until your body is perfect to feel beautiful, then you’ll never feel beautiful. 
I think this can be particularly true for mothers, whose bodies undergo a lot of changes through pregnancy and nursing.  I try to view my pregnancy “scars” as marks of the miraculous privilege I have had of bearing children.  I am so grateful to be a mother and it is worth every varicose vein, stretch mark and other impacts it has had on my body.  I hope that these “marks” can somehow add to my beauty, as I see them and am reminded that I am a mother.
Also, I think if we are overly focused on external proof that we are of worth and value, we may lose sight of our true selves!

Acceptance is a step towards positive change.
I have come to believe that in order to change our selves, we first need to accept where we’re at.  That doesn’t mean we love everything about our bodies but it does mean that we love our selves as people and recognize our worth, goodness and beauty, even if it is buried underneath a few layers of fat.  I have seen people change their bodies without ever accepting themselves but it can be an ugly process, accomplished in unhealthy ways.  Health is not a “fair fight”.  We have each been given different genetics, habits and information.  It is left to each one of us to do the best we can with what we've been given.
Elder Holland gave a great talk called “To Young Women”, that addresses this idea of accepting our selves.
I plead with you young women to please be more accepting of yourselves, including your body shape and style, with a little less longing to look like someone else. We are all different. Some are tall, and some are short. Some are round, and some are thin. And almost everyone at some time or other wants to be something they are not! …We should all be as fit as we can be… That means eating right and exercising and helping our bodies function at their optimum strength. We could probably all do better in that regard. But I speak here of optimum health; there is no universal optimum size.

If you admire something about someone else, you can choose to go out there and get it for yourself.
There are limits to what each body is capable of doing or looking like but perhaps your body has less limits than you think.  I believe myself to have very few limits on what I can do with my body.  Doing an Ironman last year proved that to be true.  What false limits might you be placing on yourself??
If you want to set a goal, I encourage you to involve God in your process.  He will help you to refine that goal (if needed), strengthen you, guide you, comfort you and find joy in your journey.  I have experienced that.

YOU ARE BEAUTIFUL BECAUSE GOD MADE YOU AND HE LOVES YOU VERY MUCH!!!



Monday, March 5, 2012

The woman behind the camera - Part 3: Elizabeth Cranmer


I had this idea a while back about how I don’t have the same type of pictures that I have of my Grandma, Mom, and Nana. There is the cutest shot of my Grandma in some sort of uniform almost and she is adorable and probably about my age or just barely younger. And my Nana around my age sits in a frame at my Mom’s house looking stunning with wind in her hair wearing a cute frock on a balcony. There are fewer yet of my Mom like this, but one of her dressed to go for a formal night out with my Dad with her hair blonde as ever and this classy art deco pin, captures me.

I want to have pictures that when my children and grandchildren look at, they can see who I was at that moment. What I viewed as my best in those years. I had a photo shoot by a friend this past year where she focused on the shots I couldn’t get of myself as a photographer. There is one of me laughing, my real laugh! Not my camera less scrunchie one, but my crinkle nose, lifted shoulders laugh. I have to tell you that typically I do not think that this would be my ‘best’ moment, but this shot was! It captured me as I think my kids will remember me and it’s beautiful!

So started the planning of location etc. I would lay awake at night planning out shots that might achieve a great look and once I had the project under way and faces to attach to the shots my mind went wild! I just had SO many ideas for each of these women and who they were from what I could see. I had to narrow down to a few ideas for each, but I hope that I captured a small essence of each one of them.

I had so much fun with each of the women. Finding their comfort and strengths. It was a beautiful day! We laughed and danced and giggled. I was sure that wonderful things were in the works. I looked through my view finder, and saw gorgeous images and shapes and smiles.

Once I had posted the sneak peeks, my outlook changed slightly. On my screen there was nothing but individual beauty that needed no comparison. But as I heard of these women’s concerns and self-criticisms, I realized that this went so much deeper then I originally thought. I was so overwhelmed that week by what spiritual beauty these women have. It wasn’t just their physical attributes that were striking to me, but their triumph in life, their struggles and their grace in all those things. I was compelled to let them each know. The tears came pouring out of me as I wrote a note to each of them about how amazing just little me could tell they were.
This was truly a humbling experience as I also heard my own self talk that week and realized that I was telling myself some of the same lies that these women were telling themselves.

I know not everyone is based in my faith. However I know us all to be Daughter’s of Heavenly Father regardless. I have never felt that stronger then this last week or two. My heart ached for the misconceptions of beauty that we all have. I have also felt so incredibly hopeful about these pictures at some point making a difference to that. I know that some of the images will not be immediate ‘love’, but in years to come they will be the pictures that tell a bit of the story that makes up our complicated selves. They will freeze in time a moment of beauty that is both exceptional and real. When I look at the images I see kindness in eyes, happiness in smile lines, strength in a still moment, and fearlessness in the whole experience.

Beauty is something that goes to our cores. We can choose to see what is already there. Ugly is not something that resides with any of these women. And lucky for each of us it oozes out of our being whether we recognize it or not. You are each beautiful. Never forget that you are worthy of that title. The way you serve, take in life and live it, will always hold true.

Be beautiful, because you are!

Love
Elizabeth