- Growing up, I was curvier than my friends, and in a pre-Kardashian era, I felt like I didn't fit in.
- I stole my mom's
diet pills from the medicine cabinet and went from a size 11 to a 2 in months.
It was 2001, and my baby fat years were getting to me. I developed early and didn't fit in with my skinny-mini friends. Growing up in the days of Slim-Fast and "there's no such thing as too thin," my curvy body in the pre-Kardashian era was desired by men and shamed by women. I simply didn't fit in.
No more, I decided.
I would do anything to look like the other girls my age and fit into the size-zero jeans my best friend wore. Soon, I was jumping on top of the counter, opening the medicine cabinet, and fishing out my mom's diet pills.
I restricted myself to eating only 18 grams of fat a day, and I worked out constantly — running about five to 15 miles a day. I ran as often as I could, and I ate as little as possible while taking
I went from a size 11 to a size 2 in three months. From friends to coaches to family members, people praised me for losing weight — for taking my
It took me 15 years to recover from my unhealthy dieting
While I did heal from that disordered eating and exercising, diet culture was still pervasive around me. Because I lost so much weight as a teen, I gained weight as I got older. I had gotten down to 118 pounds, and my body fluctuates now, but I average about 145 pounds, and that's healthy for me now at 36.
Diet culture taught me that my worth was tied to being thin, and it affected everything: how I showed up for friends; what roles I took in my relationships; and how I was willing to be seen in my business. If I wanted to be truly free of diet culture, I was going to have to value myself differently.
This past holiday season, I put some weight on, and it was seriously hurting my confidence. A friend told me that she was using a doctor-prescribed injectable to lose weight, and I seriously considered it. It was just to get off a few pounds, right?
Not so much. I found out a potential side effect was thyroid tumors, and I wasn't willing to risk it. This made me realize I needed to start thinking about my weight differently.
So I asked myself this question, "Do I want to be on the never-ending quest for the perfect body with the lowest percentage of body fat, perfect boobs, a big round butt, and a snatched waist, constantly reaching for the next shake, diet, medicine, or surgery in order to be seen as valuable and worthy to the world? Or do I want to choose a different path?"
That's when I got to work on my mindset, finding which beliefs I bought into that were hurting me. The number of times "I'm not thin enough to..." or "I'm not pretty enough to…" came up were disturbing.
I don't have it down perfectly yet, but I've made incredible strides.
I'm not beating myself up for not being a size 2 — I fluctuate between a size 6 and a size 8. I'm able to actually look in the mirror without tearing myself apart.
I'm happy to exercise and eat well because it feels good, not because I have to in order to be perfect. Feeling free from constantly body-shaming myself is a whole new world.
PollyAnna Brown is a communication expert, journalist, and ghostwriter using her 15+ years of experience in entertainment and psychology to help business owners and entrepreneurs grow their audience, impact, and sales. You can learn more here.