You're Not The Only One...

You're not the only one that wonders if you're the only one like you. 

You're not the only one that cries because you want to give up on life and end it all.

You're not the only one that wonders what it would be like if you were to be gone. To no longer exist.

You're not the only one that struggles daily with a voice (or VOICES) in your head telling you... that you suck. You fail. There's no point. You just made a fool of yourself. Why are you even trying? You keep failing. Are you really wearing that? You look disgusting. They don't like you. You're so screwed up. No one else is as screwed up as you. These voices make life utterly unlivable most days. You shut down. Can't function. Go numb. It's too much.

You're not the only one to ruminate for so long that it breaks you and you crumble.

You're not the only one to have to leave the store, work, school, or church because your brain talks you out of everything for NO REASON and you start to physically feel ill. You're not the only one that does this every day and with nearly every obligation. Leaving early starts to become accomplishment over not going in the first place. 

You're not the only one that views yourself differently than you really are. Or the only one that wishes you could shrink or grow or smooth, cut, shave, cut off a part of your body. Or even just have an entirely different one!

You're not the only one to feel like the only one. The only one that feels this way...that thinks this way...that acts this way. 

It's just that we don't talk about it. We don't always talk about the dark things because we feel like we're the only one that experiences them. Guess what? This is not true. 

I know I am not the only one that struggles in the ways that I struggle. I'm not the only one to have daily panic attacks and weekly suicidal ideation. I'm not the only one that has extreme highs and even more extreme lows, or bites my nails until they bleed while I contemplate every single limitation I have and why things won't work. I'm not the only one that has a deep hatred toward myself but tries extremely hard toward loving myself more every day. I'm not the only one that paints my life in a different light than it truly is via social media and fake interactions with acquaintances, friends, and family. I am not, and you are not alone. 

What do you do that makes you feel alone? Different? Broken? Screwed up? Whatever it is, you're not alone. Talk about it. You'll find out.

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Read This If You're Falling Behind in Life

I know the feeling. The feeling that everyone else is ahead of you. The feeling that everyone else is doing big, fantastic things with their lives but you aren't. 

This feeling comes and goes for me--sometimes it is subtle, and other times it's almost unbearable.

I started college at 17, and even when I graduated in only 3 1/2 years I felt like everyone else was still ahead of me. I felt like I wasn't doing enough. I felt like I wouldn't ever be enough, and my constant trying was of no use.

Now as I see friends and old classmates my age and even younger getting married, starting families, traveling the world...the feeling of not being as far along in my life as I should be intensifies.

I should be married! (Thinks the girl with no boyfriend.) I want babies! (Thinks the girl who can't keep a plant alive.) I want to travel the world and see amazing places while I'm young! (Thinks the girl who has been ill for 6 months, barely able to leave bed some days.)

I'm about to tell you something only because I need to remind myself.

We all have different stories. We all are shaped by different events in our life--those we choose, and also those that choose us. It would be impossible for every single person to be on the same life path.

Aside from the fact that social media makes others' lives appear perfectly seamless, put-together, and successful, there is also the reality that they're just different.

Can you imagine how boring it would be if you walked into a library full of books, only to find that every single book was exactly the same? The books looked different, sure, but upon opening each and every book you found that the words were identical--the stories the same. 

Those people who get married at 19 aren't any 'farther along in life' than the person who is still in college working toward a degree. They're also not farther along than the person who is still saving to go to college, or even the person that decided college wasn't for them.

The person who gets a 9-5 job straight out of college isn't farther along in life than the person who decides to take a year off to travel the world. They're also not farther along than the person who spends a year doing countless interviews but can't seem to catch a break.

Those that struggle with addiction, illness, injuries, and traumatic life changes are not miles behind those who are coasting along. They're just in the middle of their story's conflict. Like any good story, the resolution will come.

There is no such thing as being 'far ahead' or 'farther along' in life because we cannot read the whole story yet. I always was the kid reading ahead to the end of the book, so this really bums me out.

There is no sense in feeling like we should be doing more, accomplishing more, or be at a different place in our lives because that's simply not how it works. (Sorry.)

I'm not saying we shouldn't set goals, work hard, and strive to better ourselves. I am saying that we are where we are in this very moment because that's just how our story goes.

You're not falling behind in life. You just have a different story.

 

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health, happy, life annalise health, happy, life annalise

How To Stay On Track During The Holidays!

...SIIIIKE!

I won't be telling you how to stick to your stupid diet on Thanksgiving.

I will not be giving you tips on how to stick to your workouts and squeeze in weird at-home workouts when you're visiting family.

I certainly won't be telling you how long you need to run to burn off that slice of pie, or how to balance your Thanksgiving dinner plate with 90% vegetables and 10% "fun" food.

Nope.

I'm here to tell you to eat whatever you want and enjoy it. Take off a week from the gym to spend time with loved ones and forget about the way your body looks for like five seconds.

Last year, I was that person feeling immense guilt over not exercising while I was home seeing family. 

Thanksgiving morning I didn't eat breakfast so that I "could" eat a lot at dinner. And then I inevitably binged on all of the amazing food and then some when in reality, I could have eaten what I wanted and not been sick for three days.

The whole holiday season I stressed about not getting to work out while visiting family and conspired about how I would avoid eating all of the food that I so desperately wanted. (And I failed at avoiding it, because food.)

Whether you come from a past with an eating disorder, you currently struggle with one, or you simply are just influenced by all of the disordered eating patterns and advice in our society right now--the holidays can be tricky.

A time that is supposed to be spent focusing on loved ones, blessings, and enjoying meals and treats turns into a huge struggle.

This year, I don't care.

I'm taking a week off of the gym.

I'm eating whatever the heck I want.

I'm enjoying time with my loved ones and trying my best not to focus on what I look like as a result of not caring what I put into my body.

Don't listen to those plans for detoxing after Thanksgiving or restricting your food intake--don't buy into the notion that you MUST over-exercise or even exercise at all to compensate for the food.

The holidays are fantastic. They're a time to be a little lazy, eat a lot of food, spend time with those who matter, and celebrate life. Enjoy them and move on.

If you're trapped in the mindset that they should be anything other than that--I'm sorry.

If your mind is consumed with calories and burpees and GUILT--I'm sorry. I've been there.

So, how do you stay on track during the holidays?

You don't. You enjoy them. You don't make them ABOUT food, but you do ENJOY food when it's there. 

You don't insist on doing crazy workouts because you feel like you have to. You move if it feels good and you don't force yourself.

You accept that you might gain some weight and move on.

I fully intend on gaining at least five pounds by the end of the year, and I 'aint even mad about it.

I don't agree with "balance." I believe in being happy and carefree and not being self-focused throughout the holiday season.

Think about how great it was when you were little! You ate what you wanted with no guilt or repercussion. 

Food babies are normal. Food comas are to be expected. And embraced.

If you ONLY indulge on the one day of the holiday, that's not going to make you gain 29 pounds. Certainly not. Neither will indulging for the entire week or even the entire winter season.

Your body is a smart cookie. So eat the cookie. Or mashed potatoes and gravy. Eat all the food.



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life, relatable, health, happy, funny, blogging annalise life, relatable, health, happy, funny, blogging annalise

Friendly Reminders

Hi humans!

Today, I have some friendly reminders for you all.

1. Just because fruit has sugar does not make it "bad." If you're restricting fruit from your diet because someone told you bananas are high in sugar--I'm sorry. Whoever told you that was misinformed and clearly unaware that fruit is, in fact, healthy for you. 

2. If someone is being rude to you and you feel awful about yourself after, remember that their actions are solely a reflection of how they feel about themselves. I know for a fact that I'm sassier to my boyfriend when I'm having a bad body image day, or am not feeling 100% mentally. Don't let mean people get you down.

3. Serving other people will make you feel better. If you're having a bad day I can almost guarantee that it will make you feel a thousand times better if you go out of your way to do something for someone else. It doesn't even have to be huge! Something as simple as writing a note, giving a call, or baking cookies for a friend...doing these things literally releases happy hormones into that bod of yours.

4. You don't have to do what everyone else is doing. I know you've heard it before, but honestly--you don't. When I was little, this phrase had a different meaning. It was what my mom told me when I wanted the new, cool toy. Now, it means that I don't have to follow the diet trend, fashion fad, or workout regimen that is being portrayed by society as the "the thing to do." Nope! You don't have to do it. I promise.

5. The people who care about you will not think that you're a burden if you ask for help. If you need help, ASK. 

6. You're allowed to change your mind. You're allowed to alter plans that you have had for a long, long time. You do not have to finish everything you start. Doing so does not make you a failure--would you rather drive all the way down the wrong road, only to have to come back...or would you rather make a u-turn as soon as possible? 

7. No number can define you. Not weight, height, age, waist size, GPA, salary, debt...no. Numbers mean nothing in the grand scheme of things. As hard as this is because we tend to put numbers as #1 in our efforts, it's important to remember that a number really is silly and meaningless. 

8. You don't have to "deserve" a food, and similarly, you don't have to burn of anything you eat that you consider "bad." Balance is a term that is emphasized a lot nowadays--my thoughts? I say screw balance. If you want to eat a gallon of ice cream sometimes, do it. If you want to skip the gym for a year, do it. Do what makes you feel good, and don't justify everything you do by saying #balance. 

9. You're hot. Really, look at that butt. Work it, sista. (Or brotha.)


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