Daisy Mae
New member
Here I am, on a Friday night, finally writing a post after endless deliberation. Maybe it was stubbornness that was keeping me from posting. I wanted to believe I could do it alone. Maybe it was facing the fact that there is an issue I need to resolve. Maybe it was frustration. I know what I need, and what I don't, so I get mad when I disregard that in the moment and do the things that only further contribute to my frustration. I don't know the reason, but here I am. I don't even know if this is a big moment or not. Will it really be a turning point? I have yet to find out. I'm really hope I can find that moment that finally changes things because right now I feel like I am spiraling downward despite my best efforts to stay at the top. It's getting late (I am one of those early-to-bed, early-to-rise type people) and I'm getting tired, so my goal in writing this entry is to stop filtering my thoughts and write about everything, or at least start to, and see what insight any feedback has to offer. So here we go, me in a nutshell. This is my first time being part of a community of this kind, my first time blogging in general. Since I was 12 years old "dedication to excellence" was a term I became intimately familiar with. I ran cross country (and was good too, for a time). But that was our motto - it was drilled into us then, and it has stuck with me ever since. It carries over into much more than just running. It helped me get good grades in school. It helped me get interviews for internships and jobs. I am a really relentless person, so I don't understand why this is the one thing I can't seem to conquer. For the first 2 years of college, I ran, and was still kicking butt. Then I got hurt and transferred schools (to a Division 1 school) in he same year. I was D1 material at one point in time, but not when I was broken. I tried to heal up and make the team. I healed up, but was too slow. I joined the club team and found friends, but at the same time kept myself distant, because I knew I was still pining for varsity. It took a year and a half of bugging the coach and emailing him my race times until he finally gave me a chance. It was an utter failure. I struggled to keep up in workouts. My races were embarassing. It was the snowiest winter I remember and running outside was miserable, but running inside was worse. I got hurt again in a matter of months. By the start of the spring season, I got cut. I wasn't overly upset. I knew it was coming. I went back to the club team, where I was welcomed with open arms, and I knew then that those were my true friends. But then, I didn't really have anything to work for. I could just run for fun. It was a needed mental break and I cannot say I regret it (during that time, I began dating my boyfriend of now 1 year, who was also on the club...more about him shortly
). So I ran for the fun of it. Even though I always strove for excellence, I have ALWAYS loved running. It is playful, liberating, wild, empowering, adventurous, and has connected me to some of the most important people in my life, as well as given me nearly every one of my favorite experiences. Anyway, after college graduation (last spring), I moved across the country to start my new job as operations engineer. I have to laugh - it totally fits at least one side of my personality. I can prioritize tasks like a sorting machine, and am quick and reliable on the job. I can handle a lot at work, and even in the 3 months (6 if you count my internship last summer), I have already distinguished myself as a contributing member of my company. But it consumes my life. I'm working 11-12 hours a day, and sometimes trying to take a couple work-related classes after work to hone my skills. I am an exempt employee, meaning, I don't need to take lunch breaks, so if there is work to do (there is ALWAYS work to do), I do not take lunch break. I just eat at my desk. Though I'm going to various meetings and talking to people around the building, much of my job involves sitting in front of a computer. So even though I'm mentally toasted by the end of the day, I really haven't done anything physical. To reiterate - I LOVE being active. I don't just do it to keep in shape. I have always been someone who bikes everywhere because I prefer it to driving, I run because it allows me to see new places, I hike, I camp, I love water (oh yeah...there was a year of competitive swimming thrown in there, when I was injured and couldn't run), and if there is anything I haven't tried, I'm usually ready to give it a whirl. But recently I've been getting off work, calling my parents/brothers/friends/boyfriend on the way home, since they are 3 time zones away and if I wait I will not be able to talk to them, coming back and A) reading because I also love doing that and am too tired to do anything active, OR B) cooking because I want to learn how to do that eventually, OR C) dragging my butt through a run or maybe getting myself to the gym. There's hardly a combination of these. In other words, I have no balance. That's the week-day routine. Weekend routine: get out of the city (I'm now living in LA and am very much not a city girl) and go run in the mountains. I do this every weekend. Sometimes I camp and stay out all weekend. Sometimes I come back and do one location Saturday, another on Sunday. I usually average about 15 miles at a time, but the distance has been increasing. I ran my first 50k about 5 weeks ago and loved every second. This weekend, I'm supposed to run my first marathon, and its a race across the desert between horses and runners. (Like I said, I have 2 very different sides...the down-to-earth, A+ prioritizer, and the somewhat wild adventurer who usually bites off a little more than I can chew (ha ha ha...appropriate pun for this entry), but finds a way to make it work). My running has been suffering, and it is making me less happy. The stress at work has led to a lack of control, and I've gained weight. I'm less active during the week, further adding to the problem. The things I love, I can only do on weekends, so my weekends become packed and, even though it is a mental vacation to go burn energy, it's also tiring. Then there's the personal relationships. I have awesome relationships with my parents and brothers. Love them to pieces. My boyfriend is wonderful in every way. He's so genuinely caring, and willing to put in crazy amounts of effort to make distance work. We both agree that we are doing a pretty good job so far. As cliche as it sounds, he loves me for who I am, not what I look like. But jeeeeezzzz.....how great would it be to see him next and look every bit the outdoorsy adventurer I long to be (and am on most weekends)?? I don't only want to lose weight for him. Honestly, he does not even know it is something I am concerned about (while Im sure he would be open to talking about it with me, it just is not something I have brought up ever). Past struggles taught me to keep my mouth shut and I haven't talked to anyone about it in years. So basically, not his fault that I haven't said anything. That's on me. But I'd rather just show up slimmed down and toned up next time I see him than talk about it beforehand. I also want to do it for myself. Added weight makes running and hiking harder. Seeing as those are 2 things I love more than almost anything else, I don't want to do anything that keeps me from doing what I love. Gaining weight keeps me from enjoying the great outdoors to the fullest extent I can. And finally, I just want to be confident in my own skin again. I want to look in the mirror and still see that girl that is committed to excellence, not a wired, stressed-out, has-been who is hanging on to the remnants of a figure she had, but slowly hiding herself in her own skin. I want to excel at work, in relationships, in health and fitness, and in life. Any ideas on how to find this balance? Sorry for the rant, but I am really looking forward to any feedback. I keep hoping for turning points. Maybe this can be the day I make one.
I agree with LaMa. Your lowlights & highlights seem fairly well balanced.
with all that LaMa said. Your gym session sounds awesome. Go you! Biking your commute is a great way to add energy expenditure to your day & an excellent way to de-stress. Your brothers are lucky to have such a thoughtful sister daisy. What a great idea. When do you find the time?