Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Cause I'm a woman- W O M A N ;)

The question was asked today of us, “What does being a woman mean? What is the definition of woman?”

At first glance, the biological basis and physiological perspective of being a woman includes several criteria to go off of. Having female genitalia, two x chromosomes, producing estrogen, containing the ability to bare children, etc. However, if you base being a woman solely on these factors, this then poses many questions related to transgender male to female sex changes. To women who decide they are truly men. Is physicality the only factor? In my opinion, sex characteristics may be how the world separates the two, since identifying genders has become very confusing in today’s world. But being a woman entails much more than what the body is up to!

What one must remember is women are HUMANS. They have the same desires, needs, and wants as anyone else. Hunger, thirst, sex, belonging, urination, and yes, even defecation! Just because society portrays women as dainty, does not mean that women are not the same as any other organism. In today’s society, women are confronted with a long list of dirty laundry. Women are “supposed to” be successful, yet somehow this mysterious wage gap still exists, with men earning 12.5 more cents in the work place. Women are supposed to become mothers who focus solely on their children but when they want to stay at home with those children, are then told to go back to work right away. Yet the minute they do, people shake their head in disdain at the fact that they left the children in the care of someone else so soon. Women are supposed to be thin as rails, finding the time to spend hours at the gym and squelching the need for sustenance, denying their innate appetite for food. And good food at that. Not just celery and mustard. But yet they are to be strong enough to deal with all life throws at them. They are supposed to be beautiful, but not vain, virgin-like, yet please our lovers in bed with our endless sexual passion. We are to stand up for ourselves and share our opinions effortlessly, yet clearly women are to be seen…not heard. We must fight against all abuse, yet we are told to be submissive creatures.

        Confused yet? I know I sure am! Why the double standard? What is the true woman supposed to do? Who is she supposed to be? What encompasses this female person?

        The fact of the matter is, the woman defines this. Each one is different. Not one is the same. Yes, we may have some similar qualities: boobs, butts, and hips. Menstruation. Hormones. But this is not entirely all what makes us who we are. When I think of what ‘woman’ means…one word comes to mind for myself. Fighter, Fighting stereotypes, fighting men, fighting each other, fighting media’s portrayal of our bodies and roles in society, fighting tradition, and often, we fight ourselves. We fight what we truly want deep down in ourselves. We allow other people to taint our minds of what we are to be and then direct us to behave, act, live a certain way which is counter-intuitive to who we are meant to be. The classic ought to be syndrome. I out to be successful, thin, beautiful, motherly, clean, orderly, contained. But says who? The truth is, you can’t box us in, you can’t define us. It would be a terrible injustice to do so. Because then we would not only be unable to explore ourselves, we would also be cut off from reaching our full potentials. Because as writer Laurel Thatcher Ulrich states, “Well-behaved women seldom make history. “We can do whatever we want. The sky is the limit. We are the only thing stopping ourselves. Women are creations, just like men. Each individual and unique. There may be a socially constructed and generally acceptable mold out there that others try to fit women into. But that mold is first, constricting. Second it is unattainable and unrealistic. Lastly, it is deadly to the spiritual, mental, emotional, and sometimes even physical realm of the female person. Rules are meant to be bent. And molds are meant to be broken. And I for one, broke the mold of what a woman “should” be. And I am better for it.
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Would I be considered a woman in other countries? Most likely, I think I would pass! I fit all the ‘legal’ definitions of being female. However, would I WANT to be a woman in some other countries? In various places, including Africa, Thailand, and even our own U.S., oppression, sex trafficking and slavers, rape and sexual abuse, female genital mutilation, complete covering of women’s’ bodies in clothing and other demeaning practices women are put through occur. As I reflect upon what it means to me to be WOMAN, I reminisce back to when I was a little squirt. The first time I truly realized that I was, in fact, a female was thanks to my little brothers. I helped raise them like any big sister does, which included punching them in the face, hitting them in the lip, and occasionally kicking them in the nether regions, which produced quite an exorbitant amount of pain for them! I didn’t really understand why they would cripple over in pain when we were quite little, but as we got older, as most little kids do, we would play the “I’ll show you mine if you show me yours” game. And I definitely did not have whatever they had that could cause them this great discomfort. It was no big deal though. Until I hit about ten and was at a sleepover with friends at our mentor’s cabin and one of the girls got her period for the first time. I basically thought the world was ending and she was going to die from hemorrhaging out from between her legs! When I got home and started hyperventilating from anxiety, my mother sat me down, handed me an American girl body book and told me to read it. Boom. Sex talk. Right there. Then when I hit the lucky age of 12 I got my period for the first time and begged my mother not to tell my dad (which she did anyways) and she cried for joy and I cried in pain and it was grand. Accept puberty. No. Puberty was NOT grand. I went from running around being fine with whatever I ate and wore to suddenly having boobs and hips and stuff jiggling in places I didn’t want it to. I shot up to my current height of 5 feet 8 inches…at 10 or 11. It was rough. I thought being a woman was going to be like becoming a miniature version of my mom. Make dinner, keep the house clean while teaching us kids, love on my dad while still being able to work out all the time and still look presentable. Then after 25 years of marriage it all came to a halt. They got divorced. And I found out how unhappy she had really been. The connection with my father was gone. Her passion for life was squelched, her needs and desires overlooked. And I realized my idea of what a woman is was a far cry from the perfect little motherly princess society tells us we have to be. I love being a woman. I have always known I was female. And not just because I didn’t have a penis. But because I knew deep down I was happiest watching my grandma put on her makeup in the morning. Smelling her perfume. Twirling around in a black leotard in the living room of my childhood home. Hanging out with my girlfriends and matchmaking. Having sleepovers, eating junk, and endlessly fantasizing about our boy crushes. Dreaming in my heart about maybe…one day getting married and becoming a mother. Because I knew in my heart from a young age that being a woman was something special. Not because of anything in particular. Lord knows there are definitely moments I wish I could pee standing up and could get ripped like THAT. Sure, I went through a Tom boy stage…but it consisted of literally wearing a shirt that said Tomboy on it, four wheeling in the mud, and giving my dad the evilest stink eye I could when he would call me his girly girl. I have never questioned who I am- a woman. That is who I am. Yes, it comes with boobs and a butt, hips and thighs which I can’t erase. It comes with a menstrual cycle, raging hormones, weird cravings, the need to shave, and all that jazz…but it also comes with love. With the ability to comfort. To carry a child someday, if that is what God’s intent is. For so long I tried to squelch my female-ness. For years I have battled anorexia. I wanted a body that was curve-less. Flawless. Didn’t jiggle. Didn’t touch. Skin and bone is what I shot for. And that is what I got. I also go lanugo, amenorrhea. I was cold all the time. I couldn’t do anything I wanted to do because my family was so concerned my heart would stop at any strenuous exertion. It was hell. I was weak and frail. Because I thought that is what women were supposed to me. Submissive. TINY. Iridescent. I learned that is not who I am. I am strong. I am loud. I give my opinion and I don’t care who disagrees. I am fierce and in the words of Katy Perry, “You’re gonna hear me roar!” OK…maybe not. But being a woman to me means a whole lot more than wearing dresses and bearing children. And I learned that it is ok to be me…slowly but surely. I have expected perfection...what I got was human. For a while I lost touch with who I was, but when found myself again I was astounded to find that she wasn't all bad. Flaws and all...I am what I am~

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

January 15th


If you would have told me what my life would look like now a year ago…I would have thought you were crazy. Because one year ago today, on January 15th 2013, I was on a plane to Phoenix, Arizona. Upon arrival, I was picked up and driven to Wickenburg, Arizona where I entered the doors of Rosewood Eating Disorder center for the third time. I was still fighting with my anorexia, heavy with shame and fear, and terrified of recovering. I had lived this way for so long…how was I to know if the other side- health- was better than this? If it was even attainable? I wanted to die.

Here is my journal entry from that day: January 15th

“Back at Rosewood- My head is telling me, yelling, cursing me. You don’t need to be here. You are not that sick. What the hell are you back for?

To get back on track…mentally it was time. Food is so hard. I don’t want to eat at all. Struggling. I hate my body I wish it were sicker. I don’t need to be here. God, help me. Quiet the voice. You have given me the opportunity to go back. I don’t know why. But right now just hold me. Help me to know it is going to be OK and that you have a plan. Because right now I wasn’t to run. I don’t want to be here. I feel so wrong. Part of me just wants to shrivel up and die. Am I really ready to come into treatment and accept the fact that I can’t continue to attempt to kill myself anymore? Can I truly stay in recovery? I don’t feel it is possible for me…I’ve tried and failed every time. What is going to make this time different? I let my family down. They have had to watch me do this so many times. I have nothing left of myself…Will I ever be anything? God help me.”

What made the difference? Surrender…faith…determination. Rosewood helped support me as I started slowly fighting back for my life. They taught me how to eat again, how to sleep, how to pray, laugh, love and LIVE. They gave me the tools to open the book of my story and begin on a new page. I am unable to rewrite the past- with all its pain and foibles. But now I have the opportunity to create a story dedicated to God’s saving grace, His mercy, His STRENGTH, and His never ending love. Today I start classes again at U of I, studying Psychology to one day help the world in any way I can by counseling those who suffer. My debt was paid by Rosewood, by ANJ, by U of I when I couldn’t pay it. And I am forever grateful for God’s endless provision.

Today, I have the best family I could ever ask for. A roof over my head with two amazing roommates. A wonderful church. A man I can’t get enough of…my boyfriend. A job playing with little kids. And amazing friends who have supported me through my journey. Never give up…never surrender to death. Because for all you know your dreams could be a day away~