I made a terrible mistake yesterday.
I went shopping.
For clothes.
I didn't mean to do it. I swear. The day started off innocently enough with a family trip out for breakfast and a visit to a camper expo a few towns away.
The trouble started when the camper exhibit turned out to be a bit of a flop. The way they hyped it on the radio, we expected it to be huge with plenty of models to tour and compare so we'd have a clue what we want (read: could afford) when we are ready to buy. In reality they only had about fifteen campers in a strip mall parking lot, most of which were locked, and no salesman in sight. So, we had plenty of time to kill before Punky's dad had to go to work.
Based on the scale reading that morning, I lost a total of five pounds this month. While it doesn't seem like much, it's right in line with the guidelines of healthy weight loss: one to two pounds per week. The shape of my body has changed so much, thanks to Jillian Michaels' attempts to kill me a few nights a week, and my suit pants for work are literally on the verge of sliding right off my ass. I thought I was ready to face the world of retail with a new attitude and confidence stemming from the pride in my accomplishments these last three months.
Nope.
It's no secret that I hate shopping. For anything. But clothes shopping was always at the very bottom of my list of fun things to do, even when I was a size six. Unlike most women, I hate clothes. I could care less about the fashion world and all its crazy trends. I don't need seventeen different pairs of black shoes, or coordinated jewelry for every outfit, or a new dress for every minor occasion that comes along. To me, it's a big waste of money, time, and effort, but I can't exactly go to work naked.
My philosophy on clothes has always fallen along these lines: the bigger and baggier, the better. Yes, even when I was tiny. I've always been super self-conscious about my appearance and it's so much easier to hide behind mounds of material than risk fabric hugging my tummy. A potato sack is truly my idea of perfect apparel.
As soon as my feet hit the carpet in the women's clothing section, the new confidence I thought I had disappeared in a flash. I could feel my heart beating faster and faster as I meandered aimlessly through the racks. The same old anxiety came rushing in and I quickly felt lost and overwhelmed. It took all my strength not to run the other direction, and I actually managed to pick out a few outfits and walk to the dreaded dressing room.
I really wish I hadn't.
I took a pair of dress pants off the hanger and faced the wall as I slowly pulled them on. I had no idea what size would fit me and I worried that I guessed too low. I couldn't believe it when I was able to zip and button them with little effort. I actually cracked a smile and took a long, deep breath. Then I turned around to face the mirror, and burst into tears.
In an instant, all was lost. I stood there staring at my lower stomach just bulging under my waist line as the tears streaked down my cheeks. How could I lose nearly twenty five pounds and still look so terrible? I felt so hopeless, like all my hard work was truly in vain. It made zero difference in the way I look, if anything it's even worse now. My hips have narrowed, my legs have slimmed, my ass has shrunk, and my upper stomach, the famous muffin-top area, has melted. But, the roll of hanging fat over my c-section incision hasn't budged a bit. At least my body was even with that twenty five pounds. Thick all around. Now, staring in that dressing room mirror, I looked like a child's drawing of a person: two tiny stick legs with a big circle body on top. That's exactly how I felt in those pants.
I wiped my tears and grabbed a shirt from the hanger. True to my old habits, the size was surely much larger than necessary but maybe it would hide the roll and calm my anxiety. It didn't work; it just made me look six months pregnant. The other outfits I brought in to try were mocking me from their hangers. I sat on the bench for a few minutes and tried to collect myself. Then I put on my old, baggy jeans and over-sized tee and returned all the clothes to the unwanted rack outside the dressing room.
Punky's dad knew by the look on my face that it didn't go well. He tried his best to cheer me up and make me feel like the past three months were worth my effort, but he failed miserably. I may have won a few battles, but I'm still losing the war.
Then, to add insult to injury, I took Punky to a birthday party later yesterday afternoon for my friend's son who just turned one. We haven't seen each other in a few months and she mentioned something about the Chinese restaurant we used to frequent when we worked together. I commented about not eating lunches like that anymore, and she asked if something happened as if to imply that I had a bad experience at that restaurant. I told her what I've been up to and that I've lost well over twenty pounds. And she looked at me like I was speaking Chinese. Apparently, she couldn't tell a bit.