Author Archives: April Lee

one month.


 
 
and my life takes a turn in yet another direction . . .

we’ve been loosely planning it,
we’ve been looking forward to it.
now it’s actually H.E.R.E.
 
 

my family and i become global nomads in one month.

white bruises of the soul

a very personal post for me today.
i’ll try to form a coherent story,
as i make sense of my scribbled thoughts.
the words are difficult to write.

~~~~~~~

one month ago i was challenged
by someone i greatly respect.
who said perhaps i didn’t always
walk my talk.

the gift of change

change can be exhilarating.
yet scary at the same time.

as we embrace new possibilities
that come from positive change,
we are often forced to let go
of things that are recognizable to us.
situations, places, belongings, people.

and that can bring up all kinds
of conflicting emotions.

how to improve your day in 3 easy steps:

once in awhile (maybe more often), we have one of those days.
one that makes us wish we never got up, got dressed, even tried.
 
here’s my quick 3-step plan for turning that day around . . .

 
 

1.

walking the path . . .

she just wanted to feel something more.
was this how everyone else reacted to their worlds?

like the man quickly typing on his laptop,
allowing his coffee to grow cold.
what was he writing?
was it meaningful to him?
did it complete him, fulfill his life?

the art of recovery ~ part 2


 
 
search.
grief.
tolerance.

 
3 obstacles introduced last week that may interfere with eating disorder recovery.

  1. the search for a new sense of self
  2. the grief that accompanies the loss of the eating disorder
  3. the tolerance necessary to bear difficult feelings

 
rescue.

3 obstacles to maintenance (and the art of recovery)

recovering from an eating disorder can be a long and lonely road.
there may no longer be physical symptoms exhibited.
but there may still be emotional barriers that interfere with healing.
many are surprisingly universal.
others are uniquely individual.

today i’d like to address three common roadblocks that i have witnessed:

  1. the search for a new sense of self
  2. the grief that accompanies the loss of the eating disorder
  3. the tolerance necessary to bear difficult feelings

 
search
often an eating disorder can make its sufferer feel special.

process = continuous action

i have been on an ongoing mission to integrate my life.
to seek a form of psychological assimilation.*
to ultimately merge the distinct facets of my personality.
 
why?
i take pleasure in being uniquely me.
i experience a sense of freedom as i compose my own story.

word of the year revisited.

WAVE.

 
my word for 2013.
 
 

 
 
to bend or sway to and fro.
to be moved, especially in opposite directions.
 
just like a wave,
my life ebbs and flows.
 
in january, i committed to hopping on my wave and embracing it.

adrift in the beauty of maybe

i wake up,
eager for the freshness of a new morning.

and then i realize the flip side.
i’m another day older as well.

will i be wiser too?
one can hope.

but what if i don’t learn anything of value today?