
I have been afraid of writing this.
This morning, at 4:45 in the morning, I lay awake in the bed in the dark grey light, Danny asleep beside me, Lu asleep in her room. I couldn't sleep for thinking what I might say in this piece, something I have been meaning to write for awhile, but could not. I need my sleep.
You see, it has been tougher in our lives in the last year than I have let on here. This site is about baking and the goodness of life and funny stories and loving each other and cooking with a darling kid and falling down and helping others and the work of a chef and different flours and saying yes to it all.
It has not felt like the right place to talk about terrifying life decisions, watching a baby in pain, living on the ragged edge of desolate sleep deprivation, worrying about cancer, taking a pill that saddens our lives into something we never expected, and coping with it all in old, familiar ways.
This is a site about food and the joy of it.
I have been eating too much food. And now I want to talk about it.

We live in food around here. Danny and I talk about dinner, about dishes he might create, about the childhood memories of standing in the kitchen making dinner that Lu might have one day. For the past year, we have been cooking and baking on double time, testing and re-testing recipes for our cookbook. We have a darling toddler who loves to bake with me, and who is so active that she grows loudly grumpy if she doesn't eat every three hours. Between making breakfast and falling into bed, food is a huge, joyful part of our lives.
But it's hard to live a life of food, under the best of circumstances, and not put on weight. There's slurping and nibbling and licking off of fingers and tasting and going back for more. It's part of the job, part of the joy. With more mindfulness and rest, I might be able to do better at it. But this year? This year I have been a bit of a wreck.
It started a few months before Lu's surgery. Hell, it started 12 hours after her birth, when she stopped breathing beside me and was rushed to the ICU. I was strapped to the bed, because I had undergone a c-section that afternoon and the suffocating leg cuffs that help prevent blood clots were circling my calves. I watched them race our daughter away from us, then I saw the code-blue lights flashing and the trampling sound of what must have been a dozen doctors and nurses running toward her. I couldn't go to her. I thought she had died.
She lived. She lived in the ICU for a week, with a breathing tube and feeding tube in her. We couldn't hear her voice for a week. When she first fed, she got my milk through a syringe. Danny and I never left her side, unless the nurses ordered us to sleep on the single cot in the room. If we cuddled into each other, we each touched part of the cot, and the other part of us falling off. There wasn't much sleep. I didn't eat much, either. Food felt foreign to me, removed. I lost 30 pounds in 1o days. By the time we finally returned home, all my pre-pregnancy clothes fit.
I realize now that just screwed up my system for awhile.
We could breathe again. She was alive. She was going to be fine. But as we sat her in the kitchen in her little bouncing chair as we cooked recipes and wrote them down for the cookbook, ate rich dishes for breakfast lunch and dinner or we would never finish the manuscript in time, we knew there was this cloud hanging over us. Her surgery.
My mom was diagnosed with breast cancer in the middle of this. She's fine now. But still.
Food tasted like a rich gift in those dark winter months. The cakes we developed were soft on my lips. The bread was so much better with a slather of butter. The dishes finished with sauces were so good that I kept going back for more.
Then, Lu stopped sleeping. She had started sleeping through the night when she was 10 weeks old, from 7 pm to 7 am. Every night. After the terrifying tumult we had been through after her birth, we figured we deserved it. Also, the first draft of the manuscript was due. Her sleeping allowed us to finish it.
Then she stopped. No matter what we tried, she cried piteously as soon as we lay her down in her crib. We lost more sleep every night. We couldn't figure out why.
After her surgery, her neurosurgeon told us that her brain was pressed so tight against her skull that it actually relaxed into space. She couldn't sleep because of the brain pressure. We didn't know that yet.
We moved to the island, a welcome moment but moving is always stressful. Just as the lilacs outside our bedroom window came into bloom, it was May. It was time.
It has been almost a year since Lu's surgery, thankfully. Back then, we didn't want to say what exactly happened. It was all too raw. But it might help one of you reading, if you are going through the same thing. So here it is.
She was born with a condition called craniosynostosis, which meant that the soft spots in the front of her head had already fused before she was born. This is what caused her breathing problems that propelled us into the ICU the night of her birth. Luckily, it was just a genetic anomaly, unaccompanied by anything else. But there was no room for her brain to grow, and without the surgery she would have suffered brain damage and blindness. The decision was easy. The dread of it was agony. They told us she would need to have this surgery when she was 11 days old, so we lived every day with her knowing this was coming.
In an 8-hour surgery, they lifted her skull bones off her head, re-sculpted them to be bigger and a better shape, fused them all together with space-age polymers, and put them back on her head.
We waited, barely breathing, until we could finally see her. She was alive.
Then we waited in the hospital with her, on duty by her bed and sleeping in a small cot again, until we could leave a week later. She didn't adjust well to her pain medication and we had to go back to the emergency room and stay another few nights. And then we all came home.
And then no one slept for another 1o months.
Lu woke up every hour, on the hour, all night long, every night, for 4 1/2 months. The doctors had warned us this might happen, but we didn't expect it to last this long. I don't know how we did it, thinking back on it. And even when she started sleeping for a bit longer of stretches, because we brought her into our bed to cuddle between us, so we could soothe her back to sleep quickly, she still didn't sleep that long.
For a solid year, I did not sleep for longer than 3 hours at a time. Not once.
There was a lot of pie for breakfast.

Pie is comfort. Food became comfort again, instead of the singular joy of eating healthy and living in my body that it had been after my celiac diagnosis. In a time of crisis, I went back to old habits — eating without thinking, filling my mouth with sugar and carbs and dough for comfort, not paying attention. Hell, I couldn't pay attention to anything with much focus those days. I was just so tired. Danny was beat-down tired too, but I tend to hear Lu cry earlier than he does. In those days, she could only sleep if she was cuddled up against me, sometimes on my head. In the mornings, I walked like a zombie into the kitchen and grabbed a hot cup of coffee and whatever we had baked the day before. And then I kept eating, all through the day.
Everyone I know who has a toddler does this a bit. The kid leaves behind some scrambled eggs and you grab them and eat them instead of throwing them away. Spoonfuls of oatmeal, a cube of cheese, a handful of crackers — there was always food lying around. No good letting it go to waste, right? Throw dark-circles-under-the-eyes sleep deprivation to the mix and there's no counting how many bites went in without my thinking. I couldn't think about me or my weight or exercising (yeah right) when our baby was healing and we had to earn more money to pay rent and the edits of our cookbook were due. And god, I needed more sleep.
(Now I know that many studies show sleep deprivation can cause weight gain. "Women who skimped on sleep — getting five hours or less a night — were 15 percent more likely to become obese than women who got seven hours of sleep per night." Savor: Mindful Eating, Mindful Life
The summer meant lots of fresh vegetables and picnics with friends, slices of watermelon and huge salads. I was okay. As the fall descended, my diet went right into braises and breaded foods. I started to feel lousy about my health, my body, but I had to just keep going. I didn't have the time or energy to worry about me.
Just before Thanksgiving, I went in for my annual mammogram. With a breast-cancer-survivor mother (along with her three sisters), I don't play around with this. They had always been fine before. A suspicious set of mammograms led to a biopsy the day before Thanksgiving. Those results led to an MRI. That led to a more extensive surgical biopsy.
Around them all, I baked and baked and baked some more. If you made anything from this website for Thanksgiving or Christmas, just know that was from me turning fear into love through my hands. I had to think about someone else besides myself. I thought about you at home for the holidays, wanting cinnamon rolls.
I don't have breast cancer. But it took a lot of scary moments until we knew that for sure.
And then we weren't in the clear, after all.
Based on my family history, and what they found in the surgery, I'm officially in a high-risk category for developing breast cancer. In fact, I have a nearly 50% chance of developing invasive breast cancer at some point in my life. Nearly 50%. That's just too high.
My oncologist gave me a list of things I can do to minimize the risk. Not smoking. (I don't.) Not drinking (Danny quit after Lu was born, so I wasn't drinking much. Done now.) Exercising. Eating well. And going on Tamoxifen.
Tamoxifen is an estrogen inhibitor, given to women after they have survived breast cancer. It's also recommended for women who are at high risk. Taking it for five years can reduce the risk of developing cancer by nearly half.
Taking Tamoxifen also means you cannot be pregnant while you take it.
I'm 43. If I take the tamoxifen for 5 years, I will be 48. Taking that drug meant not being able to have more children.
We adore Lu. That's probably clear in everything I write. We also always hoped (and pretty much assumed) we would have two kids. We had the names picked out long before Lu was conceived. And now, we had this choice: take our chances and try for another or take the drug and let go of our expectations.
There was a lot of grieving in December and January. A lot of rugelach and graham crackers and homemade mayonnaise and World Peace cookies. A lot of comfort food. Danny and I both were bereft.
One day in January we were at the Children's Museum in Seattle for the birthday party of the son of dear friends. I went into the bathroom, still pretty raw with emotion. I saw this gaggle of girls, about four years old, gathered at the sink. They were elbowing each other for room, laughing and talking and discussing important matters. I stood and stared. I suddenly saw Lu at that age. I ran out to Danny, crying. "I don't want to miss it. I don't want to miss a minute."
I've been on the Tamoxifen for the last three months.
We let go.
In the midst of this, another doctor's appointment turned up worrying signs, enough that I was sent for a pelvic ultrasound to make sure I didn't have ovarian cancer. And just last week, after intestinal issues of some mysterious nature, I had a colonoscopy to make sure I didn't have colon cancer.
(This is, by the way, the hardest house to fast for two days in. Ay, the food everywhere.)
Luckily, I don't have either. This has been the year of Shauna not-having cancer. Thank goodness.
But shit, this has been hard.
All through it, we were working on our cookbook, even down to the last moment. And being the parents of a sweet, active little girl who grew healthier by the moment. She is healed now, completely. And finally, she is sleeping. For the past six weeks, Lu has slept from 7 pm to 6 am, with maybe a brief rising somewhere near midnight.
Finally, finally, this year is coming to an end.
And I haven't made a pie in awhile.

It's spring again, the time of re-birth. With halibut and sorrel, quinoa and chard, everything feels more healthy in the world.
Me? I'm trying to change my habits, deliberately.
Last month, I started running. If you know me, you know that's pretty unexpected. I've always hated running — the knees, the bouncing of the boobs, the repetitiveness. But actually, I've always been scared of running. It just seemed like something I could never do.
My oncologist told me, directly: you must exercise. Every one of us should. "Daily exercise is the other pill you have to take. Studies have shown it has a much bigger effect on diminishing the risk of cancer than any diet. Do it." My other doctor told me that studies have shown that people with higher body mass index who exercise are in much better shape, and at lower risk of developing cancer and heart disease, than those with lower BMIs who don't move. I'm already in good health — my blood pressure is consistently ideal — but I could be healthier.
So I'm moving. I'm doing the Couch Potato to 5k program, walking and running in this gradual process, three times a week. To my utter surprise, I love it. I love leaving the house with the headphones on, walking down our street to see Mt. Rainier, being washed with the smell of lilacs by that one bush, then entering the forest trail to move my body. Our lives are busy. I work from home. I'm the mother of a toddler without any childcare. I don't have much time to myself. Feeling my feet on the dirt is one of the best parts of my day. Breaking a sweat and feeling the muscles in my legs grow strong makes me much happier than that second piece of cake ever could.
I once told a friend of mine: "I've realized that happiness is movement in the body and stillness in the mind." I'm learning it once again.
On the other days, I'm doing this Jillian Michaels - 30 Day Shred
Movement makes me feel alive. I'm moving.

And I'm out in the garden every afternoon with Lu. That doesn't feel like exercise, but I'm moving my shoulders and bending my back and growing more limber by the day. There's a funny stubborn place when I'm not exercising, a place that makes it seem so impossibly hard to do. And then, when I start, that stubborn place softens, then disappears. I start to love it. And I wonder how I ever went without it.
We're growing some food in our garden. Those are the first pea shoots and fava bean seedlings I thinned yesterday. We've already planted lettuce and arugula, spinach, bush beans, carrots, red cabbage, chard, lacinato kale, tomatoes, summer squash, plus lots of herbs. We have plans for much more in May. Every morning, I go out to the garden to see what has risen. It's all green and growing. We'll be eating our share of vegetables, plus the raspberries from the 20 thriving canes along the fence. It will easier to eat healthier with this.
I've been very inspired by my friend Megan's piece about losing 25 pounds in one year, which she wrote on her blog Not Martha. She articulated how I feel about diets better than I could:
"The bits involving food slowly sorted out into simply eating in moderation. Previously I had tried low carb diets and counting calories or keeping track of what I'd eaten in a day. And you know what? All that being aware of food all day drove me crazy. The result was that I grew resentful and obsessive and felt hungry all the time. And then I would eat a whole bag of Doritos. So instead I decided to try to just not think about all that hard. I ate more carefully, more kale less Annie's Mac and Cheese, and smaller meals with more snacks. I started eating breakfast, something I'm not inclined towards, to keep my metabolism going. Slowly I learned how long it takes for me to get rid of sugar cravings (two weeks), and that bagged baby carrots make me ill, and that I really like farro and kale, and that a little bit of olive oil used to cook a meal makes it far more satisfying than when using one of those olive oil mister things. I cut down on sugar and white flour and beer and eventually started avoiding those things knowing that they would only make me hungry later. Apples and almonds and light Baybell cheeses are surprisingly satisfying snacks, a mug of green tea in the afternoon helps a lot. I ate more carefully during the week and less on the weekends."
Exactly.
I don't believe that it's any particular foods that make me gain weight. I have plenty of friends who love butter and bacon as much as me, and they are slender and fit. I'm still working on puff pastry and other baked goods. I'm not giving up on that, especially when I bake them for you. However, Danny's co-workers at the restaurant are going to have a steady stream of cookies and breads from now on. Three bites, maybe one slice, and then it leaves the house.
When I remember to put my fork down on the plate between bites, I feel a difference.
I'm still going to live in food. This is my passion, my joy, my shared work with Danny. I'm just trying to find a new relationship with food in this, a different way of being with it. I'm very much interested in reading Melissa Clark's book, The Skinny: How to Fit into Your Little Black Dress Forever
It's being mindful that matters.
I've been inspired by this new book, written by Thich Nhat Hanh and Dr. Lilian Cheung, Savor: Mindful Eating, Mindful Life
"As you begin to look deeply into the roots of your weight problem, take care not to be harsh on yourself. The 'judge' inside your head often makes you feel abad about all the 'shoulds' — you should not have eaten that cheesecake, you should have spent more time at the gym. You may also be daunted by your past failures and struggles with weight. It is time to stop blaming yourself for these failures. Perhaps you were following the wrong advice. Perhaps you were able to lose some weight initially on one diet or another, but the diets were too restrictive, your cravings took hold, and you eventually gave up and gained the weight back. You are not separate from your family and environment. In the past you did not have enough of the right conditions supporting you to maintain a healthy weight."
I'm not going to say no to the self I am, or wish to remove parts of myself, or aim for some artificial goal. I haven't weighed myself once in the last month. I'm not interested in the numbers.
I know I am on the right path by the way my clothes fit, by what other people say, by how my body feels. This isn't about a goal for me, the endpoint when I can finally relax and say now I'm good enough. I'm here. Now.

My flickr friend, Lisa Moussalli, gave a beautiful interview to the incredible Jennifer Causey at Simply Photo. I was moved by everything Lisa said, but particularly this:
"I've spent a good bit of time in France, and something I certainly observe there is the importance of sitting while you eat, and of always making room at the table for guests. This starts with the early evening apĂ©ro – a drink and a snack and a time to regroup and relax at the end of a busy day – and continues with the meal and and then the cheese plate and then dessert and coffee or tea. Keeping slowness and welcome at the heart of eating is a simple and profound ethos, and it's one I try to practice."
I'm still going to be eating great food. I'm just going to try to do this more mindfully.
Lu's leftover scrambled eggs can go in the trash from now on.

She is the real reason I am doing this. She has endured some enormous suffering in her short life, and yet she is resilient, aware, and funny as hell. This kid is alive.
She also never stops moving. She climbs every surface, runs at full pace, dances at the first hint of music, and is all muscle and motion. She inspires me. I want to be as active as this kid. Little kids know how to live. I want to go back to that.
Mostly, though, I don't want to miss a minute of her life. I want to see her grow up. She's turning 2 in three months. (What?!) Given how quickly these two years have gone, I know that 2 will become 3, 3 become 6, 6 become 12, and 12 become graduating from college in about 14 seconds. I want to be limber for this. I want to be here as long as I can.
In the past, when I tried to lose weight, I thought the pounds were the point. I hated my life. I wanted something more. I believed I could never be okay at that weight.
Now, for the first time, I'm not trying to change anything about me or my life. Danny adores me, wherever I am. But he wants me around for a long time too. In these past five years since I stopped eating gluten, I have learned more and more, in ever widening circles, about where my food comes from and what works for my body. This time, I'm listening to it.
I love my life. I just want to walk through it more lightly.

You may be wondering why I have told you all this. Well, for one, I would like you to know this: if you ever look at someone who is overweight (in your mind), and think, "Wow, she's really let herself go," just remember that there is always a story behind it.
Also, something has not been sitting well in my stomach these past few months, not writing about all this. I did what I could. It was all too raw at first. But this space is a haven, for me, for some of you. A place of laughter, yes. But also a place of sharing our stories and learning from each other.
Our lives have not been as idyllic as they might have seemed. They have been hard. They have also been beautiful.
Telling you is telling me. I've been able to hide from myself. I'm always the one behind the camera. When I saw photos of myself on friends' blogs, I cringed and did a dozen sit-ups immediately. But with all this grieving and too much to process, I dove right back into my old habits.
For years, I have felt an affinity with this quote from Mark Doty, a brilliant American poet:
"I don't exactly feel that this openness has been a choice, although of course on some less-than-conscious level it must be. Rather it feels to me as if it's simply the course my life has taken, beginning in the early eighties with the process of coming out. I felt then a great thirst for directness, an imperative to find language with which to be direct to myself, which is of course the result of having been, like many young gay men, divided from my self, from the authentic character of my desire. I felt I had to hide for years! And the result of that for me, once I began to break through the dissembling, was a thirst for the genuine."
The thirst for the genuine. That's why I am sharing this.
Finally, if just one of you reads this and hears something of yourself, I hope it helps.
445 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 201 – 400 of 445 Newer› Newest»Thank you for a beautiful post, Shauna.
As the mother of a 2yo who's already had four surgeries, I understand completely. The last one was life-threatening, and occurred last month. I'm still catching up on sleep and see more lines on my face.
How true that the mother takes care of herself last-I am a testimony to that.
Thankfully, you seem to be open and ready for this new page. Thank you for your honesty.
Much love to the whole family.
As they say, it takes a village. We followers wait with bated breath for your posts. We enjoy your humor, recipes and warmth that conveys right to our hearts. Thanks for sharing your concerns, joys, sadness and frustrations. And, know this, we are here to pick you up when you are down becaue you are part of our village.
My dear, your writing touches me. As a lover of food, as a mother, as a wife, as a person, it really touches me. Grab hold of every moment with Lu, because you are right: the years with our children really do pass in the blink of an eye. Wishing you and your family continued happiness and good health. xo, Dawn
What about adoption? I don't think Lu has to be your only small bundle of joy- you two obviously have lots more love to share.
Beautiful and inspirational in many, many ways. Best wishes to you and your family.
Thank you for sharing your story Shauna - I can only imagine how hard it must have been, but I know you will always be positive. You are an inspiration. Sending lots of love and hugs, xx
I started reading you before you even mentioned 'The Chef' and I just want to say thank you for writing this.
I feel like 2 weeks ago I turned my own corner on how I view taking care of myself and think I'm in now a good spot, finally. Your post has really been an encouragement and I want to thank you for taking the time to write this; I know posts take time and life.
Thank you. Thank you for sharing your life with us.
Shauna,
So often I have finished reading your posts, sat back, taken a big breath and wondered: how does she do it? How does she carry the fear and the pain and the stress and the worries, keeping it all separated from the humor and the joy and the celebration? You've been so careful to parse out little hints of the challenges of these past 2 years, so careful to protect US from it all, I worried for you.
I am so relieved--so grateful--that you've found the courage to 'come out'. In so doing, you allow all of us to gather around and embrace you, pooling the astronomical power of well-wishing.
Be well, friend.
Just say yes.
Beautiful! Thank you for this.
I'm crying, Shauna, for a whole number of reasons I'm not going into here. Thank you for this post. Thank you.
Oh, it helps. It really helps.
Thank-you for being so raw and honest. Indeed, you've had a rough run of it and you deserve every moment to stand up and say it sucks. But you are doing what so many of us avoid - making the change to make it better.
Our lives aren't measured by the things that happen to us, it is measured by how we respond to the world. Kudos to you for moving forward. Very inspriational.
Shauna,
Such wisdom and strength from such a young woman. I am impressed.
I can't say that I know exactly how you feel, but I empathize nonetheless. I've struggled with my weight since high school, and I was never successful at losing it and keeping it off. It wasn't until I went off gluten that I started finally losing weight and keeping it off. This site - your words and photos, particularly - was a big part of keeping me sane through the detox and the cravings, reminding me that there was still lots of tasty foods out there and the spirit of a Baker Who Can inside me.
Now I'm where you are - trying to eat right, trying to exercise, trying to remember where joy lies. It's hard, but it's doable.
I guess what I'm trying to say is, take care of yourself, and thank you for letting us experience part of your life. If there's anything a distant intimate stranger can do for you, I'm there. Brightest blessings to you and your family, for now and always.
Beautiful, strong post. And being mindful of what you eat is the best way, in my opinion, of getting to a healthy weight without feeling like you are somehow punishing yourself. You enjoy every bite and your body thanks you. But seriously -- you have been through a lot of crap and it's so lovely to watch someone be gentle with themselves over that, and gradually make changes, rather than being harsh and self-punishing. No good there. So... kudos, and hugs, and let's hope the next year is better for all of us!
Thank you for sharing, really really thank you.
I have been prescribed 2hrs of exercise a day. When I moved to NYC I lost 80lbs, yes read it, 80lbs. I moved from there to the suburbs of Boston where I found that 80lbs waiting for me.
I've visited a nutritionist and through no fault of her own she didn't know how to help someone who lived in a gluten free, and nut free home. Do you blame her?
So she looked at our eating and prescribed 2hrs of exercise per day. Sure, I'm not entirely sure where to put it. But one step at a time, I've worked in 1hr a day 3x's a week and am walking more at lunch--since it all adds up.
I've given up cooking dinner almost entirely, and am trying to eat mostly vegies, fruits and proteins. However, I've noticed that if I don't have carbohydrates I overeat the next day, so I'm trying to figure out the balance.
I don't have to be skinny, I just want to be able to move freely again and when we do have kids to be able to play with them with all the pep and verve kids deserve.
Work it!!
I know you must be so proud to have made it through such trying experiences only to realize how strong and awesome you really are.
It's amazing how resilient human beings can be, and you are a shining example of such resiliency. Your blog inspires so many readers, and your honesty makes everyone of us feel even more connected to you.
Dear Shauna, I don't have a weight problem, but my dear-to-me sister-in-law does and your piece gives me so much insight to her struggles. I do have a problem with computer-induced inertia and I really connect with what you said about breaking through to more physical activity. And as the mother of a daughter with a serious medical condition, you touched my heart with your brave and honest writing. My daughter is 20 years old now and we have been though some very tough years--hers is a psychiatric condition and the last 4 years as she has entered adulthood have been quite confounding and harrowing. But even with all that, I want to be here too for all that there is to say Yes to (love that from your writing too). Your essay made me get up from my desk and go straight up the hill near my house for a 40 minute, heart rate raising, hike. Keep it coming, Shauna. You are touching many lives in many ways.
Tracy
p.s. I and my 12 year old daughter are both Gluten Intolerant and we love your recipes--looking forward to the new cookbook.
Shauna,
I read your post and then the comments and WOW - people are amazing. Thank you for sharing your story. I wish you and yours all the best. You are not alone and please know that even though we have never met, I and all of those who posted before me! are pulling for you, encouraging you, and willing you to succeed - to be healthy and to find balance in your life again.
I gained 50 lbs in a year on fertility drugs, and gained every year after that for the seven years that we tried. I developed stage 4 endo and have been on different drug therapies to correct the issue, I know how frustrating it can be to not like what you see in the mirror or in a picture. The best any of us can do is to not give up, keep trying, keep making the right choices.
You have a beautiful child and a man who loves you, you have your health and a successful cookbook. Bravo - now go get some sleep!
Thank you so much for writing this. Your posts always leave me thinking, and I can often relate to what you write. What your confronted with cannot be compared to my problems though, but I always understand what your trying to say.
I have been struggling with a serious eating disorder for the past 2 years and I'm just now recovering. I've always had problems with eating and I've always thought that I was eating too much and too unhealthy, and with my father criticizing my weight, I wanted to loose it all... and that's what I did. Now, I'm beginning to realize that neither way was the right one, that I have to listen to my body and that I can't be too strict with myself. (I'm trying to eat healthy at the moment and I'm doing good actually, apart from my passion for baking).
Reading food blogs like yours made me see how food can make people happy, when used in the right ways. Reading these blogs allow me to think about delicious foods and different ways to enjoy them and I don't waste my time anymore with finding new ways to not have to eat. I'm really thankful for people like you, who share their happiness and joy with people like me. It's really given me new strength to see how good life can be. I'm not completely cured yet, but I'm feeling better than I have for a long time (even though I'm only 16). I hope I can grow a strong woman like you are, and I wish you the best of luck for your future and the future of your family (you have a really sweet daughter by the way:))
Helena, with greetings from Germany (hope my English is comprehensable :-P)
Well said. What a struggle you have had the last two years. I admire you for your words and your passion for life and all the pleasures in it, like food. I think it is amazing that you have continued to write with everything that has happened and done it so beautifully. I hope this next journey is as positive for you as what you give us all in your writing. Now, I've got to go and hug my four year old - you're right the time truly does go quickly and I'm going to try my best to appreciate it all too! Sometimes it's all too easy to forget.
I adore you. Your courage, strength, and beautiful writing gets me every time. It takes a lot of wisdon and stillness--the kind you can only find in a mind that's at peace--to write those words. In owning the need for change and health you give back to all of us that read your words.
Thank you for telling us all this. Your honesty gives us faith that we can face great odds and do something really good for ourselves. And others.
Hugs and kisses to all of you.
You are beautiful, and have a beautiful life. But there is nothing about being beautiful that keeps it from being hard hard hard.
In fact, I think recognizing how hard it is to make beauty is part of witnessing it. You have kept a positive place in your life, and kept moving forward, through so much.
Also, from inside the thing, I think recognizing beauty is what keeps me going, at least. It's only when I can't find the beauty that I give in to despair, and when I can see it I can get through even the most awful things I can imagine.
The beauty in your life was evident, even with only the little wisps of the difficult parts you have shown. Seeing more of the picture come into focus makes it even more.
You are amazing and inspiring and yes very human and imperfect. Perfect is boring. Being yourself, right where you are, and finding joy in it, that is beautiful. Thank you for being you.
touching at so many levels. thank goodness you are cancer-free. thank goodness your mom is ok. thank goodness lu has healed and is doing well. the glimpses of her in pictures are so full of the personality you describe.
but what i really wanted to say, to you, myself, and everyone else, is to remember to forgive yourself. anyone else in your situation would have done the same. maybe worse. the stress of surgeries and cancer scares and lack of sleep and... allow that to be it's own segment of time, have compassion for yourself in the face of everything you endured, and allow yourself to exhale and be here now. with a joyful toddler, the chef, a book on the way, spring and it's impending bounty of good and healthful things, a lovely island to run on... it was ok to be where we were and to cope the way we coped. and it's good to be where we are now.
i think this comment is more for me than anything. but i'm glad you share your beautiful food and the ups and downs of life along with it. a place for us all to reflect and be dazzled...
Thanks for sharing, Shauna. I just had a c-section 16 days ago, and have known since our little girl was only 12 1/2 weeks inside me that she would need surgery upon birth. They whisked her off to the NICU just after birth and I was only able to hold her about 15 hours later and just for a few minutes. The following day she went to surgery and was hooked up to all sorts of tubes for several days. Luckily, she came through it all like a champion and was released from the NICU in only 8 days. The doctors originally told us it would be 2-6 weeks.
Glad you are taking care of yourself now - you deserve it. Food can be such comfort in times of need, but it can also be a double edged sword. Thanks again for sharing your story.
lots and lots and lots of love.
Lu is SO very lucky to have you as a mom. xoxo
shauna, what a brave face you've had to put on, and now a brave gift of sharing. blessings to you and your family! i'm glad you're not giving up bacon!
Shauna -
I haven't posted in a long time, but you should know that your blog kept me company during my cancer diagnosis and surgery, when I was stuck on my couch unable to go out for nearly 2 months. Thank you for that.
I completely relate to your search for genuine, and hope you are on the healthy road to continue to discover it.
Barrie in NYC.
Thank you for this beautiful piece of writing and sharing so much of yourself in it (as you do weekly on the blog)
I have tears in my eyes reading this. Weight is such a tough thing and losing weight is hard. You are so full of determination and have such amazing sources of motivation to get the weight off (health, Lu) that I know you will do it.
hugs
oh goodness. did not mean to leave off the last "a" in your name in my comment above! i was so moved i typed like a racehorse :) apologies!
Shauna, that was beautiful. I sat and cried for you and your family and I feel honored that you chose to share your story to us. And I am so happy for you that you are taking this step not only for your family, but for yourself.
Last year I tore my ACL playing tennis. On April 20, 2009 I had surgery to repair my ACL. I am still recovering and am leaps and bounds better than I was. But in the meantime I gained about 10 pounds while I sat with my knee elevated. Not a lot, but a lot for me. I have been frustrated and lamenting those 10 pounds for months and months. You have inspired me to get to work! I have been just attributing it to age (i am 37) and been so frustrated that I am not making any progress. But if you can do it I can do it!
Thank you!
Shauna, you are flat out incredible. We know it, Danny and Lu know it, you must know it too. I applaud your courage in speaking so plainly about things most of us try to hide or ignore. I'm so glad Lu's doing so well and you can refocus your efforts a little. Take care, I wish you all the best things in the world.
Thank you for your vulnerability. What a blessing you are. There's much to ponder in what you wrote. Thank you. May you be blessed with the years full of richness and joy, and not missing one of Lu's precious moments.
I applaud you Shauna, today is the first day I have read your blog and it was indeed a profound one. I followed a link that Andrea from Superhero had tweeted and I'm so glad I did. You moved me in so many ways.
I just wanted to say Thanks and a big Kudos to you for letting everything go in your post. Its a journey I will look forward to reading and sharing in the future.
What strength. Bravo.
Thank you. This helps.
This touched my heart! *hugs* I've been reading you for almost three years, and won't be stopping anytime soon.
I can't even begin to tell you how much I needed to read that. You are not alone - and you have let me know I am not alone either.
Thank you!!
Hi Shauna,
I just recently found your blog and cannot even tell you how much I have loved reading it. The recipes are wonderful but what I love even more are your posts. This one was by far the most touching and I just have to say that you are an amazing woman. Thank you for sharing your life with ours. All my well wishes for you and yours,
Krista
Dear Shauna
Thank you for your sharing. I had experience some difficulties in my life that got very deep last december and reading about your cooking and your joy for life help me to go through these difficult times. I'm now in a better place and I totally identify with the phrase "thirst for the genuine". I also want to share that not all people gain weight when they go through stressful times some people like me gain health problems like migraines, mysterious gastrointestinal problems, anxiety attacks and the doctors told me the same thing that they told you, exercise and eat well. And you help me on the eating well part, I love your recipes! Thank you for being you.
Genuine and beautifully written. I wish you the best with your daughter. We have one that is mentally handicapped and have spent years trying to adapt to sleep deprivation so I empathize with your 'mindless eating'. I will be back!
It's posts like these that have kept me with you for more than four years. Love, love, love.
- Calli
As others have said, thank you for being honest. Obviously this post resonates with many of us, myself included, and that's exactly why more people need to open up and tell their stories. You did a good thing by posting, and you're doing a good thing by taking care of yourself. Lu's going to want her mama around for a long, long time, and I remind myself that my own daughter wants that, too, when I slip into unhealthy habits. My mom died when I was 22, of congenital emphysema, and I still miss her like crazy 15 years later.
Wow, you are very brave and I am happy to hear that you, Lu and Danny are all well, despite the challenges you have been through. You have incredible strength and what a gift you have given us by sharing. Thank you and I wish you continued good health and much happiness.
Shauna! thanks for sharing. What alot of people do not realize is lack of sleep, and "stress" cause us to gain weight. Thank you for sharing. I had done the low-carb thing 5 years ago and through a doctor lost 50 lbs, when she told me to start eating wheat. I got sick and gained 60 lbs back in less then a year-that is when I got diagnosed with celiacs. I do not want to diet anymore-so I exercise and am slowly losing weight but FEEL GREAT!! good job!!
Shauna,
Thanks so much for sharing this. I went through some similar experiences. I have found that openness fosters intimacy, and, of course, with intimacy, love blooms. This has been both a personal lesson and one that helps me in my work as a therapist.
Hugs to you.
"Peace. It does not mean to be in a place where there is no noise, trouble, or hard work. It means to be in the midst of those things and still be calm in your heart." I love this quote, and your writings up to this point seem to be the calm in your heart. For sharing that peace with us, how grateful I am and should we all be. Thank you. Peace to you and yours.
Thank you so much for this post. You can't know how many times I've wondered how you could eat all this fabulous food and not have a weight problem (something I've struggled w/ my whole life). I applaud your honesty here and really appreciate your honest. This may be a food blog, true, but that's only a part of our lives -- as this post has shown. Thank you. --Sally
can you feel the love? i hope so.
so much is coming your way.....
this is incredible. thank you.
Beautifully written. You are an inspiration in so many ways-- thank you. We want you to stick around for a long time, too!
The most meaningful blog read this year. Stay strong!
I've always loved your writing, but this post has really blown me away. I applaud your courage for posting this. It is incredibly heartfelt and must have been very hard, especially given the fact that your life pretty much revolves around food! I wish you the best of luck in your efforts to be healthier. As an avid runner, I am thrilled to hear you've taken up the sport! And yes, hitting the trails is one of life's great pleasures.
As far as eating, my own issue tends to be sugar, which I eat way too much of. I recently gave it up - though not forever, just to give myself a complete break. I am finding other things to snack on- sliced apple, cashews, cheese. It's not about weight, but about what I put in my body. Trying to be more mindful without obsessing. I have done Weightwatchers, as well as recording calories on dailyplate.com and other sites. But I feel they take way too much time and cause me to focus excessively on exact calories. This takes away the pleasure of eating.
Anyway, I'm sure you will find your way. It sounds like you already have. And I am thrilled to hear you, Lu and your mom are all well. THANK YOU for sharing your life with us. I am sure you've helped more than a few people w/ this post!
One of the most honest posts I've ever read. I only hope that one day I can write something so sincere.
Shauna, I've been reading for years -- your passion for food, love, and life is contagious. Good for you for hanging everything out there -- by doing this you've probably lifted up a lot of us.
It seems like so many of my friends and family and people I know have been struggling lately -- cancer and other various illnesses, unemployment, anxiety, depression, loneliness -- but through it all, I see so many of us focusing on getting healthier and making a conscious effort to feel happier. We have to. We have to take our lives into our own hands and make each day special, no matter what obstacles stand ahead of us. It's good to know you're right there with us, through the good and the bad. Best of luck to you, Danny, and Lu. You all deserve it.
Shauna, this is such a brave and motivating post. I'm sure it will touch many readers.
Dear Lu, she is a sweetie.I'm glad she has survived more than any child should ever have to endure.
On the clear cancer results - fantastic news.
Shauna - you are...fabulous, in every way. Your book, your writing, your blog, your spirit, has brought me more comfort in these last few months of being diagnosed with a gluten intolerance than you'll ever know. I appreciate your posts, especially candid ones such as this. It is refreshing when someone bares their soul, because we can all identify with what you're going through right now.
I wish you the very best luck in your new fitness program! The couch to 5K program is EXCELLENT.
This is easily the most beautiful post I have ever read. Thank you for all of it.
you're amazing. thank you.
What a great piece Shauna! Your words will probably touch a lot of people. Plus since food is your life, it was great to read about your relationship with it.
When I used to go through tough times, I used to starve myself. I got the help I needed and actually getting pregnant the first time is what helped to save me. I had my kids late, 31 with the first and 40 with the second. So I am 55 now and my philosophy is eat to live. I don't own a scale I jog, ride bikes, hike and garden for exercise. When your entire body is working well, like takes on a different tone. You will also be a good example for Lu.
Keep up the great work! Keep us posted on your progress.
thank you for sharing your story.
my mother died just a few days ago from cancer. here is an old photo of her http://katsinthebelfry.blogspot.com/2010/04/to-my-mother.html
i definitely am going to get back into exercising too. i'm glad to read that you are well.
Thank you so much for sharing! We all have struggles and it's good to know we are not alone. I'm finding myself in a similar place, weight wise, and I knew exactly what you meant when you said that there was a stubborn part of yourself that didn't want to exercise, but every time you do exercise, it gets a little easier. Glad to hear that you are all doing well despite all of the health concerns!
Thank you for sharing such an amazing story. As a big-boned gluten free blogger who also loves to bake, I understand your perspective completely. When you have a true appreciation of food and the ability to be overwhelmed by the wrenches thrown into your life, it's hard to maintain an ideal weight. I think it's inspiring that you can share your story so candidly and with such heartfelt emotion. Thank you again.
So real. So honest. So thankful for you!
thank you.
Let me join the choir of THanks for your "thirst for the genuine" and for sharing with us. One of the things I loved about reading blogs that made me want to write blogs were the stories - the truths that made you feel you were a part of another human in a real way, perhaps even more important than meeting them. You have touched me, and so many others - without even seeing us. That's amazing and appreciated. Love.
Bravo for your bravery. It must have felt so liberating to get that off your chest. So many of us feel similarly but don't have the courage to say it aloud. I empathize with you in so many ways your post brought a tear to my eye more than once. Thank you for sharing :-)
Thank you, Shauna, for your open heart and searing honesty. Yes, it helps.
You are an amazing gift. A beautiful, thoughtful, talented, generous and amazing spirit who shares herself so kindly with us all. Thank you.
Oh, Shauna. I've been reading you blog for a few years, and this moved me to tears. Bless you. Bless you for being in it, all the way, all the time, and being able to express it with such clarity. I wish you and Danny and Lu a year of (finally!) peace where every day brims with joy.
You always, unfailingly, choose life. I love that about you.
I can't imagine all the grief you've been through. Life always seems to plan everything at once, doesn't it? I know I've said this in past comments before, but your story is so amazing and I will always be waiting to hear more of it. I think it's important to share both the good and the bad because there's always this web of support from the people here who love you.
Always praying for you and your family and for your health.
Shauna, you are a strong woman, a wonderful mother and a good friend to those of us struggling with a gluten free life. My best wishes and support to you and Danny. I look forward to what your life changes will bring. While I love your baking, I will also love hearing about your new food and hope you will continue to share the new stuff with us. Your efforts help so much. Take care and God bless.
Elaine, Grantham NH
What a wonderful post. Thank you for sharing so much of yourself with us. Reading about all you have been going through it is amazing you have been able to continue with such thoughtful fun posts over the year.
What a journey you have been on and are continuing, I can't wait to see whats next!
I am holding you all in the light.
Shauna - look how many people your post has already helped! Thank you so much for your honestly and genuineness. It reminds me of Mary Oliver's poem "Wild Geese:"
You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting —
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.
from Dream Work by Mary Oliver
published by Atlantic Monthly Press
© Mary Oliver
Glorious. Thank you.
Shauna:
I am a physician and psychotherapist. I work with a model called CBT - cognitive behaviour therapy. Last December I was at a conference and I saw Dr. Judith Beck present on her work using CBT to help people lose weight. I ran to buy the book. I do not need to lost weight, but the majority of my patients do. I think that the book, called "The Beck Diet Solution: train your brain to think like a thin person" is one of the best books I have EVER read in my field. It is an approach that can help change all the sabotauging thoughts and behaviours around poor eating that lead to weight gain (or prevent weight loss). It is about making permanent lifestyle changes. It can be used with any reasonable diet plan. It sounds like you have already started doing a lot of what the book recommends - but I highly highly recommend it to anyone who wants to lose weight. BTW: I have no connection to Judith Beck! The book is a fairly easy read, even for someone with little time and sleep deprivation. Good luck!
Unlike many others who have commented here, I haven't been following your blog for a long time, I haven't gotten to know you, in fact I just stumbled across your blog and this post today.
What a heartbreaking and challenging time you have been through - I simply can't imagine what it is likely. But I am so grateful to have found you and that you have chosen to share what you have been through. I applaud your honesty and openness and most of all your courage, not just in bringing this forth but also in stepping inside yourself - for most of us the hardest place of all to visit.
Good luck with your journey - I'll visit again.
Sue
Thank you for sharing, you have a great voice that is so easy to relate to. Did you ever think that you could be so strong? Keep on running!
thanks for sharing, your health is the most important thing. i watch RUBY and she is so inspiring, losing over 300 lbs. and finding what it is that she is "feeding". thankfully for us you wrote a cookbook but it is not worth losing your health over, take a break and take care of you!
Thank you so much for sharing your families trials I'm very touched by the words you wrote.
thank you for this post. it resonated with me on so many levels. i have struggled with all of these same things in my life. i am now finding my way toward a healthier life for myself and for my family. your authenticity is so refreshing.
I feel silly writing the three hundred and whatever comment, but I must because your post touched my heart.
I'm sure I'm going to say some of the same things that the last hundred people wrote but here goes.
Shauna you are amazing. I wouldn't be to hard on yourself by sharing the burdens, because even though I don't actually know you, I feel like we are friends. I want to hear what's on your heart, I want you to free it from weighing you down (in more ways than one) and I want even more healing to flow into your life. But most of all life is never happy all the time (even though we desperately try to make it that way at times) we all get thrown a boomerang now and then that brings us to those stressful levels, and that's O.K. It's then we learn to come together as friends to help each other walk through it. Share the load and the burden is light. Whoever says you can be happy all the time is full of hobbsquash. There are too many realities that prevent that one from happening, I mean haven't we all tried? And how many have succeeded?!
The good thing is all should get better from here on out. You've gone through one heck of a valley and soon you'll be seeing a change of scenery. It will be blue skies and apple pies.
I find when I have wanted something to happen in the past and it hasn't worked out as I had liked, after time passes and I walk through that other door (that I would have never ordinarily walked through) things are always better that I had originally planned. And the lesson learned from my perceived loss is always better than if I had gotten exactly what I had always wanted.
God has a funny way of bringing the best out of us this way.
SO Good luck Shauna on your journey to good health. Love lots, forgive easily (most of all yourself), and life will be good.
God bless!
so real, so true, thank you. The reasons you wrote resonate. there is always a story behind everyone's seemingly different facade. I actually just learned that about an accquaintance.
We have had our share of family medical issues, and pediatric surgery and NICU issues...but to hear your story, to live your courage, doubt, and read your blog's optimism...is awe inspiring. really. I wish you well and thank you for inspiring me to live with intent and integrity.
I am right there with you sister. Life has been distracting me from focusing on myself, but I have learned through the past several months that change is possible. My aunt lost probably around 60 pounds and kept it off using sparkpeople.com, I've heard great things about it. I'm so sorry for what you have had to go through. You mean so much to so many people. We all believe in you!
thank you for you. for being real and raw. for sharing your truth. your entry about carrying that weight is an inspiration for us, your readers, to dig deep within ourselves too. i feel grateful to have found your blog as it enriches my life with your food for the body and soul.
i admire you.
Thank you for your generosity - what a special nectar of genuine you give. . . blessings to you and your family.
Catherine
Thank you for such a lovely, thoughtful piece on the moments in LIFE that go into one's weight and health. Your goal to be more mindful is so inspiring. Thanks for sharing this.
This might seem a little out of place but...
*squishie bear hugs*
as I hand over tea.
Shauna - What a beautiful and brave post. Thank you for sharing and for doing it in a way that touches anyone who sees it. I will send best wishes and caring and do 30 Day Shred with you.
Shauna you inspire me daily. Please keep giving all that you give to all of us out here, Lu, The Chef and most importantly yourself. You make the world anew with your vision.
Thank you for all that you share.
Thank you so much for sharing. I, too, am learning how to let go. I, too, have had a difficult year and have some extra pounds to show for it. But, like you, I am letting go and living well. I often think of that saying..."if you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans." It's hard to let go, but you know that life is abundant. Your words are powerful. Thank you.
Lovely post, Shauna. I have found that the same beliefs that got me to develop good financial habits and to change my life after getting diagnosed with ovarian cancer and to eat gluten-free also have made it possible for me to get myself to a healthy weight. It's all about embracing what life has to offer within our given limitations. We all have limitations that are placed on us by our bodies, our lives, our societies, etc., but there's so much beauty within those. The first post on my blog talks about this better than I'm doing now: http://aprovechar.danandsally.com/?p=1
We're all rooting for you.
If you like 30-Day Shred, you'll LOVE No More Trouble Zones. I did NMTZ every few days for about a month, and it actually reshaped my body. For real. I wish Jillian Michaels would follow me around my daily life yelling at me to "STOP PHONING IT IN!" Sometimes, when I can't find the motivation to do something, I think "What would Jillian Michaels yell at me?" It helps.
Thank you for writing this piece. I have been so inspired by reading your posts and your book. My eyes and my senses have really been opened by a lot of what you have written about food and now I feel so inspired by what you have written about exercise and moving one's body.
Best wishes to you and your family, Shauna. I am also struggling to gain more wisdom about my health. Sally Fallon and the Weston Price Foundation have helped me quite a bit with food issues, so I wanted to share these resources with you just in case you think they can be helpful to you.
Hi, Shauna,
I've been reading you for a long time, but I don't know if I've commented before. I don't have time to read all the comments (300! wow!) because I have a toddler of my own, turning 2 in June.
You bring tears to my eyes. My little one was born 2 months early, through c-section, so she was in the NICU and I couldn't see her for more than a day. I've felt that fear, and not being able to do anything about it. And to have that fear hanging over you for so long? Plus not sleeping and trying to get actual work done?
I don't care how much weight you've gained...you have done Very Well. I pray that your hard season has passed, and that this new season will be one of joy, peace, and health for you and your precious ones. Thank you for your heartfelt and always inspiring words.
The beauty of your voice, and the courage laying behind these words is so admirable. Thank you for the way you continue to share from your heart.
Oh, Shauna. My heart just bleeds for what you've been through. My DH was diagnosed with cancer in the fall, and I know only too well how hard it is to eat right with the time at the hospital, the tests, the stress, and the fear.
It is so easy for people to say "take care of yourself" and so hard to do it. I am so happy yuo're in the clear and proud of you for taking the hard steps to actually take care.
"When a door is closed, a window is opened." Time to find the window, girlfried. Hanf in there!
You are beautiful, wonderfully and fearfully made. Sending you smiles, and much love and appreciation today, Shauna.
Beautifully written, thank you for being so open, honest and fearless to tell your story. I will be interested to follow your journey, please keep writing... Thank You.
Shauna, you are legit.
In the beginning, your book and blog helped me know I would eat well even without gluten. And as I keep reading I learn much about living life well, too.
Thank you for it all.
I'm saying a prayer for you and yours, right now.
God bless you!
That right there is a lot. It's a testament to your strength and that of your marriage that you have made it through intact.
You mentioned pumping milk for Lu and, I'm not sure if you are aware, but breastfeeding has been shown to reduce the chance of breast cancer in the mother and the breastfed child too. So you can check that cancer preventer off your list!
What an amazingly beautiful post. I think every woman can see something of herself in your words.
Shauna, you epitomize "You never know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have". Bless you, now go breathe deeply and rest.
This made me misty. Shauna, I know the sleep thing. Girl, do I know it. We have a son who is bipolar and he came out manic. Didn't sleep until 3...almost 4...come to think of it.
I am so glad you are okay. And though I do have 3 children there was a time in my life, about 5 years) where it looked as tho I would only have my son. I cried and stamped my feet alot then. Felt totally heartbroken...I could literally feel what you wrote about the gaggle of girls in the bathroom. My prayer is that God (whichever one you believe in) gives you another child...in some way...biological or not....you seem like an awesome mama! Oh, and might I just suggest...if it's doable for you... to homeschool Lu. My 10 year old daughter is a social butterfly and has tons of friends. But she is also a homeschooler. It makes for really cool, close families. I know, with having an almost 21 year old son, how fast it DOES go.
The weight thing...yeah...that too. I lost 30lbs 2 years ago. I started with eating mindfully and walking. It took me 8 years to get around to it tho!! And I have to be constantly vigilant! No sleep was the thing, that did me in, too. In 2000, My daughter was born, our middle son was dx with Bipolar (and was still not sleeping), I was in a car accident that left me with a chronic headache, my mom (best friend) died, and my husband got laid off. I stopped sleeping and got fat.
Basically, thank you for sharing. There are so many of us who have gone through something devastating and being open lets others in to encourage, support, and show love. It is what we need to keep going. Thank you for keeping going.
Oh, and my husband works for the American Cancer Society. He has been telling me how ACS's stats show that women are the worst at taking care of themselves and putting everyone else first. Women need to take care of themselves first to be there for the very ones we normally put first. So, thank you for writing what you did. I am sure you have readers who needed to hear it. I am glad you are taking care of you to be there for Lu and Danny. I bet they are glad too! Plus, all your readers really like you too...and want you to stick around.
Rachel in Atlanta, Ga
Thank you for opening up your heart and sharing such a personal journey. My eyes are filled with tears and I feel thankful to know (once again) I am not the only one with overwhelming challenges. Your little Lu is a brave soul and she is so blessed to have you and Danny to love and care for her. As far as the weight issue...Jillian's been kicking my trash for the past couple of months. I've struggled with my weight for the first time in my life since being diagnosed with Celiac 3yrs ago. It is frustrating, depressing and confusing to me all at the same time. I'm inspired by your efforts and wish you the very best. No wonder Lu is so brave...look at you!
You are on the right path and have the right frame of mind, that's the key to becoming a healthy you. I've struggled with weight for as long as I can remember and this past year I've come to a lot of the realizations you've mentioned. It feels fantastic to finally be healthy and you will be there before you know it. My youngest is Lu's age and she and my son are my main motivation, to be a healthy example for them and to grow old with them.
Thank you for sharing.
In tears indeed. Wow, thank you for sharing this all. For the inspiration, for the reminder, for the permission to love ourselves, accept ourselves and have the courage and patience to change ourselves. like anyone trying to make change (no matter how emotionally entrenched our motivations are), it's not easy. i hope you will find you've got hundreds of cheerleaders out there. and i now count you as one of mine, even though we're strangers.
Wow, look at all the comments. I'll add another "thank you." For the last 3 months I've been having continual migraines. I've finally gotten help and the cycle is broken, but I know that when one is in constant pain or turmoil one does not have the strength for food/exercise discipline. Your genuineness is a gift for which many of us, though really strangers, love you.
Thank you for posting this. I am forwarding it on to a few folks, whom I think will benefit from reading it. I am also grateful personally; this post brings you much closer to "humanity" (instead of simply "well written, interesting food blogger").
I am sorry for your loss of future childbirth, however, have you considered adoption? The lack of bearing children need not rob you of the gift of additional children.
Shauna, thank you thank you thank you. What a beautiful post. I am one of Geneen Roth's retreat students and saw your post on her facebook page. A big high five and a hell yeah! I have a 7 you who is disgustingly healthy. I am a physician who lives in fear of the possibility of illness affecting her. I eat to go away. Your post was poignant and spot on. Since starting Geneens work I have found, well, me. Not the me I need to be to start living life in the shoulds. Just the me that is me now. And that is so much more than enough. I will enjoy following your blog and am so glad I found it. I hope you one day find a way to one of the retreats.
Denise
Dear Shauna, I love your writing--I was touched to the point of tears reading your story. I feel some frisson of recognition in your story (as a mom and as someone who has weight issues and sleep dep) and I feel humbled and inspired at the same time. I wish you and your beautiful family good health and happiness forever.
I feel so privileged to read your writing on a regular basis. Knowing what you've been through makes me appreciate you on an even deeper level. Thank you for being an inspiration in so many ways to so many of us. You are a jewel.
I'm going to second the anonymous who asked about adoption.
This medication that will help you maintain your health does *not* have to preclude you and the chef from expanding your family. While adoption is not easy or simple or cheap, neither is pregnancy. Like the previous commenter said, you have lots of love to give. The family bonds formed between siblings and between parents and children do not require shared genetics or time spent in the same womb.
My younger sister is adopted, and, let me tell you, the fact that she and I look different and that she came home at the age of two months rather than two days matter not a lick. In *every* way we are sisters, and in *every* way she is my parents' daughter. Full stop.
So, in a sense, your choice to take the medication could actually allow you to 'have your cake and eat it, too'--so to speak. You *can* be proactive about your health and still grow your family, should you so choose...
Just a thought...
All the best, Shauna, and thanks for sharing! (As a long time silent reader, I gathered that something was up...)
I have been reading your posts (along with my Celiac daughter, the medical student) since BTC (Before The Chef)and as difficult as this post probably was to write I'm grateful that you did. For longtime readers the stuff between the lines was unmistakable and worrying, so it feels better to know -- and the medical student can stop speculating about what is going on with Lu. I admire your strength and good humor and I hope things do what they often do -- after going badly, then go well. Best of luck with all of this. I think living in a world of love has to be helpful.
We all appreciate you so much! Thank you for sharing this.
Wow, you and your fmily are so brave. I love your blog and I love that you feel comfortable sharing this with the world. I am so happy you are all well and living life to the fullest.
Shauna. My god. I'm only going to muck it up by blathering, so let's just leave it at this: your girl has one damn fine mama.
I've read your posts for over two years, ever since I've been committed to leading a gluten free lifestyle. It's helped me in ways I can't even express. And now this post. You are amazing. I have all the faith in the world that you will reach your goal and then some. Best wishes.
Wow you are tough, is what I have to say right off the bat!! So happy to hear that your beautiful daughter is doing well and sleeping better.
I cannot diet for the life of me and find that mindful eating, and trying to choose healthier foods over more indulgent ones, are the only things that truly work for weight control.
Some other books you might find worth looking at: The Diet Cure and The Mood Cure by Julia Ross; Dr. Gundry's Diet Evolution; and Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon.
I look forward to your writing about your journey, as I think it will address issues that many many people are struggling with.
I thought this post was beautifuly written. I could identify with quite a bit of what you said. And I thought the pictures of you on your friend's blog were very pretty. Thank you for sharing this side of your life. I need to exercize more regularly too. Thank you for the continued inspiration.
Beautifully expressed and very moving - a true message from the heart.
You have helped. It was just what I needed exactly when I needed it. Your story, your hopes and the lessons you are learning resonated.
May peace be with you. By sharing your story you have given a great gift to so many others as well as yourself.
You're awesome. Thanks for sharing this. I love especially that I had been jealous of your seemingly-perfect life. And it is, just not in the pain-free way I imagined. Thank you.
As always, you got right to our hearts and to the heart of the matter. I admit that I read your blog because of its positive view. I am getting older and I realize that I just don't have time for negativity - but I don't confuse negativity with being real. And being honest. I am here to tell you that I went through similar circumstances 25 years ago. And I survived. for a while, then I thrived. It is a very hard process to go without sleep (I had several years of not getting more than 1 1/2 hours at a time)and I paid the price. I. too had weight gain - cortisol adds belly fat! I now have a personal trainer who kicks my butt every week and I am looking forward to hearing about your experiences with getting in shape. (My experiences with it aren't usually fit to print!) I learned that what you experience under stress stays with you longer, and that was evident in my not being able to sleep through the night for 15 years. I am telling you this in hopes that you can "unlearn" the stressful stuff and keep being creative. It took me too long to get that back, but then the world was a very different place then and I had no one to talk to. I am so happy for you to see that so many of those whom you have shared with are gathering around to give you support. (Iwas going to say help with the heavy lifting, but thought it was too awful a pun...). I am older, wiser and here to tell you that it gets better! I am now on my way to the airport, first to florida and then on a transatlantic cruise with my loving husband. I wouldn't trade my life with anyone. Even the hard parts.
Thanks for sharing your story. You so beautifully capture your joys and pain for all the world to see here and I feel touched by your story. Take care.
Shauna gal, your post resonated with me so strongly. In January this year I had a scare of my own - stratospheric blood pressure and cholesterol - borderline obesity (How on earth did that happen to me without my knowing??) I came home from my routine checkup shaking with fear and with a fist full of prescriptions and instructions. Not unlike the day fifteen years before when I learned that gluten was killing me. Instead of letting the fear cripple me I swung into action: purging the kitchen of salt, animal fat etc. - inventing a low-fat, gluten-free granola for breakfasts - signing up for yoga (Now practice an hour a day and intend to become a yoga instructor for seniors and plus-size folks). Upshot is I'm down 15 pounds and my BP and cholesterol have returned to normal! I'm staying with it, saving my own life - loving it! So many loving people have inspired me to triumph - you among them! I'll be fine and so will you - all of us together. Sending you my love and respect. Namaste. (Follow my progress on blog: http://www.dandelionlunch.blogspot.com)
Inspiring and beautiful. Exactly what I needed to hear today and I appreciate it and all you do for us as readers. I am grateful that you share so much with us and I am so glad to know that your life is in good hands. Thank you and I look forward to seeing you sometime in the next year to celebrate your book.
Thank you for the courage to share your journey. You are an inspiration.
At 40 I was found to have stage IIIb breast cancer: no high risk factors and a life deemed to be healthy and active by modern standards. My survival at 5 years was estimated at <20%. It has been 8 years and I am free of cancer.
Why do I share this? I know anything is possible and statistics do not have to define us. I believe that for you as much as I do for myself. I bet, with all your risks, you get to be the one who doesn't get cancer! ;-]
I wish peace and love to surround your every fiber of Being. I feel like you - food is not the enemy (nor is weight...health is so very much more and often has no connection to weight at all).
Do what you are, following your heart, and I know you will be flourishing in this world, your life, till you're old and even wiser than you are today! Thanks so much for letting us know what you've been through. I wish you the best.
Teresa/waterhythms@mac.com
This is a fantastic record of a many hard moments.
Our son was born prematurely due to my preeclampsia and then terrified us with incidents of no breathing, seizures. He also didn't sleep.
All happened in the midst of a very fragile marriage.
I understand those feelings of rawness and applaud your willingness to share.
I also feel uncomfortable in my current skin and this post definitely made me feel like attitude makes such an enormous difference in our success. We'll be doing this together and thanks!!!! for the emotional support.
Sounds like you're being prepped by life for the teen years! Just half kidding. Wow.
I love your blog and thanks for sharing all that you do.
Thank you for sharing your story so honestly, it brought tears to my eyes and I resonated with so many aspects of it. I am a mom of an only child also due to circumstance, not choice, and I deeply understand your grief at losing the family you had envisioned and planned for. There are many special joys and benefits to being a family of 3 but if it is not what you wanted it feels like a raw deal. Lu is so lucky to have such a strong, wonderful mother. I wish you health and continued resilience.
Thank you for being human, and for being Divine - and for sharing both with us....(from a kindred spirit gluten-free girl in San Diego)
Thank you so much for your honest and thoughtful post. You are an inspiration to me.
And like you, I have always been scared of running because of the boob bouncing. i started doing Zumba, instead of running since I always loved dancing, and now I am addicted, I can't even believe it. I love an exercise class...something I never thought I would say!
Anne, Chicago
I needed to read this tonight. Thank you for sharing this. I have been struggling with my weight for years and I have two children (3.5 and 1.5) who I need to live better for. I am their teacher and want to be a living example of what a good and purposeful life is. You are an example of this too. Bless Lu and her parents.
Bless you for sharing your story.
You've helped me out and so many others.
Keep strong!
Thank you for sharing your story! A year ago, nearly to the day, I was diagnosed with breast cancer after a routine mammogram showed a small lump, an ultrasound confirmed it and recommended a biopsy, and then the biopsy came back positive for cancer. I was 47 at the time. This does not run in my family AT ALL. It can happen to anyone. I was shocked but my prognosis was very good and after 2 surgeries (a 2nd tumor was found under the miscroscope), 4 weeks of radiation and - thankfully - NO chemotherapy, I'm happy that all I have to do is take the tamoxifen for 5 years. My body has adjusted to it now that I've been on it for 6 months. But I understand how you are feeling right now.
The whole experience has changed my life.
But I am thankful for medical experts and the diagnostic tools we have available today. It truly does save lives. And I met the most wonderful and amazing people along the way that I would not have otherwise.
I've been reading your blog now for a couple of years and LOVE your photos, your love of cooking, love for your daughter and husband, love of life itself is inspiring.
You have inspired me to get moving a little more and with any luck lose those 20 lbs that packed on in the past 10 years.
I look forward to your further posts and wish you all the best!
What a wonderfully honest and touching post. We all struggle within our own lives with issues that crop up...and yet, these blogs oftentimes allow us to brush over and around them. Thank you for sharing so much of yourself and your family's life. It touches so many of us. I actually visited today just to let you know that I've listed your blog in my sidebar, hoping my readers will discover the beauty of this space as much as I have. Thank you again. And keep taking care of yourself! You and your family deserve it.
-rosiegirldreams.com
Hi Shauna, My Mom died a year ago from bone cancer. I live in San Diego, and would drive up to L.A. to take care of her. My husband and I have our own business, and the stress, and fear were unthinkable. I would leave the hospital at night, go to Trader Joe's, and buy a great bottle of wine, and decadent soul filling food and go back to her empty house, and comfort myself as best as I could.
I just found your website because I have autoimmune thyroid issues, now.. I would say brought on by a year of stress... oh and 20 pounds that needs to come off. I have JUST gone gluten free, (they say that it can help the thyroid issues...) and have been happily reading and cooking from your blog. It and your family are lovely.
What I wanted to say is you just went through hell, and life sometimes hits you upside the head, and you have to do what you have to do to keep your sanity and make it through. You made it through the year, and it sounds like everyone is getting healthy, your Mom is okay, your daughter is fine, and I am glad to hear that you are okay. Stress helps you gain weight, and keeps it on. So hang in there, and keep us posted... and cut yourself some slack about the weight! Take care, and thank you for letting us all into your life.
I totally relate to what you're saying (wrote about it recently here). I am on a totally different path, with each footstep very deliberate. Kudos to for your new direction!
Thanks for sharing. You have always been an inspiration and continue to be.
Shauna,
You're a bloody star, you are. That post was inspiring ... and I'm very glad you don't have cancer. Good luck with the running! (my friend swears by wearing 2 sports bras, stops the bouncing completely.) and I too am off to slowly eat some yummy quinoa. thank you for the inspiration. always.
love to you all xxx
Thank you for your forthrightness. Your clarity and openness will be a blessing to a lot of people.
I agree with the Buddhist notion of not being hard on ourselves for the times we overate, did not exercise or weren't mindful enough. Yesterday my daughter biked alone for 30 km on a lonely stretch of highway. She did just fine, but that night I ate 5 slices of homemade gluten free pizza. I didn't need 5 slices. I wasn't even that hungry, but it was an emotional release from the stress I had felt at letting her go like that. I don't always overeat, but I have some days like that.
You have been through a huge amount of stress in a very short time frame. The way you ate might have kept you emotionally stable during the roughest parts of it, and now you are moving on. Congratulations.
By the way, Lu is very blessed to have the loving parents she has.
Namasté
I'm right there with you in many ways! Me, I'm sick again after being healthy for several months (can't figure out why) and food gets scary for me- I know you know what I mean- when it seems like everything makes you sick... You've inspired me to get myself back to the doctor! You bring tears to my eyes every time I read your words, and I can't wait for your cookbook to come out (September? I have to wait that long???) You definitely have the right approach about weight loss and taking care of your body, so keep it up (LOVED the Buddhist quote). My motivation for getting healthy is definitely so that I can keep up with my 6 and 9 year old... and you've helped rekindle that. It's so easy to get discouraged. You've been through one hell of a year, and manage to keep right on inspiring the rest of us to keep on going- thank you!
thank you for your honesty and inspiration. truly.
Shauna,
It is amazing how much effort it takes to not beat ourselves up, even when we wre in the midst of such terrifying experiences such as your child being ill, or in my case, the love of my life dealing with Cancer. But it is also about having gluten intolerance and having a hard time in the pst straying from the gluten free life. Your site has re-engaged the excitement of being a foodie. I had lost my balast in the kitchen after my diagnosis. This from a woman who worked as cook for many years, but I really lost my way in the kitchen, but your lovely pictures and works bring to mind, he bounty we are blessed to have, and I thank you for that. Also, not being able to have children has been a great loss to me, and I continue to mourn that even as I head into my fifties. But as I look ahead, I am excited about my future, and hope to have my sweetie at my side. May you and your family have some blessed and peaceful times.
Do you read these? Do they help? Because I want to help. Perhaps just putting this small energy here, this moving of my fingers over the keyboard before going to bed, perhaps this helps. But the reality is that your book and your blog have helped me, these last 9 months, since the day the labwork came back unbelievable.
And I want to help.
So I'll hold you in my heart tonight, mixed in with my worries and hopes and all the love I have for my unborn children. May the morning bring you lightness, hope and a life a little closer to that center. You are a beautiful soul, Shauna, thanks for sharing with us.
Wow, 355 comments. I think that it's pretty clear, that your words and thoughts, have touched many hearts across the world tonight.
Thank you for sharing your life and allowing us to share ours. I know mine certainly wouldn't be the same - you have helped me learn to embrace what it means to have Celiac. I wouldn't have it any other way.
bree
Shauna, I knew some of the sleep deprivation and I knew of the surgery, but sheesh, you have been through the wringer. I am the daughter-in-law of a neurosurgeon, and remember many of his stories of operating on kids.
You've hit on so many of my "causal factors" for holding on to excess pounds...lack of sleep, stress, too much going on, motherhood, marriage and not always making enough time to exercise and eat right. And I'm not always surrounded by food and immersed in food like you, but thanks to the celiac I am fixated on food.
Just this week I made positive steps toward some mental progress, as I am hiring a diet coach. I've also had a change in my work schedule, so I'm going to start the 30 day shred again like your fellow blogger.
I hope that the rest of 2010 is calm and non-eventful on the health side for you and that you are able to make your health a priority. My best to you, the Chef and Lu.
~Laura
Shauna -- I can directly relate to the damage sleep deprivation does to the mind and body. My husband and I went through a miserable stretch and like you, looking back I don't know how we coped. I guess every one of us just does what has to be done to get through each day one at a time. I also struggle with my weight which was a first for me as I was always naturally slim and could eat anything I wanted until I hit the wall that was my 40th birthday. Now I've had to re-tool my thinking and behaviors and re-learn how to think about food and my body. Not easy, and still a daily project. Thank you for writing such a difficult but beautiful post. I will revisit it frequently. Isn't it weird how one person's struggle can be the motivation for complete strangers? Well Done, You!!
Thank you for the brave and honest post. I too am an emotional and unconscious eater. You are SO RIGHT about the sleep deprivation. I have a lot of sleep problems (no children, just a bad sleeper) and I'm beginning to do what I need to do for myself, even if it means going in the other room to sleep because my husband snores. Not getting enough sleep leaves me in a crazy state where I am inclined to stuff whatever in my mouth to feel better. We had a cold snowy winter in southern Virginia this year, very unusual for us, and all I wanted to do was sleep and eat. I am on a similar path and my New Year's resolution is to be more mindful of everything: the food I eat, the money I spend, what I am doing or saying at any given time.
I'd like to pass on a tip about throwing food away. I too hate to "waste" anything and I blame my German mother for that. I've since learned that it's better to throw something away than to treat yourself like a human garbage can. I also recommend getting or building A COMPOSTER. There are some reasonably-priced ones out there or you can build a simple one yourself. I bought a stainless steel compost crock that sits on my couter. Any excess that doesn't contain meat goes into it. Also eggshells are good for composting and if you rinse them out the birds love them and need them. I'm not cooking for a small child, but my husband and I will never finish a loaf of bread. I don't feel bad knowing the food will be put to use and it's not going into a landfill, something we all need to watch. Plus, it's heatlhy for the garden. Lu would love the process, don't you think?
Thank you so much for your blog. Because of you I am currently fighting with my doctor to test me for celiac disease. My sister tested positive to one of the markers but her doctor says she doesn't have it--maybe that could be a subject for a future post because there is a lot of confusion even getting a diagnosis. Anyway, even if I have to pay for it myself I want to know. (There is also a new stool test that is supposedly a definitive test.)
Thank you for raising awareness because many doctors don't even consider celiac. My doctor is up on a lot of things but he still thinks celiac is "rare."
Thank you for sharing your story. I love your blog, started really running after my first child's birth...Keep going, keep pushing, keep winning!
Melodie
Shauna, your honesty is compelling and inviting. I often say that we really minister to people out of our weaknesses, not out of our strengths. I suspect you have touched many, many people.
Ironically, I am a nutrition counselor that helps people lose weight. I am a "food is fuel" person, which is why I have never had a weight problem. But the dark side of that is that I never savored food. Your book and your appreciation for food changed me indelibly. I found myself for the first time delighting in food, really tasting its delicate nuances. You did that. I don't know how (I suspect it was your brilliant, ebbullient prose), but you did that. So thank you!
I am alive in a way I was not before. Just wanted you to know that.
Blessings of health and happiness to you and yours. It's time.
You are a very courageous woman. You've made it through the storms and gained life-changing wisdom along the way. God bless you as you and your family continue on the path towards ever-increasing good health.
I've been reading your blog for a long time now. It is one place I know I can always go for inspiration. You inspire my cooking and you inspire my life. You have helped make it easier to joyfully eat gluten free with my wonderful husband. We do it because it is what keeps him healthy...you have helped make it fun. Your darling Lu was born at about the same time as my son and I have really identified with the joy you share when you talk about her. Today my heart aches for the struggles you have faced. My greatest hopes for many, many better days to come. You are moving forward in a strong and beautiful way.
Wow! Sending you so much encouragement and prayers reading that post. When I first got "healthy" eating gluten free which in my case meant recovering from malabosroption I really began to gain weight. the idea of dieting or depriving myself of anything was a complete mental block because I ALREADY was depriving myself of wheat. I just set the quest aside and decided to start working out and get to strong. One thing at a time is ok. You have been through a lot. Start with one thing, exercise. Now that time has passed and I don't feel "deprived" I can start concentrating on food choices, snack choices. Mr doctor said Celiacs need more grains in their diet to lose weight. Whole grains, that is a tough one since they are alternative grains, right? So the next step, add grains, then cut the sugar. I would love it if you did share your journey about losing weight! I feel like we have to do it differently than the rest of the world. It is more of a mental task for us, since we don't play by the same rules as everyone else. I am on board! Let's encourage each other!
Shauna, You inspire all of us. Thanks so much for sharing, and I hope that things are looking up now for your family. Your constant positivity has helped us all at dark times in our lives, and hopefully we can all support you through these times in your own. To love and good health!
I'm proud of you Shauna. I've been there and at times, I'm still there. My son is living with autism, I'm the group leader for a parent support group, we're a GFCF family and we have a hobby farm. There is a lot of work to do each day and a lot of baking not to mention therapies. When my son was born, I weighed 318 lbs. I now weigh 158 lbs and I'm still working on it. I used to hate running as well. I've always been fat and running was "for skinny people." I don't feel that way anymore. I have a RoadID (RoadID.com) and on it it says, "Running is Freedom". I run until I can't, then I walk until I can run some more and the cycle continues until I hit home. I'm also at high risk for cancer. I've had mammograms since I was 20 years old. I don't do them anymore because I've read in many places that they cause breast cancer. Everything I do and put into my body is natural. There are natural remedies you can look into that will reduce your risk of cancer. You're smart, look into this heavily. My aunt just left this world because of cancer. But her life was prolonged for a year because of natural remedies. Listen to your doctors, but take responsibility for your own body. Take care of yourself as much as you take care of others.
Shauna,
Love. Compassion. Gratitude. Forgiveness. First for yourself, and then for others.
Thank you for sharing your journey.
Shauna, you are beautiful and this post is beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing your story. Gosh, I can't believe how much you guys have been through. You are inspiring, and strong and I'm so happy that you have come to this point of catharsis.
Do you know, over a year ago I emailed you (not expecting to get a reply) asking you where you got your self-confidence from and if you have any tips on how to love yourself for who you are since I am always plagued by these weighty worries. I will never forget your reply, part of which said that "knowing that I am never going to be perfect helps. Compassion helps more." These words have stayed with me. It is through your compassion that you have blessed others and I'm so glad that in return your readers have shown compassion to you at your time of need and vulnerability. Thank you so much Shauna for being you and for being you on this blog.
Lots of love to you and your family x
Oh, Shauna, what a post. I cried, I laughed… with most I identified…
What a year indeed!
I think it’s so courageous and wonderful that you share all this.
So many things I want to say but I’ll keep it short. I hate running but I‘ll start walking twice a week (20 minutes each time), and I’ll be thinking about you.
Love you, Shauna. <3
I love you -- you're beautiful in spirit and self. I'm proud of all that you have accomplished with your fight to be gluten-free, filled with love and the ability to keep moving no matter what is thrown your way. I hope you, Danny and Lu are continually blessed with love and good fortune.
Shauna,
This made me cry, but in a good way. I have had weight struggles since I was young, and I am inspired by, and agree with, your philosophy. You are beautiful. Thank you!
SJ
Shauna,
Thank you for caring enough for us to share your life, pie, pain and all. It was a blessing to hear about being on the end of a difficult cycle.
I've had those, too. And a big part of my emotional recovery has been learning the foods that I'm sensitive to, gluten included. My husband discovers that he actually gets depressed when he eats gluten.
I've lost 42 pounds by avoiding foods I'm sensitive to, generally eating healthier and FINALLY starting to exercise a couple times a week. I still have another eighty pounds to lose. Thanks for adding inspiration!
Ellie
Thank you for sharing from your heart. I can relate to different things you've said, but in different places, at different times. Bless your heart going through it all in such a short time. Our first child didn't sleep through the night until she was nearly a year old. Our 2nd child was nearly FIVE when she slept through the night. In the midst of that we learned our 1st born was autistic, then later that our 2nd had ADHD. Then came the celiac dx for me. I'd been super thin til I had baby 2. I'd gained a bit, was probably a "normal" weight, but felt large. A GF diet brought 30 lbs. in 7 months. 15 more have crept on since then. I was doing food demos for a living, selling cookware. I love food & lived food, too. But, I know if I want my cholesterol & blood pressure to lower, I need to diet & exercise. At 45, that's a big change, but I need to do it!
I have a dear friend in the midst of breast cancer right now. Surgery will be soon followed by treatments. I feel as if I'm living it with her, but wishing I could take her pain. I'm so thankful that your tests were all negative this year & pray the Tamoxifen will be the miracle pill for you.
I just discovered, in Dec. of 2008, something I should have known for the 4 years prior to that being on the GF diet: GF food has double calories of gluten foods! I knew I was finally "processing" my food, lucky me, but dorky me didn't realize how much more I was ingesting! Oh, my! I have put my autistic daughter back on a GF diet to see if we see changes & am baking up more than I had been, so I can totally relate to the whole food life & gaining weight. Know that you aren't alone in that! Hugs!
After I read what you wrote here, my thought was, "Wow, she doesn't know she's beautiful." I have been praying for you and your husband since the birth of your lovely daughter (she looks just like her Dad!) Have you ever read the blog, May All Seasons Be Sweet To Thee? She lost a baby and then gained weight and just wrote about it recently... Shauna, you don't know me from a doorknob but I love the way you write and care about so many things... thank you for sharing. Kay Guest
ahhhhhh breathe deep.. I can relate to your story. My daughter Amelia had a stroke at birth, in which she lost 1/3 of her brain....which led me down an unexpected road. But along this road I have found hills and valleys and a lot of myself. Amelia is now 9yo and is my miracle child who regrew her brain, no one who wasn't directly a part of my life in the first 3 years of her life would know our tale, but I do and it has been written all over my body at times, sometimes with weight and sometimes with pain, but in the last 4 years I have taken control. Mindful eating, walking, belly dancing, water aerobics and music have reinvigorated me to thrive instead of just being. I chose to thrive in adversity.
I am so enthralled that you too will thrive...
I admire your resiliency, compassion and humor in the face of such struggles.
Food can be comfort (it never says no!), but you are right to look beyond that and see the bigger picture. Three years ago facing my own health issues (PCOS) I realized that while food soothed me, I wanted to be around for a long, healthy, active time. I will never weight 115, but have lost 70+ and gained muscle and self-confidence.
Oh and Enell makes the best sports bras for the well-endowed (IMHO and I'm an F cup!).
thank you so much, Shauna, I actually had to stop reading your blog because I have been trying to love myself back to a more comfortable weight and there were so many tempting recipes that would up my cortisol (grains). It is inspiring (as usual!) to hear your words. thank you for your vulnerability.
We're all human. We all have more in common than we think. We all have our stories, even if we don't show them in the artistic photos of our blogs.
Your business is food, and food can be healing. If you look at my blog you will see the struggles we go through to eat, and yet we can still consume some amazing food... and some of it inspired by your blog and others like it.
I know the pain of having a child with a health problem, and how easy it is to shove your own health under the rug when you're running on little to no sleep after a toddler and trying to make ends meet.
Kudos to you for all the joy you share with us, and all the good you do for those who struggle to find food that works with their diets, and for loving so fiercely your sweet daughter.
All of that aside, as a friend and a woman I have to also ask if you have considered that breastfeeding for an extended period of time greatly reduces your chances of breast cancer? I am not judging you for the meds at all! I am not sure what I would do in your shoes, but knowing about alternative therapies and homeopathy has afforded me a MUCH healthier daughter and it may be worth looking in to for you as well. Homeopathy, RIFE, EFT and possibly chiropractic, yoga, etc. may give you the possibility of becoming pregnant again, and then the breastfeeding will reduce your chances of breast cancer even further.
I hope this was not offensive, I only say it with the purest of intentions.
Much love,
Manda
I just stumbled upon your blog today and what a powerful and emotional post this was. I applaud you for your perseverance, your return to healthful living, overcoming challenges, self-acceptance, and sharing it all. Good luck with your journey.
Thank you. I hope you continue to be gentle with yourself.
Wow. That looks really good! My wife used to bake pies like those too! Thanks for sharing the recipe. Now, I'll try to make it for my wife. LOL
Thank you for sharing this story with us. I am happy to read that you are able to now enjoy more time for yourself. By focusing on you, you'll make everybody in your life happier.
Good luck!
I have not been reading you for weeks and weeks. Now, because I wanted to share your blog with a friend who has celiac disease, I popped in for a look. The universe works in mysterious ways, because I have just this week come to the same place in my own struggle with weight. Your words clarified all that I have been feeling, and I cannot express the depths to which your words resonate with me. Thank you so much.
As far as Jillian Micheals 30-Day Shred goes, I have done the workout many times, but there are a number of flaws with it, from a physiology stand point. I love the interval idea, and found that Prevention Fitness Systems has a DVD that uses the same idea, but it is much better executed and safer. Try their "3-2-1 Workout with Chris Freytag". I think you will like it and get good results with it, without the risks.
With most sincere thanks for all you do with the power of your words,
SK
I think there's a reason I just stumbled on this post right now. Thank you so much for sharing your story and for making others in a similar place feel less alone :)
I wish you and your family so much happiness
The generosity of your comments (and emails and messages in other places) have left me speechless until now.
I'm still not quite sure what to say.
Thank you.
When I wrote this piece, I was alone. I have been walking around since feeling surrounded by community. (The first run I took after publishing this was particularly strong!) It amazes me that when we share what feels urgent, if it's entirely personal, that's when other people feel most included.
To those of you who have said you were inspired by this to move more and be more mindful of your food? I salute you! Let's do this together.
To those of you who talked about my strength? Well, thanks. But my goodness, the stories poured out here make it clear that our struggles this year are hardly heroic. We're all just doing the best we can. We keep going. We open our arms, and sometimes our mouths.
To those of you who were moved by the line I wrote about the fact that there is always a story behind the image? Remember that is true of anyone, everyone, regardless of weight.
To those of you who wondered if Danny and I are open to adoption, and growing our family in that beautiful way? In one word: yes. We very much hope for that. I will write about that more at another time. Family, for us, is love. Love doesn't have anything to do with biological birth.
To those of you who shared your stories, both here and in email, thank you. I wish that I could hug all of you.
And to everyone who has read and said something kind, I am never going to forget your comments. This community is my inspiration.
Hi Shauna,
So many people have left so many uplifting sentiments, but I need to add mine as well. I am so proud of you for making such huge steps for your family and your health. I do not know you, but have been reading your site since the beginning. I lived your journey with you: you see, I discovered my gluten allergy five years ago.
I have been a runner for years. Anytime I have had to take a hiatus, I slip into a valley that seems a bit dimmer than to which I am accustomed. I recently got back to running after having Henry in July and foot surgery in November and love the empowerment I feel; the space and time I have to re-hash the day; and how much cleaner my body feels when I am done, sweaty and tired. When I go by myself, I relish the time alone. That does not always happen. During the week, I load Henry in our jogging stroller and he babbles and kicks around as we run past the monuments on the Mall in D.C. (If you can find a jogging stroller for cheap, I would recommend running with Lucy--it makes finding the time to run easier, she has fun, and your workout is so much harder;/).
I thank you for your honesty. Sometimes that is all some of us need to make life tolerable. My mom has had breast cancer (five years ago) and she does not always take care of herself--like you, she has been dealing with more stress than any one person should contend) and I am frightened that you will have a relapse....
You are strong and beautiful. Please take care of yourself for Lu and for Danny, but also because you revel in laughing and feeling and just being you.
Thank you for your honesty - it is beautiful. I can see from everyone's comments that so many of us have had similar experiences using food as a comfort. I feel for what you've been through and survived the last year, have had similar (but not identical) experiences myself, and it's inspiring that you've shared the positive steps that have come out of that - mindfulness, and running! I've just started running too after a long absence and a long winter of being inside and cozy rather than up and at em. I love that after-run feeling in my lungs - like they've just been stretched and made alive after a long sleep. I wish you the best with your running, and life in spring generally!
Bless you and thank you! the paradox of celiac disease is that food can be both your healer and your poison. I gained wait post diagnosis and find it difficult to lose. I have been exercising for the last 4 years and found running. I cannot always run because I was hit by a car years ago and have knee problems. However...I like to be aware of my body and do what I can. I still have some weight to lose but I am ok with it. Exercise makes me feel powerful and running fills me with peace and joy. I like to exploit the vegetables and fruits I love because they support my body when I want it to perform. So many of us are on the same path as you are. I am grateful that you share your struggles here..its so good to know I am not alone.
Wow Shawna, what a story. I can only say that having lived through severe sleep deprivation with a baby, there is almost nothing harder. People who haven't gone through it can't even begin to imagine what it's like, especially because you are in such an altered state, but to everyone else you look like yourself. But to compound that with everything else that you have gone through! We are only around 6 weeks away from baby #3 and I try not to think at all about the lack of sleep heading our way - then again, our health is what really matters.
Your site has always been honest...and there were hints now and again that there were worries too...so it was not so much that we did not know...but more how much. I always would come back because you seemed to find joy in life and that has been an inspiration. I think everyone has bad times (not to minimize your hell year at all). I appreciate that you shared a glimpse of yours. But am more moved that you continue to find and share joy and the wisdom of yes. I never see that word in print without my mind flickering to you. Be well.
*Hug* Your story and journey are amazing and inspiring. Always remember how tough it is to really tell how healthy you are when you focus on your weight, especially just from a numbers and visual perspective. When we see ourselves, we can't help but look through the lens of this obsessively fatphobic society all around us. It's about how you feel in your body, in your skin, not your reaction when you see your body. It's taken me a long time to peel off the layers and find how health and size are not necessarily at odds. The Health at Every Size Movement has really opened my eyes.
You and Danny and Lu have long been an inspiration to me -- a single, late 20s (30s on Sunday) wondering if I would ever have a family and love in my home in tough times and good times. I live alone because the last thing I want to worry about at the end of a tough Silicon Valley day is my kitchen sponge status.
I've always been an emotional eater. Now that I am GF, I CAN gain weight. I'd eat out to be around people. That meant lots of cross-contamination & expense. I slowly made myself sick again... and spent WAY too much on food.
I'm sorry to hear it is tough, but I think many of your readers relate to your happy and your not as happy moments. We appreciate that you share your hopes, life, and wins with us. Like I said, you inspire me and give me hope -- about love, life, and, yes, puff pastry.
Thank you.
Your blog has meant a great deal to me since I was diagnosed with fibromyalgia at Christmas and learned that cutting gluten out makes me able to function happily!
As a sterile ovarian cancer survivor who gets the tests and holds her breath, as you do, best of luck to you and your lovely family.
Lu does deserve a sibling. And there are a lot of kids out there who deserve you and Lu!
Best,
Annie
Thank you so much for this post. I have been reading since you were married and writing about your honeymoon in Italy, and someone said "you simply must read her. she is amazing." As someone who has put on weight in the last few years due to stressful circumstances, I identify strongly and admire you greatly for having the courage to be vulnerable, hence strong, so very strong.
Hi Shauna: My heart and thoughts go out to you. Take each moment and cherish it...You don't know me...I know. I stumbled upon your blog a couple of months ago because I've had some terrible tummy issues - my whole life - and a doctor I went to finally put me on a gluten free diet. Your blog inspired me and helped me through my detox and now I look to it for inspiration, comfort and well, really, just to make me smile! Everyone is right, you are a beautiful writer and clearly a wonderful person...
My brother was born with craniosynistosis. The surgery was done a little late, so a little damage was done. But he is smart, funny, and turning 26 in August. Congratulations on your beautiful little girl, and making it through a very rough year!
Thank you, Shauna, for sharing so much of yourself. My mother is a breast cancer survivor, and I--mother to a young daughter--have been working through some of the same feelings/experiences you describe. It meant so much to me to read your post.
Shauna, thank you for saying all the things I've been struggling with on a similar level. Let us both make life better for ourselves. Good luck.
This was beautiful and powerful. I did hear a bit of myself in this post. As someone who was diagnosed with Celiac disease just under two years ago, I'm still trying to repair some of the damage it did to my body. It has also completely altered my relationship with food, in a way that's neither good nor bad, just totally different. Not to mention a huge learning curve.I find that food has helped me discover more about myself, my habits, my body and my life. Thank you for writing this.
Shauna, I would just like to join with the many others out there to thank you for your thoughtful words; illustrating your courageous and passionate choices for living. I hope you will continue to inspire with your thoughts and pictures. Best wishes to you and your family.
Wow, what a beautiful post. There is so much about what you said that I can relate to. I am completely moved and inspired. I have recently been struggling with how to get back in shape (also with a toddler)...food is my passion as well and it doesn't feel right to obsess over it. What you said makes so much sense...such a different outlook. Thank you, thank you for sharing...I know it means a lot to a lot of people.
Thank you. This helps immensely!
Shauna, You are beautiful. You are real. Thank you for encapsulating the struggles of health, motherhood, work, daughterness and wifeocity. Food indeed is a blessing and a cement that binds families together- & while we cannot share too much love, too much food beguiles us. Thank you for your writing- it is a guiding light on the journey of healing for me. May you enjoy many years of love, health and enough.
It takes amazing courage to be vulnerable, and be at peace with it. Thank you for your stories, they are truly inspiring.
Meghan Austin
I am touched by your candor and acceptance of the journey you have taken. You are an inspiration for so many, in the way you drink and eat life and then share it all with us along the way. I send you love and wish for you a year full of beauty and lightness of heart!
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The conversation and community is the best part of being here. Id love to hear what you have to say.
Let the conversation be spirited and full of questions. However, any nasty comments with a personal attack, or scurrilous ones with no intention but to hurt? They]re not getting published.
This is why I am no longer accepting anonymous comments. Too many insulting comments come through those.
This space is like my kitchen, and Im inviting you in. If you would feel comfortable pointing your finger at me and shouting during a party in my kitchen, well, I'd ask you to leave. And then the rest of us would clear the air and go back to talking and laughing. The same is true here.
Now. Enough of that. Let's talk.