
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 401 – 445 of 445You are awesome. I just started a gluten free diet, happened upon your blog, and fell in love.
Thanks for being such an inspiration!
What an inspiration you are! What doesn't kill us, strengthens us and I just feel your strength! Thank you for sharing your soul.
Shauna, I have been following your lovely blog for quite a while. Thank you, thank you for this post.
Shauna, good on you girl for getting through it and coming out the other side stronger. Keep up the good work with the running and the recipes, just have to tell you how much your site and book have changed my approach to being gluten free, both fantastically inspiring personally and professionally (am a nutritional therapist). Also, bit random but have you heard about re-bounding? Really good exercise and fantastic for the immune system, helps to get the lymphatic system moving.
Best of luck with everything xx
Thank you for writing this! I too wept a bit reading it.
If you're not there already, may you soon get to the point where exercising gives you more energy afterward, instead of using up energy!
You are an inspiration and a wealth of information to myself and many. God has some serious plans for you and your family! Recently my mom was sent to a specialist because of some calcifications that showed up on her recent mammogram. She was trying to be strong, but I heard tears in her voice (my grandmother is a breast cancer survivor like your mom). We prayed that when she went into the specialist's office the next day that the calcifications would be gone, and no further action would be necessary. You know what?! The very next day I witnessed my very first miracle in plain sight! They had to run x-rays several times bc the doctors just could not believe that there was not one speck there... I'm praying for you and your family. Thank you for sharing the intimate details of your life. Like you said, you never know who might benefit from you rawness, and prayer works, so the more prayers the better!
Thank you so much for writing this. It is easy to forget that there is a whole person, a whole life behind blogs that tend to be on a specific subject (food, travel, et al).
It is easy - especially for those of us who love GOOD food - to fall in to the trap of nourishing our stomachs when we really need more nourishment for our souls. More rest, more beauty, more stillness, more laughter. I know, especially as a mother, when it doesn't feel like there is time to give myself what I need, there are many times it is easier to give myself macaroons than a long run in the woods! Sounds like you picked some wonderful reads on the subject.
Thank you for sharing all the rough parts of your year & your journey through it all.
This post could not come at a better time for me. Breast cancer in my immediate family, I'm carrying too much weight myself... This one is bookmarked for those moments when I want to sit down with the whole cake to soothe my frayed nerves. My life is worth more than the comfort/guilt rollercoaster that food can bring me.
You. Woman, you know how I feel about you - you're so beautiful, inside and out. And I always cheer whenever you tweet that you're going on a run, because I love running and running is fun, a good stress reliever. But oh my, the stress you've been under. I've gotten hints, but it just crushes me to hear more of the story - and I'm not even the one living it! I have so much respect for you, for Danny, for the strength of both of you. It's a wonderful, awe-inspiring thing.
And lest you think that others don't also have this problem, I even wrote about it, not so many months ago. It helped me, as I'm sure it did you, realize that there are others out there with the same issue. (And really, I bet most people would look at me and never guess my screwed up relationship with food) So here it is: http://tinyurl.com/2d7cb8b
And, as always, LOVE. Love to you, love for your honesty, your guts, your courage. Love.
A beautiful, and moving post.
Embrace your path -- your journey. It is what makes us into the person our loved ones love. Having a child whom you adore is a gift. Having a child with whom you travel down a rough path is even more of a gift. It teaches us the true meaning of a mother's love and the joy of seeing that love reflected in our child's bright eyes!
I admire your courage and wish you the best on your journey!
Such a brave, honest post. Thank you for sharing your life with us.
I read your blog "carry that weight" and I can't tell you how much it moved me.
I have been dealing with weight issues all my life and decided that this year was the year I was going to tackle it.
The last two years have been tough, dealing with bladder cancer and the removal and reconstruction of my bladder, followed by a year of watching my mother die a slow, painful death and then having to pack up her life, well, let's face, weight control - in fact control of any kind - was not in the cards.
Peri-menopausal, working full-time, married with a pre-teen boy (also an only child), well there just has not been much time to think about myself. In January I decided to start a weight loss blog and write daily about my weight loss efforts and my life at www.writingmyselfthin.com.
But I have not been as honest about my life as you have been - I have shared some but not all of my grief, and I have to say that your honesty has really inspired me to be more open and honest on my blog.
and as somebody who has recovered from cancer and then pretended it never happened, I am going to take a page from your book and start exercising daily (apparently pouring a glass of wine daily can't be counted as exercise) and admit I actually had cancer and need to make changes in my life to make sure it never happens again...instead of ignoring it.
Good luck, I will keep reading.
Thank you for being so real. I completely agree that your blog is a place for sharing joy and your experience of living life fully (which is inspiring to all of us who read you)...but this latest post, even though you were writing about fear, somehow made me see you as an even more fully alive person (and writer, and mom, and cook!) I've been inspired by your embracing-it-fully attitude towards eating gluten-free, something that was new to my life when I began reading your blog. But this is the first time I've written here. Strange to think how many mysterious, anonymous readers like me you have out there!
I, too, was always afraid of running, until I just decided to actually do it. Now I couldn't live without it. It makes me feel, whole, strong, and replenished. I'm so glad you seem to have found the same thing. Running, if you do it consistently, can be so much more than good for your muscles and heart. It's become almost a spiritual practice for me.
Thanks for your wise words. You are a brave, wonderful woman.
Shauna, I think I've been reading your blog since you started it, I've mentioned before that I feel like I know you all just from all of the reading. Thank you so much for sharing about your year and eating. I have put on so much weight the past few years. I don't have a baby, my children are grown and I have been going through the "empty nest" syndrome so I reach for food for comfort. I don't know how you have written and worked so hard on your book without sleep and all of the other obstacles. You are strong and sharing with us makes you even stronger. I'm just so glad that you have gotten through the testing and you are O.K. As always, you inspire me. I'll check out the couch potato to 5k. Thank you. Love to you all.
Bernadette from Maine
Thank you.
Wishing you all the best. I am so impressed with all you do and you have been such an inspiration to me and my life with my gluten-free son.
I admire and respect your honesty and your willingness to share.
xoxo
bee in sweden
This sounds so much like my story yet I havent really been able to put it into words like that. You will lose the weight you are amazingly strong. I plan to read lots more of your blog now that I have found it.
hcgwillpower.blogspot.com
I'm typing this in tears. Thank you for sharing what's true for you, right now. I have a one year old and have also been so struck by what a living teacher he is- so present, so alive, so active. Recently started walking again, exercising and had a very similar experience to yours. I walk with him. At first I had him in a carrier but it became unfeasible so now I push him in his stroller. I think of it as my weight training!
I've been posting about it on my blog. I'll link my name to one of those posts directly.
Thanks again. I feel so connected to you, my heart is open to you and your family and I wish you all health and happiness. I am grateful for your generosity of spirit.
Shauna,
You honor us all with your honesty.
I must say that in my own life, every hell that I've been dipped into has left me a stronger, better mother.
Blessings to you and your beautiful family,
Lori
I know this in NO way mitigates the pain of not having a second child biologically, but having several friends who have built their families this way after infertility-- have you considered adoption? It's an amazing gift, both to yourselves as parents, to your daughter as a future sister, and to a child who otherwise would have no one. Ethiopia is really really needy right now... and so are thousands of children in foster care here in the US. I have friends who've pursued both routes and have beautiful children in their arms and their homes. It's even more beautiful in some ways when the children are adopted trans-racially... rainbow families we call them! It's something to think about- to pray about.
Love this - thank you for sharing it.
This was such a beautiful piece and I'm so honored, touched and humbled that you shared this with all of us. While I could relate to many points along your story, the desire to be there for every special moment in my children's lives has motivated me recently to take some healthier steps as well.
It took us longer than we expected to get pregnant and I often think about how old I'll be at certain milestones...college graduation, weddings and grandkids. While I can't change my age, I can influence how healthy I'll be at each of those special times. I want to keep up with them now while they're young and later when they have children of their own. And doing things right today and tomorrow, just like you, is how we'll get there.
Our son is gluten and dairy free and your's is one of our most favored sites on topics of food. It means so much more to me now. Thanks again for sharing and I wish you all the best!
You continue to inspire me. This is the best post I have read all year. And, maybe, ever. I remember seeing you, chef, and Lu at BlogHer Food and thinking, "What a sweet, happy family." I had no idea you were going through any of this. I am holding you all close in my thoughts and heart that there will be no more health scares in your lives ever and that Lu continues her sleepy ways.
Like you I am trying to get healthier and am using c25kapp.com. I finished the program last fall and continue to do 2.5-3 mile runs every day. On Jan 1 I decided to get more serious about losing weight and joined WW and have lost almost 30 lbs. It's hard when you love to cook and eat (that part I really relate to), but my mindset now is that I want to be healthy for myself and my family. I'm on my way. We're on our way. Thank you for your amazing words and presence.
Thank you for sharing your story. 2009 was a hard year for me. We bought a house we had to gut and remodel, my son graduated during this time, i found out i had thyroid cancer (lots of doctors visits), had surgery and RAI treatment (isolation)and so on. I have gained weight and still i don't feel good which adds to the problem of trying to get back to normal. I really enjoy your blog and the Chef. I am trying to find the right balance with food and feeling good. I was thin before i found out i was gluten intolerant and now, especially having thyroid problems it is very hard to stop gaining weight. I have 3 months before my sons wedding and i am using that as a motivator to get fit (lots of pictures! and i have to find a dress!!) You have motivated me to start my plan today! You are good parents and may God bless you with a time of healing this summer.
teresa
What an amazing post (I was directed here by CityMama on Twitter). So smart and amazing and right on - your priorities and your reasons for wanting to be healthy are perfect. Thank you for this.
As a woman: Thanks for an inspirational post and best of luck with exercising.
As a statistician: another child may reduce your breast cancer risk, and not taking Tamoxifen for the 1-2 years to get pregnant and have the baby may not increase your breast cancer risk by that much. Before deciding not to have that second child that you want so much, try looking into the numbers more and asking a statistical cancer expert, not just a doctor. Doctors don't know statistics very well:
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/25/chances-are/
"I've realized that happiness is movement in the body and stillness in the mind"
I love that. Thank you for this. Your post really touched my heart. I've been there in multiple ways. I've lost weight, 20 pounds, and put it back on...and then some. I did it the way you should, eating well and exercise. Why did I put it on? Is it because I stopped working out as much after I was basically let go from my job? Is it because I found out my father was ill with something that would eventually end his life making paying attention to what I ate not seem to matter anymore? It's a journey, I did learn from that. I mess up, I learn from my mistakes and I try again. Sometimes I want to give up, but I tell myself to never stop trying, if I did I feel I'd go to a dark place I don't want to be. I'm on a good path now, 3lbs down, but it's not about the numbers, it's about feeling good about myself and being healthy. Giving up would destroy me spiritually and mentally more than physically.
Hang in there! Every day and every healthy choice is a step in the right direction.
Wow, you tell an amazing story. You should be so proud of yourself for taking the difficult things in life and making them a motivator for a change.
I'm a runner too (wow... I just said I am a runner!) and have been running for a few years. It's never easy, but I always feel fantastic afterward. Remember, it's just one foot in front of the other.
Good luck!
Shauna, on some level we all have the same feelings of self that you do, though for different reasons and challenges. And you are right, from age two to college while sometimes (when life is difficult) life seems to drag on it doesn't seem all that long ago when my daughter at age 2 and I were at the Seatle Children's Museum --she is now off to college in the fall. Spring is a wonderful time to look at life in a fresh way, and since today is beautiful, I am about to take my dog for a long, brisk walk and celebrate another day that includes exercise instead of my excuses. Karen Robertson
Thanks for being an inspiration. I started the couch to 5K after reading this and I'm sticking to it for my daughter!
I have been reading your blog for several years, attended your cooking classes at PCC, and thoroughly enjoy what you offer. However, this poignant post was one of the most heartfelt and beautifully written. Wishing you and your family good health and plenty of sleep in the years to come!
Thank you, Shauna.
Thank you for your post. i think i am a reader of your blog for ..4 years i think now. and i often tell friends: read her blog! she has found true love, she writes so inspiring, she has a wonderful daughter. i think her life is beautiful. and sometimes i compared ... and thought: hu, what stressfull life do i have. and now i am admiring you for writing this post and show us all a little more of your life. i wish you all the best from austria.
sabine
Thanks for your inspiring post. I have had a rather chaotic last year, nothing special to complain about, actually, lots of good things happened, finished my thesis, got married... but at the same time lots of stress, and since August a long distance relationship that includes two plane trips.... all that led to me eating lots of my comfort foods, cold winter nights baking... BUT ever since I read your post last week Friday, I have been taking better care of myself, cooking healthy meals served nicely arranged on my plate and not living on pancake in front of the computer. Thanks and lots of luck to you.
My son is a year and 5 months and I'm crying over this story - so touching and so beautiful as to how you've learned so much from this and cared to share with the world at large - very very inspiring for me Shauna - God bless Lu and both of you!
this is a beautiful post and thank you for writing about it. So many of us carry this burden with us. i cant but have admiration for your family and beautiful daughter for coming out of this so beautifully. it hasnt been easy...but you did it... god bless
My goodness. You have had such a difficult year. Blessings to you and your family as you heal and move forward and thrive.
Thank you for sharing your story so honestly. I had not read your blog in a while, because I was having a tough first year of motherhood too. It was difficult to read your blog when everything about your life sounded so blissful. It is perhaps also true that if someone's life looks perfect from the outside, there is often a not-so-perfect story on the inside....
My difficult year was simpler than yours. Our son was born tongue-tied, which makes it difficult for babies to nurse efficiently, and it was not discovered until he was 8 months old. I spent the first 6 months of his life nursing him every two hours around the clock for an hour every time. He would not sleep because he was, unbeknownst to us, still hungry.... One day, he was awake for 17 hours straight. It took a long time after his tongue was clipped for him to start sleeping better. Finally, at 15 months, he sometimes sleeps through the night. Sleep deprivation is brutal, and only those who have been through it as intensely as you and I have truly understand just how difficult it is.
May you find rest for your body and soul as you go forward from here.
A much belated echo, but still: thank you for sharing this. I nodded, winced, and remembered our own years of hospitals, surgeries, cancer scares and our sons, who did not sleep (2.75 hrs max) for four years.
Whatever the cause, lack of sleep is brutal - and for us, it came with a list of food restrictions. Anaphylaxis to sesame, tree nuts, peanuts, eggs, milk, wheat. Zucchini. Then rye, barley, spelt, kiwi, pumpkin - the list went on. And I responded with food, the more comforting the better. Simple, fresh, and as full of deliciousness and love as I could make it.
If my sons' bodies were going to make food an object of fear, I was going to balance that. Food is a pleasure, a discovery, and it is love. But somehow, food was also expected to fix all of the cracks and sharp edges in our world. Possibly, this is where I went wrong.
The kids grew, and so did I. During the time of crisis, the comfort of food outweighed the extra pounds. And looking back, I'm really not sure how I could've done it differently.
I'm applauding as I read about your taking stock, and shifting gears. Your priorities are still the same - still Lu, Danny, yourself and *yes* - and it's inspiring to see you thinking and working towards this goal.
I loved this post. Thank you for writing it and good luck with everything.
Thank you for your beautifully written and honest post, it resonated with me on many levels - the sick, nameless dread of having a new baby in the ICU, the desperation of sleep deprivation, and the way that sugar, butter and flour can seem like the answer as you run through life with a little one...thank you for sharing this, and know that there are lots of us out here struggling with the same things as you. How wonderful that your daughter is healthy (mine is too! hooray!) and I send you love and courage on your journey,
Catherine
I just read this post nodding in understanding - sometimes keeping the weight down just seems so unimportant compared to everything else in life - esp when comfort is needed so much - well that is my experience - but it is inspiring to read how you are turning it around - I wish the best of health to you and your family - and thanks for sharing - it is just what I need to hear right now
this is an old post, so you might not see this comment--but such hugs and blessings to you. what a hard time to have endured and what tremendous love and life you pulled from it. a million kudos to you. thank you for allowing all of your readers a taste of the truly genuine, so that we can mirror it in our own lives.
Thank you for sharing your story.
thank you.
Thank you so much for sharing. I've been struggling with my weight for a long time, and after following your link to the Couch to 5k site, I'm taking up running. And I'm actually EXCITED about it.
I'm a comfort eater as well as a boredom eater. Over the last few weeks, I've slowly worked on changing that, and I've found that I've been less hungry after I stopped grazing and snacking all day. It's comforting to know that there are others out there who have tried and succeeded in changing the same bad habits that so many of us deal with. It means that I can do it, too.
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