About

susanharrow1This is a blog devoted to discussing how we as women feel about our bodies, ourselves. I’ve always had a love/hate relationship with mine. Mostly hate.

I’ve been athletic my whole life so I prized my body for it’s agility and know-how to move about on it’s own, but didn’t gave this much thought. I never considered rewarding or praising my body for its ability. I just expected my body to perform, and it did. Loving it was another matter.

I heard on the radio a woman discussing the mind/body connection. She said that there was a direct connection between mind and body – it’s called the neck.

The neck may seem to connect us, but in many of us it represents the great divide. This is how it was for me.

I’d like to know how it is for you.

 

Hide Your Body, Hide Yourself

Susan Harrow | September 14, 2009

My mother was an expert in hiding. She taught me how to hide my body. I learned never to show off my good traits but to mask my unattractive ones. I began to wonder what effect a life of hiding has on a person.

If you’re always looking for ways to not be seen, how do you speak out? How do you move through the world if you have an invisible cloak that has no magical powers other than to keep you in your own shadow? How can one be exuberant and thrilled about living if this exuberance is housed in a body that is a constant shame.

These are the questions I’ve lived with. These are the questions I’m answering for myself now at age 52 with a body that is seen, with ideas that are being heard, with a life being lived fully in the body, because of it, not in spite of it.

Until age 50 I didn’t want to have a body. I could have blamed it on Catholicism, but it’s much more complicated than that: family history, a love-hate relationship with food, illness, accidents, sex and the ultimate enemy, the mirror, the self.

Ever since I can remember I’ve had nightmares. That was probably the first rebellion of what I’d later call “The body.” I’ve never called it “My body”, that would be too close. To me, my physical self has always been “The Body” something outside myself and usually very far away. Like James Joyce’s description “Mr. Dufy lived a short distance from his body,” I lived a long distance away from mine.

Early on in Catholic mass I learned to transcend this earthly ball and chain. During the long Latin ramblings by overweight and overindulgent priests, I’d stare into the tall blue flame candles on the altar and let myself travel far far away. Churches and temples were created with high round high ceilings so the spirit could soar unencumbered, and mine did. It was the only time I felt free. Later I learned different types of meditation that would bring temporary relief from the pain of living in uncooperative flesh.

I had this secret escape valve that gave me some relief from my overactive mind and the critical thoughts that dominated my being. Author Mary Karr said something like, “My mind is a bad neighborhood. Don’t walk down the alleys or streets.” Mine too.

At one point after working intensely with Israeli homoeopathist Vega Rozenberg, things came to a tipping point. My heart was beating hard and fast for hours at time, racing from 50 to 150, I thought it would burst from my chest. Nothing I did could stop it. Not meditation, not exercise, not a soothing warm drink. It beat and beat, using up my quota, for we all have only so many beats that make up a life.

After days of this I called Vega in a bit of a panic.

“Are you in or out?” He asked.
“What?”
“Are you in or out.”

I told him I didn’t know the answer to that. He said I damn well better know. Before this I had never thought that accepting life was a decision that I had to make.

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2 Comments to “About”

  • carole says:

    How right you are! As a personal branding coach, I work with individuals who want to get ahead in business. Often, people are unable to accept themselves and yet are critical of others. A good technique to help here is to get these individuals to express gratitude for what they already have, which soon gets them realising that they have most things, and are unique. The next stage then is to accept themselves exactly as they are, and only then do they seem able to move on and enjoy life and become successful. If it helps there is an article http://www.selfgrowth.com/articles/gratitude?#. that I find useful.

  • Don’t have a “love/hate” relationship with your body any more Susan! Go to: http://www.brandyorubestlife.com and call me. We can get that fixed in 10 minutes. You can drop 2 to 3 sizes in 10 minutes. For real. It works. I’m a witness! Pam Perry, Ardyss International Manager & PR coach

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