Tomorrow is always a sad day for me. Even though it comes right after Christmas, it’s been a sad day for me for the past 15 years.

During the decades I spent overweight, fat had a big impact on my life. My appearance kept me from enjoying many activities, made me feel shy and awkward with people, and impacted my relationships.

I hid whenever possible. I dressed in black and stayed in the background. I hoped no one would notice me in crowds or at events. I grew very uncomfortable whenever attention came my way because of my size. You can imagine the horror I felt when my sister Paula asked me to be in her wedding party. It was 1991 and I was at a “medium” weight, having regained some 60 lbs after a 3-year hiatus from sugar and white flour. The weight had returned, as it always did, with a vengeance.

I was even more horrified when I saw the dresses she had picked out!

PatBlue

Talk about a cliché! The horrible bridesmaid dress!

My youngest sister, Pam, was even more concerned about wearing the shiny, lacy covered dress than I was. Not only did she battle her own weight problem, she was pregnant, necessitating a slightly different gown shape.

“Yikes,” I told her. “They’re horrible! We’ll look like French whores coming down the aisle!”

Pam, whose Texas accent elongates every word, shook her head in agreement and rubbed her growing baby belly.

“And I’m going to look like the one who made a mistake,” she said.

We considered refusing the bright blue confections. We plotted accidents with chlorine bleach. We wracked our brains for a way out. I think we even considered batgirl capes.

But, in the end, we wore them.

Pat & Pam

That’s what you do for your sister. You put aside your own concerns about what people will think. You grin and bear it. You pray people will drink too much and not remember. You burn the pictures later.

Actually, I destroyed many pictures in those days. When it came time to find photos for this blog, I couldn’t find many fat ones. It was denial – my way of pretending I didn’t weigh over 200 lbs.

But my search for pictures turned up the ones you see here. Tucked away. Someone must have sent them to me because they weren’t the formal wedding pictures.

And though they filled the bill of “fat pictures” I needed, I hated seeing them. You see, they reminded me of that day – December 28, 1991 – when Pam and I put aside our pride and walked down the aisle in the brightest blue silk available while the middle sister of three got married.

Seeing these pictures, I was reminded of the fact that it was a happy day for her, maybe her happiest.

But it was a hard day for me personally. I couldn’t get over the discomfort I felt in my own skin. I was so unhappy with myself and my size. I was fixated on my weight and on dieting. I tried every crazy diet that came along, alternately losing and gaining pounds and pounds of fat. That huge blue dress emphasized my weight. I couldn’t deny it.

In those days, I never lived in the present. I lived in the future when I’d be thin (again) (maybe for a minute) (once more).

So I hid. I smiled when I had to. And my own absorption in my misery detracted greatly from my experience with my sisters that day. Like all things past, I can’t go back now and enjoy the day differently.

Today, I’ve grown past that point. I live in the now. My enjoyment of life has changed drastically. I don’t live for the future when a diet might change my life for me. Years ago, I went straight to the heart of my discomfort and changed my life by giving up my daydream and diets at the same time. And I left behind the excess weight for good.

But my discomfort that day was a communication to me that something wasn’t aligned in my life.

I wish I could say my sister Paula had experienced the changes in my life and confidence since then. I wish I could say I had experienced her life once I learned to live in the present moment and be content with myself.

But my sister died in 1995.

And these pictures are some of the last I have of our shared lives.

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