Welcome to the Blog for my book I've Been There...My Testimony of Hope.

This blog is a mixed bag, no holds barred mix of back stories, information, updates, and connection links to I've Been There...A Testimony of Hope. It has links inks.

My hubs David and I are committed to sharing CHANGE MAKING COMMUNICATIONS to inspire life-affirming changes at any age and stage of life. promote the idea that it is never too late to be great and to live our very best lives.

We welcome and appreciate all supporters. Together we are stronger, and that is the message of I've Been There...A Testimony of Hope.

The who, what, when and why of my book

For years prior to writing this book, my hubs David, clients and friends urged me to share the who, what, when and why of where I was and where I am today.

Oddly it was a quote that framed things in a way that made sense to share my healing and spiritual path from the "there to my healthy, happy here. The essence of the quote was, "those who have walked through the fires and became a Phoenix have a moral responsibility to give the lessons back to give other their transformational wings."

The girl in the shadows on the book jacket was me back "there.| " I wrote this book as a testimony of hope and chronicale how my scars were turned into Lodestars that guide my and others I share our Change Making ideas with today. My book is an offering and affirmation that it is not what happens to us that defines who and what we become. Instead, it is how we respond and choose to do about it.

Bright blessings on your own journey,
Raia

Coralie "Raia" Darsey-Malloy

About Me

My photo
First up...I wear many hats, literally and figuratively. I write professionally and along with my memoir I've Been There...My Testimony of Hope I have written a variety of books on healthy dynamic living. My hubs David and I co own and co-direct Change Making Communications . We share ideas through blogs, Face Book Groups, You Tube, free lance writing, presentations inprivate and group facilitation dynamic living live coaching. David and I have been partners in life and business since 1990. We have no intention of retiring because we know that it is only work if you don't life it and we love what we do.

Friday, January 20, 2012

AWARENESS AND TRANSFORMATIONAL CHANGE



My life and business partner David and I keep coming up in my thoughts about the  importance of remaining mindful and conscious as much as possible throughout the day.  This has to do with dealing with misconceptions of ourselves and others, as well as our expectations of ourselves and others too. It's important to think about expectations and what they are based on. Societal, familial or self expectations can be undermining in so many ways. from relationships, motivation and the  growth we seek.  

It is time to release all the inner and outer noise and  develop the clarity about how each of us fits  within existing structures and  systems--or not. David and I are a place in life where we no longer feel the need to be tied down to any structure or system. Instead we choose to believe that we are here  to break free from them and live with the idea that there is no ceiling to how good life can be.  Within the growing awareness within society there is greater acceptance that  there’s always multiple ways to do them, and sometimes brand new ways to do them. W hen you push someone in one direction forcefully, the opposite direction will become more attractive for  that person.  Don’t push anyone to do or follow something forcefully, it will only lead to destruction, but instead of compelling  stand beside and guide them with love and understanding, give people time, ask them to take it slowly and at the  end you will see the beauty within them. 





Many of  old systems don’t apply anymore and no longer work. Change can be channeling because they are what people know and familiar with and they may accept things without questions. During sessions with clients we encourage them   to think beyond existing parameters. Critical thinking re-frames old archives and assists in more neutral, objective thinking rather than boxing ides in with  long lists of rules and regulations.  It is time to more  questions and decide what is valid for who we are and where we are, who are the authorities and who is making the rules we live by. 

There are many who are   beginning to shatter old perceptions and begin thinking beyond limitation. It is a time to begin thinking outside the box and opening up to other aspects of who we are within our Divinity.  We are not here to fit in at any cost. We are being called to break free of old patterns, delusions and conditioned existence. As we transform your inner world and heighten awareness it  creates a ripple effect that inspires other people to break free old ties that used to bind.  Within our  personal and professional experience we  believe this  applies to anyone who is interested in transforming and awakening to broader perspectives  life. As we do it opens the way to live a more self-accountable life  as we work with the law of  cause/effect/choice/consequence. 




THE ANATOMY OF AN EATING DISORDER FROM THERE AND BACK

By Coralie Darsey-Malloy

I sit and listen attentively to each woman within the sharing circle speaks as they openly discuss their individual struggles with their eating disorders. Some are working through their own process and others are there looking to find answers for a loved one facing similar challenges. As I quietly observe I glance around the room see how some mask their pain with a vacant stare while others speak in words that are strangled with emotion. As I silently participate in their individual and collective journeys my heart goes out to them. I am fully able to empathize with their struggle … because I was once going through a similar process and am fully aware of how difficult it is to believe that there is a way to move beyond their compulsive coping patterns.

Their journey was once my journey and I had decided to come  a support meeting to  offer my testimony of hope. When it came time for me to speak I start sharing some of   what I had learned along my own path. At first they there was openness as started sharing why I was there. The energy in the room shifts and the participants turn their heads and sit quietly as I begin sharing my story. 

“I am here tonight to honor and support where you are—because I once walked this path and fully understand what a difficult journey you are on. After  thirty years of struggle and strife I finally found another way to live my life and I am a living testimony that it is possible to heal your body and your life. I have been free from the clutches of anorexia, bulimia, compulsive over-eating and body-image issues for over sixteen years. I am not a recovering anything. No quite the contrary, I am healed, whole, well and in better health now than I ever was in my youth. I am here to offer encouragement   and say that if I can do it  you can do it too.”

I pause for a moment and suddenly sense that the energy in the room has changed. As I glance around there is a tangible, yet inaudible ‘clunk.’ My many years as a group facilitator and life couch had put me in touch with this dynamic before. It is  very clear that minds within the room have suddenly closed. Something in what I related created a low comfort level and experience has taught me to respect individual boundaries than to forge ahead. I left shortly afterwards. The next day I called the facilitator of the support group and discussed what had occurred. Her feedback was not all that surprising and openly confirmed my observations as she said, “Yes Coralie, even though the group appreciated where you are—there is a lot of denial, anger and feelings of victimization within this group. At this point all they really want to do is to be able to express how they feel each week without really getting into problem solving right now. Maybe what you have to offer will be more accepted at some later date—but thank you for coming. Good-bye. Click. Conversation over. Now what?

As I hung up the phone I take a deep breath and allow my mind to go back along the time time-lines of my life to where it all began to unravel for me. Around the age of eighteen I decided to take a modeling course and see if I could make it in the fashion industry. The women who headed up the agency never bothered to tell me that my five foot two and a half inch height would never allow me to go very far. She willingly took the money for the course and I blindly followed her lead. As I struggled to compensate for the obvious height issue it made sense that if I lost enough weight maybe being skinny could somehow compensate for what was lacking vertically. Couple that dynamic with a home life with a controlling, abusive, alcoholic father and a passive enabling mother I began to develop a sense of self that was outwardly directed. That shift in focus was the beginning of my downfall.

As I continue wandering around in the musings of my mind I vividly remember how I began starving myself so I could create the body I had in my mind. This was many years ago  long before there was a clinical name for binging, purging, laxative abuse and creative self-starvation techniques. The process was effective in my mind because it allowed me to become a skinny 89 pounds. Initially the cycle pattern had started out with restrictive calorie counting, frenetic bouts of intense exercising that were difficult to sustain. Here is a photo of me in my twenties at my lowest weight.



Each time I ‘failed’ a binge followed and then the whole cycle began again. . Weight gains lowered  my self-esteem and created an internal need to binge. I used food  to compensate for  the growing feelings of inadequacy or block out thoughts and emotions that were too uncomfortable to handle.  I  did not realize then  that my fixation on food, weight and body image were compulsive coping mechanism. The fixated thinking had become a way of denying what I believed to be insurmountable issues in my personal and family life. That awareness would only come many years later.


His serious tone caught my attention interest and I felt he might just have a solution and I quickly said, “What do they do?”  My father could see he had me—and he played the moment to his advantage by taking a s drink from his glass of Scotch and a slow puff on his cigarette before answering. “It is any easy fix—eat whatever you want, then stick your fingers down your throat and throw it up. Some also use laxatives—between those two things—you can be whatever weight you want and keep it. Simple huh?”

The impact of what he had just said was not lost to either my mother or me. I vividly recall the look of horror on her face. It was the exact moment that the light bulb went on for me. Needless to say there was nothing my mother could say or do to stop me. Little did I know then that my father’s statement would re-route my life and create a quagmire of confusion that would take years to emerge from. As I continue to wander down memory lane I am caught in a full circle moment of total recall and I vividly remember my first binge/purge experience.

“Ahh—alone at last. My stomach is bulging as I wander towards the bathroom. I cannot help thinking about the volume of food just consumed. It was the biggest binge of my life—but knowing that I was going to be able to ‘get rid of it’ created a blissed out state while I was indulging. Throughout the ‘stuffing’ I comforted myself with the reality that I was about to embark on my first episode in throwing up. No one could stop me now—I was on a whole new path of liberation—or so I thought then.

As I stand in front of the toilet the stark while porcelain bowl invites me to begin a ritual of association that will last far longer than I ever wanted it to. At this juncture I foolishly believe I would be able to control my association with it—too bad I didn’t know then what hard lessons I would have to learn as a result of what I did next. Before beginning I paused and wondered how to do it. For one brief moment I felt like an initiate to some order—and this was the act that would allow me to gain entry to some unseen power.

Hmm—I wonder how many fingers I should use? I decide to hook my thumb and little finger together and try three. Ugh, that hurt, maybe I should try two. As I shove them down my throat initially nothing happens, I try again—further down this time—there I’m getting a gag response—keep it up—the energy within my intention to master this art of body and weight control drives me to keep going. As I push harder and deeper I gag more and I keep it up, pushing, probing fingers deeper until I finally feel my insides begin to respond. As the inner upheaval begins to move I am full of anticipation as I sense the massive amount of food I’d consumed is rising upwards. Excitement begins to build as I feel lift-off occurring.

The food rushes up in a volcanic eruption. Once I had the first experience in motion I kept it up I did it once, twice, three—four—until I lost count and could finally feel my stomach had released all its booty. As I flushed the toilet for a final time and closed the lid I looked at my formerly bulging abdomen and saw how flat it had become and I absolutely delighted. I stood in mute silence admiring my handiwork. Then within the aftermath I feel my knees slightly buckling and I sit on the toilet and try to process what had just happened.

In retrospect it was one of the last times I paid any real attention to my body’s responses. From that point on I become increasingly dissociated from anything it felt or needed. But initially symptoms were too obvious to ignore. I could not help but notice what a physically demanding ritual the self-induced vomiting actually was. I felt weak, my neck and back were stiff and sore from bending over. Residues of bitter tasting bile lingered in my mouth and my eyes felt as though they were stretched and bulging behind their sockets. Coupled with all of that was an incredible thirst and it was clear to me that I was severely dehydrated. But I held on to the fact that I had managed to do it and in the bizarre fashion of anyone with an eating disorder I felt kind of good about my achievement.

The void within the moments afterwards was eventually filled with something else. Even though I felt physically weak—something bigger and not clearly understood had occurred within the unusual and rite of passage I had just undertaken. I noticed a sense of relief—as if on some emotional level I had a moment of release from things I could not clearly define. That gave me a profound sense of empowerment and I liked it. Although it was not fully comprehended to me at that time I came to see that something within that first experience put a new set of beliefs in motion. In retrospect this first act created a false sense of security about controlling my destiny and achieving every weight loss dream of skinniness I had been harboring within.

As I embellished the moment with romanticized ideas that this ritual would allow me to create the perfect body size and shape—and with that would come all the love, acceptance and appreciation I could not find anywhere else. As my mind ran along those line it eclipsed any sense of how bizarre the path I was embarking on really was. Logic and reason were replaced with an unrealistic sense that everything I ever wanted or desired was now within my reach. I could eat whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted in whatever amounts I wanted and never have to look back. On top of that I could show the world that I could achieve something many others could not—a lean, strong, thin body—something everyone wanted and now I could finally have.
As I continued along this deluded path I developed an ‘ignorance is bliss’ approach to my rituals. 

Being able to binge and throw up worked for awhile. But what is now called bulimia eventually began to upset my metabolism and eventually my digestive and elimination  were severely affected. The more I did ate and purged the less energy I had and it was difficult to keep up my happy face about being thin at all costs. When the process began to affect my ability to eliminate I added my father’s second suggestion to the list and began using laxatives to move what foot I could not ‘get rid of’ by throwing up. Over the years of abuse my body became soft, bloated and what I termed ‘gooshy.”

Then in the midst of feeling un-toned, flabby and increasingly unhealthy I decided to go in a different direction and I began to starve myself, exercise for hours and abuse laxatives in growing amounts. At one point I was taking up to sixty laxatives a day to lose weight—but in my deep states of denial and delusion I told myself it was safe because I only used herbal laxatives. During anorexic phases of the eating disorder starving myself, throwing up, exercising excessively and abusing laxatives worked quite well.  I was proud of how I consistently surpassed five pound increments until I was less than 90 pounds. At my lowest point I managed to starve myself down to 89 pounds.



At that point I was hospitalized and went through five years in and out of psychiatric wards. I was subjected to massive amounts of mood-altering drugs. When didn’t work I was given over 120 ECT treatments before they finally figured out none of it was working. No one within the medical system ever considered addressing family life or what might be the root cause of my debilitating health and personal problems. Through that whole time no one ever addressed the problems I was having at home and with my parents. I consistently felt that I was the problem—and that added to a growing loss of self-worth and any sense of self. There were times where I thought it would be better to die and I often wished I could. 

The depressing feelings of hopelessness and helplessness were so bad at times I considered taking my own life so the pain could end. By the time I reached the ten year mark of struggle I was 28. None of what the medical model had to offer was doing anything to change my behavior—or my life. So I made the decision to get out of the system and find another way. As I look back over the anatomy of my eating disorder one of the most surreal aspects of it was through the whole thirty year process I was still functioning on many levels. The five year stint in the psychiatric wards was the most challenging and least productive times of my life. But after getting out of that kind of constrictive ‘care’ I made a decision to do something—anything different.

At age twenty-eight I married my childhood sweetheart and began to journal and pray for direction and a way to heal my life. It was clear that if I did not find a way through the confusing maze of my disordered life and disordered eating I was going to die. My throat had started to bleed when I stuck my fingers down my throat. My intestines and stomach ached and I was increasingly sick and tired of feeling sick and tired. I have come to accept that the challenges I was having in trying to find answers contributed to the break-up of my first marriage—but there was nothing I could do—except keep on keeping on until I found another way to cope.
My lifestyle was a horrendous series of uphill and downhill slides into a world I feared I might never be able to escape. It was a lonely, isolating world at times because I could never allow anyone to get too close, lest they discover my terrible truth. The irony of it all is that I still had an outer semblance of a life. I worked, socialized, dated and even began writing, producing a series of talk shows on community access television in Winnipeg. So to all appearance I had my act together. The shame of my secret ritualistic life of self-destruction continued as I lived a life of ‘quiet, unspoken desperation.’

It took another twenty years after that to finally have enough of a spiritual epiphany to fully comprehend that my obsession with thinness, fixated thinking about image-management and trying to define myself from the outside were not the real issues. Then in an amazing moment of clarity some of my prayers were answered. For the first time I could see there was something very wrong with my whole lifestyle and my sense of Self within it and once I ‘got it’ things began to change. When Karen Carpenter died I was amazed to learn that what I had been doing since my late teens had finally had a name and a diagnosis. Well imagine that. Too bad it hadn’t been addressed when I was being tortured by the medical model all those years ago.

Up to that point a part of me did not really believe that what I was doing could actually kill me. I had been doing it for so long never in the thirty year span had any doctor ever said that there could be some long term health problems with what I was doing. But the media hype around her death mentioned that her heart gave out and that was a big newsflash for me. As unfortunate as it was to hear about Karen’s death added another dimension to the clarity I was developing from within. It forced me to sit down and ask myself some really tough questions.

As I sat quietly I could not help but wonder whether I had an unspoken, formerly unacknowledged death with and that maybe the eating disorders were how I was unconsciously planning to fulfill it. That hard core question about whether my death wishes were stronger than my life wishes changed the course of my life path. I knew deep within my being that I did not want to die and that I had better smarten up or the choice might not be mine to make.

From that point on the course of my life path began to change in strange and mysterious ways. Once I made a decision to live I embarked on a quest to heal my life and stop allowing feeling of victim hood to shape the events in my life. As I kept my focus on regaining health, balance I sought out a series of therapists and alternative health practitioners in a whole-person approach to my healing. Therapy helped me to stop playing the blame game with my parents and put energy into taking responsibility for the choices I was making within whatever circumstance I was in.

Had I had a hard life in some ways? Most definitely! Had my family of origin contributed to my personal and health problems? Undeniably! But through time I had to accept that I could either live in the past with all the hurt, regret, blame and shame or I could choose to forgive all of it and move on. And that was what I did and I continue to do that today. Now admittedly the changes didn’t happen overnight. It took a lot of self-ownership, therapy, changing my diet and my mindset to help me become healthy rather than skinny. The more I focused on building a more positive sense of self and striving to be healthy and whole the less time I had to worry about my outer appearance. I was beginning to live life in the reverse of how I once did—from the inside out.

Here is a collage of the various changes in my body over the years. From my heaviest to my skinniest. 



As I learned how to manage my life, handle stress and focus on goal setting and goal-getting my world and everything in it changed for the better. As I learned how like and love myself and accept my shortcomings as part of being human I also was able to establish safe boundaries with others. As I progressed along my path towards wholeness and happiness I recovered repressed memories of sexual abuse and it became clear that I had been treating myself the way I had been treated. I had been abused and felt that was what I deserved and I found a way to abuse myself—and what was what the eating disorders represented for me. It is so obvious now—all change begins with awareness and once I was aware of why I did what I did I was able to change the pattern forever and never go back.

I made it through and life today is sweeter, richer, healthier and more abundant than it ever was in what many call the prime years of their life. I now thank Source that when I had considered ending my life that Some   higher power prevented it from happening.  Had my life ended I'd be missing all the good that I now enjoy.  As of January 20, 2012 I have have been with the love of my life since July, 1990 and we are partners in life and business. Even though we are at an age when some retire David and I remain committed  to sharing what we have learned so others can benefit by applying the principles we have developed and applied to our own lives. It has been said that anyone who has met the challenge and overcome it has a moral duty to chare it. And so that is what David and I do.



As I reflected on my  journey through the past to present  back  I realized why I felt the  need to go sit in on that support group. They may not be ready to hear what I have to say but I know there are many out there who are. As I was able to transform my life and become healthy and while I took training and began developing and presenting workshops about a system of weight management that works from the inside out. David and I combined our training and experience and developed the Inner Dynamics System where we assist clients in discovering solutions from the inside out. The Body Dynamics System  is a healthy approach to healthy weight management that has  a proven track record. It  assists people change their lives by changing and re-framing their attitudes and behaviors around their weight and body-image.

The process for self-change involves a readiness to change a and some guidance about how to do it. David and I co-direct a personal development  company that is appropriately named Fresh Beginnings. We promote the idea that is it is never too early or too late create a new beginning or live the best life at any age. The website link for Fresh Beginnings is: www.fresh-beginnings.com.



After sharing my healing journey with clients I was encouraged to write a book about it. I’ve Been There…A Testimony of Hope is the name of my memoir and it chronicles how I transformed my scars into stars and life for the better. The website for the book is www.ibtbook.com.



Thursday, January 19, 2012

Desiderata


"Desiderata" Latin for "Desired Things" was originally an inspirational poem copyrighted by Max Ehrmann in 1927, it went on to become an uplifting and truly motivational song in the early 1970's. It inspired me through some of my darkest hours and I love it as much today as I did then. It continues to serve as a reminder that even when it does not appear so everything is working for our highest and greatest good.

Go placidly amid the noise and the haste,
and remember what peace there may be in silence.

As far as possible, without surrender,
be on good terms with all persons.
Speak your truth quietly and clearly;
and listen to others,
even to the dull and the ignorant;
they too have their story.
Avoid loud and aggressive persons;
they are vexatious to the spirit.

If you compare yourself with others,
you may become vain or bitter,
for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself.
Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans.
Keep interested in your own career, however humble;
it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.

Exercise caution in your business affairs,
for the world is full of trickery.
But let this not blind you to what virtue there is;
many persons strive for high ideals,
and everywhere life is full of heroism.
Be yourself. Especially do not feign affection.
Neither be cynical about love,
for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment,
it is as perennial as the grass.

Take kindly the counsel of the years,
gracefully surrendering the things of youth.
Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings.
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.

Beyond a wholesome discipline,
be gentle with yourself.
You are a child of the universe
no less than the trees and the stars;
you have a right to be here.
And whether or not it is clear to you,
no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.

Therefore be at peace with God,
whatever you conceive Him to be.
And whatever your labors and aspirations,
in the noisy confusion of life,
keep peace in your soul.


With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams,
it is still a beautiful world.
Be cheerful. Strive to be happy.