Wednesday, February 24, 2010

You're the best...AROUND!

One thing that I have realized over the years of my emotional ups and downs is that I am forever trying to reinvent myself to be better than the last moment.  There are always new clothes, new travel excursions, new friends, new lifestyle habits.  However, something that I have been struggling with most recently is that I'm not so sure how to be better without being disappointed about not being the best.

Something that I always found interesting in some unnamed former President's arguments about public school education is that in America, we should "teach values".  I am confused by this.  I am confused as to whom do these values belong?  Who is it that decides what values we adopt?  Who are the role models who give examples of these so called values?  Sure, there are certain things such as you know, don't steal from people and don't kill your neighbor and stuff, but the term "values" is really hard to define.  I look at perfectionism in the same way but it is something that constantly haunts me.

What is the best?  What is perfect?  How am I supposed to compete with something that I cannot even define?  The quest for the best is often ruled by certain actions or thoughts that are just completely made up by me!  I make these rituals and scenarios and desires,  I also happen to punish myself  when I don't meet them.  For example, I am devastated by my weight.  I have been so frustrated by my inability to lose weight in a healthy way and I let it completely consume all of my ideas about beauty and perfectionism (in myself).  

I wonder though, if I am ever going to feel good enough.  I used to feel beautiful at one time or another, but my idea of being beautiful has been so warped and manipulated to the point where I cannot even look at myself without criticism and blame.  I continue to ask myself how do I get out of this pattern?  Who's idea of the perfect me am I fighting with?  It's just me and my ideas and my critiques, and obviously an influence from other sources in the world, but it's me who is holding myself up to these standards.

Okay, so, let's break the cycle shall we?  I am going to attempt to define what are my "good enoughs" right now.  For today, and maybe for tomorrow, these are what make me good enough:

1.  I have a job that pays me and praises me for competency in my skills
2.  I have a Masters degree from a highly competative institution
3.  I have a supportive family every single day that loves me unconditionally
4.  My friends call me and want to hang out and look to me for advice, and I need them as well
5.  I spend my days looking for ways to relax but also have fun, and I have a good idea of what I like to do but also what I would like to try
6.  I live in an amazing city in an amazing apartment that I pay for with hard-earned money
7.  I have a supportive parnter who believes that I am beautiful
8.  I have control of my diabetes often enough that I rarely go high or low and I'm learning more about how my body is controlled by this disease
9.  I care about others and treat people with respect
10.  I am constantly trying to learn more about myself with the intention of maintaining happiness

Happiness is such an important driver for all of the things that make me who I am and good enough for me.  There are many things that I want to do and experience, but I have to stop thinking of those things as making me the "best" I could possibly be, but rather helping me become good enough for me.  This is not lowering standards either, but this is me attempting to recognize the happiness and good things that I have helped make for myself and that others have helped me make too.  I can contribute to helping myself, but I also need to keep in mind that the best and being perfect are undefineable and unattainable.  That has to be good enough for me.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

'Cause You're A Bugaboo, a Bugaboo

I know it's been a while since I have added anything to my blog, but it's been a busy beginning to 2010!  One of my New Years resolutions was to be more proactive in the management of my diabetes, but to not let my life be taken over and consumed by it.  It has been a difficult balance these past 12 years to figure out what is my life and what is my diabetes, and I think that I've come to the conclusion that one is not without the other, and that's well, okay.

There is not a moment of any day that I do not think about diabetes in some way.  I'm pretty tired of thinking about or saying the word that sometimes I want to change the name to something else entirely, like a code word.  Hey if Lady Gaga was born "Stephanie" I can do this right?  Instead of diabetes or liveabetes, maybe I should just call it "bugaboo" or whatever comes to mind at the moment.  Regardless, diabetes is a bugaboo and it shows in every move, every thought, every action of every conscious moment of every day.

I cannot think of anything else that I have to put this much time and energy into.  I think about things that I do every day including brushing my teeth, eating, sleeping, and other habitual needs of mine.  If I forget to do one of them, I'm totally off and most likely cranky but it's certainly not the end of the world.  If I did one of those things all the time without a break, I would be one white-toothed, fat, or untired person.  There has to be a balance with the things that we are sustained by however, we do all of these things to keep doing what we do every day to keep us alive.  So in fact, the only thing that I do other than diabetes for every moment of every day in my life is actually just living.  So, in conclusion, diabetes and my life are in fact, synonymous.

January 5, 2010 marked my 12 year "Liveaversary" and many friends came over to celebrate (yes, celebrate) the dedication to this partner in life of mine.  It's really too bad that I didn't get some shiny diamond ring out of this relationship, but if the chance were to come, I would divorce it in a jiffy so I can understand the hesitation on the 'betes part... but still it looks like I'm in this one for the long haul so I should get some kind of pretty thing out of it! 

Being that it is now February, I have tried to hold on to my resolutions from the new year by enrolling myself in an intensive outpatient program at the Joslin Diabetes Center.  I was nervous to go because it would mean that everyone would be looking at every microscopic piece of me, and I was afraid.  To be quite frank, I have been scared about the damage that has been done to my body and if a lot of it might be irreversable.  Good news is that I'm healthy and that most of it can be reversed if it already hasn't started healing.  This has given me a lot of hope and motivation to keep going on the recovery path and that slowly but surely, I'm making a better life for myself.

Something that I have found quite interesting in my diabetes-inspired reflections is that I am much happier when my blood sugars are in control, but when they're in control it is because I am dedicated to being happy and do what I can to control them.  Sounds pretty cyclical right?  Well, that's the whooooooole idea.  When I am happy, my diabetes is happy, and when my diabetes is happy, I feel like I'm a new person and that I am stronger.  So, now that I've figured that one out, I'm hoping to find the things that continue to keep both the bugaboo and myself at peace.  These are some of the things that have worked so far:

1.  Taking a compliment
2.  Listen to other people better
3.  Talk about love
4.  Exercise
5.  Budget my money and my time
6.  Walk to and from work (as long as it's not freaking freezing) and not listen to music, but look at the people and the buildings and the area and take it in
7.  Walk to and from work with music and kind of shake my booty because you know that Pink, Beyonce and Alicia Keys are comin' on
8.  SLOW DOWN.
9.  Check my blood sugars and take the time to do the math
10.  Buy new bed sheets, keep up with laundry, and my mail
11.  Re-connect with friends
12.  Make new connections
13.  Dress up sometimes for no real reason
14.  Dress down because it's really is cold out there and I just want my cozy sweater
15.  Recognize when things give my heart wings and try to do it again

So those are just some of the things that I'm trying to do more often that help keep my life in balance and in check.  I don't konw if I've ever really mastered this art, but I can certainly try.  Another really big aspect to happiness is to recognize unhappiness.  There are things that make my life not really what I want it to be and even though diabetes is one of them, I can control most of the rest of them and I'll try and control the bugaboo as much as I can.  I guess the moal of this story is that my life is a sea of checks and balances, and if diabetes liked it, it should have put a ring on it.  Man, Beyonce rocks. 

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Yes Doctor, I'm sure

I am very inspired by music.  Sometimes I think that the only way I can describe what I'm feeling is through music or lyrics.  Something that struck me today was a quote from Alicia Keys: "This beautiful city seems empty. All the people in the world and you can still feel lonely. What's the point of having it all without the person you love. Sometimes you just need to start again in order to fly."

Why yes, Alicia, I totally agree.

I think that with most mental and physical illness, or any kind of "abnormality" the feeling of being the only one in the world who is experiencing "this" is overwhelming.  I'm pretty sure that it's not entirely true for the most part, but I can see why it feels that way.  When I was at my lowest and worst I felt like I was completely alone, but it was a constant battle.  To tell or not to tell, that is the constant question.  When I finally chose to start over, the first step was letting people know what the heck was going on, and the world no longer seemed so empty to me.

One issue with Type 1 diabetes and eating disorders is that there is not much research out there about it.  There is nothing really empirically based, there is no right or wrong way to treat it, so it feels desperately isolating.  I didn't expect anyone else to know what was happening because I didn't really know the medical implications of it, all I knew was that I felt awful.  It wasn't until I peeked at my medical files one time at the doctors and I saw the diagnosis, "Eating Disorder, NOS".  Crap, really?  Is that what this is?  Let me pull out my handy Diagnostic Manual here and look up the symptoms... Wait, haven't I been trained in this?!  I reminded myself that I had been hospitalized twice now and no one ever asked me direct questions about my eating disorder so if medical doctors couldn't get it I couldn't be too hard on myself.  In the ICU in St. Louis, one doctor came in with about 4,000 medical students and said to me, "How long have your blood sugars been high" and I despondently responded, "Not long".  He came back at me quick with, "Ya sure about that one?" and left the room.  I don't know about anyone else, but I don't respond too well with that kind of attitude and I have no problem shutting down after that.
 
I don't have the best advice for everyone, but I do know what has helped me.  My world was extremely empty because I made it so.  I chose to push my illness under the rug and to tune out any voice of reason.  I did not ask for help, I didn't acknowledge when people were worried.  I lied, and I stayed in the dark (literally).  So at the risk of sounding very after-school special, it may seem like all the love is gone and you're totally alone, but it's not true.  Oh, and you can always start over.  I reinvent myself all the time.  There are certain things that I want to say, "I love to do..." instead of, "I would love to do..."

Starting over is not always easy though because people remember certain things about you at the time.  I think this is one of the things that makes recovery so difficult.  I made certain friends and took pictures and had size 0 pants during the ED.  I struggle with all of those things because sometimes you want to just get rid of everything, erase your past and start totally fresh.  However, starting over does not mean negating everything that has happened before this point.  I think that starting over means using your past to help you understand where you are now.  It's the age-old trick that your experiences are what shape you and what doesn't kill you makes you stronger.  I look back on my horrible middle school years, (I'm pretty sure that Mean Girls was based on my town) and I think, wow if I knew then what I know now... The thing is though, you couldn't PAY me to do it again.  So you learn, you move on, you try again.  

I was talking to my sister the other day about how I was nervous about an upcoming event because I was going to see people who I haven't seen in a long time.  Panicking, I said to her, "When I knew them I looked like a different person" and she intelligently responded, "You are a different person, a better person".  Huh, yeah I suppose she's right.  Like middle school, I would never go back to being that empty person and what I know now is because of what I didn't know then. In order to learn to fly I had to see the lonely world but realize that there was love there to help me start over.  Sorry for the extreme cheese, but I had to give a shout out to my girl Alicia who always seems to know the right things to say...

Monday, November 30, 2009

Hibernation

Since I have been in recovery from Diabulimia, I have obviously experienced some weight gain.  I cannot express enough how painful this has been for me.  In the beginning of the weight gain it was literally painful.  When my body was "running" on the fuel of high sugars and molasses-like blood in my veins, it was depleted of all nutrients, fat, muscle, and water.  The body begins to break down muscle and fat for energy.  When an individual, who has been suffering from other types of eating disorders, begins to eat properly again, she will most likely experience water retention.  This is one of the most uncomfortable experiences physically and emotionally.

When the body is starved and deprived of everything that it requires to function, and is suddenly given a little bit back, it becomes very selfish.  Like the old lady next door who keeps every newspaper and greeting card ever given to her, your body starts to hoard whatever is brought into it to protect it just in case it was challenged to live on starvation mode again.  I kind of like to look at it like my body went into survival mode, and it stored absolutely everything.  I'm sure you can imagine what this does to someone who has the biggest fear of "fat" and weight, and has lived for years focused on losing weight, no matter what it took.  I have had to let myself fill up like a balloon, and I had to do it "willingly".   I had to store fat like I was a bear and go into hibernation for what seemed like the rest of my life.  The edema finally did go down, and I am not swollen like I was, but during that time, I wanted to go into hiding until it was over and I was out of that body that I did not recognize.

The positive spin on the water retention is that because it is so painful, I never want to do it again.  This is one of the biggest reasons why I remain in recovery and continue to keep my blood sugars in check and take my insulin regularly.  When I first started to retain water and take my insulin, I was so immensely resentful for many reasons.  It made everything I owned painfully tight (including shoes, stretchy pants, and don't forget about jeans).  I required so much insulin all the time, which is a fat-storing hormone, and I was so used to eating food like I was a 300 pound man.  Now I had to be on a meal plan, take tons of this "fat juice" and retain water like I was being paid to.

I don't know what it is like to be in withdrawal from a "typical" chemical dependency as far as I know.  I do think that the symptoms that I experienced were most certainly the reactions of detoxing.  When blood sugars are so high for an extended period of time, your blood becomes toxic and poisonous, and you're officially in DKA.  This, like a drug or alcohol, can kill you if there is too much.  So, too much of anything is (usually) not a good thing, and in my case this had to stop before I killed myself.  As if that wasn't motivation enough to keep me from relapsing, going through the withdrawal symptoms again is probably one of the most influential reasons for staying healthy.

I can't decide if this is motivational or scary, and maybe it is a little bit of both.  Even today, I struggle with my weight and my diabetes acceptance and care on a daily basis.  I have more appreciation and care for my life than I used to, and that is definitely because of the support that I have from friends and family and the boyfriend, but it also has something to do with me too.  I was completely closed off to help or acknowledgment that something was wrong, I just lived in my day to day coma and no matter how small I became or how sick I felt, I just kept going.  I have had to try and reverse those thoughts now, and try to just keep going, but in the positive direction.

I hate when people (other than myself) are right.  Usually my mother does this often and so does the boyfriend... flippin voices of reason... argh...  I mean, clearly I know everything that is right for me all the time and in any situation.  In fact, I'm always right for that matter.  However, letting other people help me and love me is not me being wrong.  I have to remind myself of this allllll the time.  It is easy to jump in and save the day when someone else that you love is in trouble.  I hate watching my loved ones hurt and I would do anything to stop it from happening.  I try to remind myself that there are people who love me that way too, and I have to let myself be loved.  It's not giving up on my pride, it's not failing, it's not losing my independence.

All of this recovery stuff is hard.  Diabetes is hard, and so is living a balanced life.  I'm working on reaching my long-term goals of health and happiness right now.  These goals were long-term just a short year ago, and now I guess they're more like short-term.  I had to detox and clean my system of the damage done to it, and there are still days when I feel like I'm dragging and not "normal", but the first goal that I made was to start to regulate my system.  I have done that now, and work on it daily, but these new goals I have are way more fun to accomplish.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Are you sure you can eat that? WARNING: This may sound bitchy...

Ask anyone with diabetes what really grinds their gears about common misconceptions about the disease, very often asking them "Should you really be eating that?" is at the top of the list, or at least it is for me.  It is hard to know what would really hurt someone's feelings when you talk to them about their diabetes, but a word of advice would be, think.  I am happy, no, more than happy to answer questions about Type 1 diabetes and to explain what medically happens to my body, but I am not like your grandmother who died from complications with high blood sugar, I still have all of my appendages, I'm not like Stacey from The Babysitter's Club, I am me.

Every diabetic is different and has a different style in their care.  Instead of saying, "I heard that diabetics aren't supposed to drink booze or they'll die" try something like, "What does alcohol do to your blood sugar?"  I don't want to hear some horror story about someone you once knew, and I don't want to hear about an amputated leg, and I don't want to be asked if I have the "Bad Kind" of diabetes.  Note: No "kind" is the "good kind".  Diabetes sucks, always.

Despite the many things that I don't like to be asked or bombarded with about the liveabetes, there are certain times when it is nice that people just understand.  Unfortunately, despite all of my strong-willed and thick-headed ways, I have to rely on other people sometimes.  One of the scariest moments in my life, (that I wasn't even conscious for) was my last night in St. Louis before returning to the east coast for the summer.  It was the first and only time (knock on wood) that I passed out in my sleep from low sugar levels, but it was also one of the only times I could not help myself and relied on my best friend to bring me out of my coma.  This is not a scare tactic, and it doesn't happen every day, but I was so lucky to have her there for me that morning, spoon feeding me honey until the paramedics got there.  Being my best friend since before I was diagnosed with diabetes, Amy had grown up with me counting my food and testing my blood, and knew what to do in an emergency.  This was the best support anyone could have given me because she knew that there was always that possibility that I wouldn't be able to help myself, but she also didn't let it rule her life or mine.

It is okay to ask me questions about my personal care of diabetes.  I may or may not want to talk about it, but knowing that there are people who would like to understand more is always a comforting thought.  Making assumptions and comparisons about diabetes is never a good thing, just like it's not for anything else!  We're taught not to stare when we see something that we don't understand, so please, if you see someone testing their blood sugar, taking an insulin shot, or has a beeper-looking-thingy on the side of their pants, don't stare or get grossed out.  As far as I'm concerned, shots, needles, blood and counting, etc are the sugar-free lemonade that I'm making out of the lemons I was handed.  It's hard enough to deal with it as it is, so no offense, but I can't be concerned with how my diabetes is making you feel.  It's not comfortable for me either so if you have a cure for it, I'm all ears!

A great article in the New York Times was just brought to my attention by my new friend, Katie.  This article was a breath of fresh air for me because it is a real account about living with T1 diabetes, which is always something that I'm trying to figure out myself!  It also helps explain the difference between Type 1 and 2, which is another subject that is important for me to help others understand.  I know I don't have the most svelte body on the planet here, but there is nothing about my lifestyle that has caused me to have diabetes, so again, I'm just living it now the best way I can handle at the moment.

This post might be a bit more harsh and unapproachable than I hoped it to be, but I am trying to be honest and raw in my opinions and experiences.  I have ups and downs in my tolerance for the disease and explaining it, but as a general note, I try to be patient and understanding when someone may only have one obscure reference to diabetes that they base all other assumptions on. This is kind of the same thing I think, and the best way to know more about something is to ask questions.  Just please, stop staring at the piece of cake that I was enjoying, because in reality, nobody should be eating that...but we do cause it's yummy... 

Friday, November 20, 2009

The show must go on...

Ever since I was a little girl I have loved to perform.  My sister and I debuted one of our most famous performances, "Kirsten and Alison Doing a Play" at the young age of 7.  Since then I have moved on to more "well known" roles and performed in various plays and concerts, etc all through college.  I think I've always felt somewhat comfortable on stage after my nerves subside, which is probably one of the reasons why no one really knew that I was so sick.  I guess you could say that it was one of my most realistic performances of my life, you know, the "I'm totally fine and I'm perfect and completely functional" character that I hid behind for way too long. 

It is my understanding that the mind and the body go into survival mode when life is compromised and you function on pure adrenaline to just stay alive.  I look back on this time in my life and I am blown away at my ability to seemingly function normally, receive a master's degree, and get a job that could cover the expenses of living in Boston.  I honestly have no idea how I got here.  Basically, I was in a walking coma, and I was totally encompassed by the thoughts of needing to prove that I could do it all.  I spent my every day physically in pain but ignoring all of it to just push through the task at hand.  I can hardly remember a lot of what I studied, what I spent weeks researching, or what I said or did to prove that I was a master at my craft. 

I do remember the nights when I was sleeping on the floor of my bathroom for fear of vomiting from the glucose levels.  I remember falling asleep on my couch at lunchtime on one day, and not waking up until the next day and still not being able to get up and face the day.  I remember the clumps of hair that fell out after taking a shower, and the stomach acid burning my esophagus, the popsicles that I tried to eat because they would quench my thirst for the moment.  I can remember thinking that I was a big show, and that I could smile when I was just so damn tired because that was the scene that had to take place so that no one would know.

One positive thing that came out of my experience was the love and support that I found.  When your body goes into survival mode, senses are heightened, and I found the most incredible friendships of a lifetime.  I was so needy, and without questioning or thinking about it, my friends just reacted to me and loved me regardless.  It was difficult for me to tell them what I was doing because I was so ashamed of it and I didn't want them to leave me.  I know that they wouldn't do that because these friends were the kind of support that one can only dream of, but I still wanted to be in this world on my own.

The thing about eating disorders is that it is difficult to detect until it has physically manifested itself in weight gain or loss.  Most likely, the severe weight loss is the point when it has gotten so bad that it feels like there is no turnaround for the person who is living it.  There was a point in time when I really thought this was just the way I was going to live my life forever.  I would eventually deteriorate from this disease, and I would let it take over.  When I was at my smallest, it was extremely obvious to everyone that I had gone too far.  I fought to stay in my own head and by myself and "manage" this the way that I knew how, but the reality of it is that I was so far gone.  I was so deep in this character that I had created that I completely lost myself in all of it.

I don't really have any brilliant ideas on how to intervene when you see someone suffering from this.  The reaction and feelings are going to be different for everyone, but I know that for me, it took the absolute, undying support of my family and friends to pull me out.  If they were tired of dealing with me or helping me or listening to me, I didn't know it, and I felt like I was supported the whole way through. 

When a diabetic who has been omitting insulin levels begins to take it more regularly, her homeostasis is completely off.  When I started to take my insulin again and my blood sugar levels started to come back to normal, I retained fluid like a sponge because my body realized that I wasn't in starvation mode anymore, and now my organs and muscles were holding on to anything they could for fear of being starved again.  This is one of the worst experiences of my life, and I never ever want to go through it again.  It does go away, but for what seemed like an eternity, I felt like a balloon.  Everything was swollen and tight, including my fingers, feet, eye sockets, everything.  I was devastated because I had nothing to wear that didn't feel like it was squeezing and restricting me.  My mother took me to the mall and helped pick out some dresses that flowed and didn't pull, and didn't show my swollen stomach and didn't accentuate my expanding waistline.  I came out of the dressing room and my Mom looked at me and said that I looked "pretty".  These were the types of things that kept me going and put me on the track that I am now. 

There is no way I could have done it on my own.  I had to accept the help from others and realize that it was hard.  It hurt, it made me cry, and it was embarrassing.  I was basically detoxing because the sugar in my bloodstream had in fact become toxic and was killing me slowly.  It was important for me to be cared for during this transition and I can thank everyone in my life for that.  I don't have the magic solution, and it's not very pretty and tied with a bow, but I had to go through this pain to realize that it is so much brighter on the other side.  

Life is way more enjoyable now, and I can honestly say that I'm happy.  There is no need to put on a show and take it all on by yourself.  A wise man named Bono once said, "sometimes you can't make it on your own" and this is one of those times.  If you let help come into your life, you can equip yourself with resilience to the things that may seem impossible when you're otherwise broken down and fractured.  It takes a community to raise a child, no (wo)man can live alone on an island, blah blah blah, you get the idea :).  If help is offered, just take it, you can repay it in another way some other day.    

Thursday, November 19, 2009

I know it feeeeels like somebody's waaaatchinnnn mmeeee

I'm going to go ahead and admit something right now.  I think that everyone has an opinion about me.  Strangers, friends, my family, my boyfriend, people who don't know me but have sat next to me on the T one time.  I think they are all watching me, and scheming about how I should be living my life.  This is an embarrassing quality to admit, but I think that it is very real for a lot of people.  I literally walk down the street, see someone I don't know, they may be looking at me or not, but I am devastated and convinced that they were looking at my outfit or my butt and thinking the worst.  As if it really matters.  To me, it actually does.

To be a perfectionist is an impossible job.  To believe that you are good "enough" for someone or something will never be.  I am never satisfied with "enough" because in my mind, there isn't such a thing.  I want to be fantastic.  I have come to learn that I am not satisfied with the things that might make me fantastic because the bar is raised higher and higher every time I reach a "goal".  Best grades, best classes, best college, best grad school, best job, etc.  I have a tendency to be thinking about the next step instead of living in the moment.  My good friend Jenni once said that we have to stop living for the next thing because we're missing out on our lives now.  An example of this is, "As soon as I get out of grad school I'm going to move to Boston and get a great job and be the best social worker".  Problem with that is I can hardly remember what it was like to live in St. Louis!  I was lucky to slow down a bit and meet some of the most amazing people in my life who I miss dearly every single day.  My health was what forced me to slow down finally, and try to take in what was happening at that time on that day and not worry about tomorrow.

I bring this whole idea up because it has been one of the biggest challenges for me this past year.  A combination of the constant fear of criticism and moving so fast that you can't see what's happening to you has made it difficult to think of myself as "in repair".  My boyfriend tells me that I'm a "work in progress" and it's nice to slow down for a second and believe that the road to health is a long one, and I have to be patient.  When I was actively involved in my diabulimia, the behaviors lasted for about two years.  There were ebbs and flows, and was worse around December '07, but overall, it was a long time.  I have to remind myself that the neglect and damage to my body was done over time, and it seems to be much harder to heal now that the destruction is done.  Rome wasn't built in a day, and neither was I.  It's like when you get a headache first, and then take meds for it, it is much more difficult to rid yourself of the headache.  It takes time, relaxation, and maybe a nap.  So I have to think about my eating disorder as one looooooong-ass headache, and I'm just now taking a nap.

When I am having trouble reminding myself that I'm a work in progress, and I am down about how I look, and can't understand why this is all just so hard, I read my post-it.  It is probably the oldest trick in the book, but I am very grateful for my post-its.  Post-its are like your friends who say the right thing every time, and encourage you, and come from the heart.  I have a post-it on my computer at work that just says, "Remember".  This is a visual cue to me that I have a great support, and that I have a very happy life even if in that moment it doesn't feel like it.  It's not perfect, I still struggle, but then again, I'm trying to figure out what is "enough" and that nothing is going to be perfect, (including me).  

"I'm in repair, I'm not together, but I'm getting there" (ohhhh thank you John Mayer for feeding my obsession with cheesy quotes).