“We cannot achieve more in life than what we believe in our heart of hearts we deserve to have.” ~James R. Ball
I was a binge eater. At night. Every night. No one would ever have guessed it because I was at a healthy weight. But I believed that my weight was too high a number, so I would try to fix it.
Each morning I would start afresh and eat like a svelte, sexy mouse. I vowed that this time would be different. But each night, to fill the voids I didn’t know were there, I would eat. And eat. And eat.
What helped me get off that hungry, helpless cycle? A dress.
When I was swinging wildly between under and overeating I did not buy clothes. Why bother when I would be smaller in a couple of weeks? I would be better. No point wasting money on clothes that would be too big on my soon-to-be-lithe frame.
Years went by and my body shape was still no different. I still had a wardrobe filled with ill-fitting and ill-feeling clothing. I was still no better.
Hiding behind the seemingly practical idea of not wasting money was the belief that I was undeserving.
I did not deserve to clothe a figure I deemed too large. I did not deserve to move my body in ways that felt good (unless it was going to tone and tighten). I did not deserve to eat high quality food. I did not deserve my own love. And I definitely did not deserve to be loved by another.
After years of weight loss attempts and willing the binge eating to stop, I was tired of the struggle. I decided to stop focusing on the scale numbers and start focusing on learning to eat normally. To eat without the restriction, the rebellion, and the inevitable guilt. I wanted to be free.
The desire to feel sane around food trumped my desire to be thin. I put the pursuit of skinniness on hold. I realized that meant my body might not shrink. That the numbers on the labels of clothes I fit in may never decrease again.
My previous excuses for not buying clothes didn’t apply now. I would have to dress my figure as it was. So I went out and brought a dress that fit my current body.
That small act gave me some proof that maybe I didn’t have to wait until I was skinny to have nice clothing. Maybe all those things I had been putting off, I could do right then, at that weight, at any weight!
I slowly gathered more proof. That party I didn’t want to attend because I deduced from the guest list I might be the biggest one there—I went.
The walks I enjoyed but put off because I didn’t see the point when it wasn’t going to burn off enough calories—I walked anyway.
The perfect, but expensive foundation I wouldn’t buy until my cheeks lost some chub—I bought it.
I was dieting (and falling off the wagon via whole loaves of bread) to lose weight. And I was trying to lose weight so I could be confident and happy and could do the things I enjoyed. By doing those things and creating those feelings in spite of my weight, I cut out the middle steps.
I realized that, instead of going from diet to weight loss to happy, I could go straight to happy.
I showed myself that feeling confident and beautiful was not a luxury afforded only to those with bodies deemed perfect by our society. I realized that I deserved to feel good. No conditions. No weight restrictions. And that set me free.
Make your list.
Where do you hold back on what you deserve? Make a list of all the things you have been putting off until you lose weight (or achieve another goal). What would you do differently once you reach your goal? How would you live your life? What kind of things does that future person do each day?
Start small and take action.
Look at your list and pick at least one thing to do today. To get momentum going, start with whatever is easiest and fastest to implement. Do it immediately.
By doing something small and simple, you’ll begin expanding your beliefs of what is possible for you right now. Instead of just thinking you might be able to do those things, you’ll prove to yourself that you can do them, regardless of how close you are to your goal.
Some of the items on your list may seem too difficult or impossible. Break them down into smaller steps.
For example, if you are putting off swimming until you lose weight, maybe you could go sun hat shopping, or try on some swim suits, or walk barefoot on the beach and feel how lovely it is to have your feet in cool sand and salt water.
This should be a list of things to make you feel good. If a step still feels too scary or hard, break it down further.
Keep going.
Keep your list handy. Whenever you have a “once I reach my goal” thought, add the action you are putting off to your list. Each day, pick another item from your list to carry out.
Doing things to make you feel good now doesn’t mean you will never reach your body or life goals. It just means you don’t have postpone your joy. And in these short and unpredictable lives we live, joy is too important to wait for.

About Hannah May Marshall
Hannah May Marshall is a ditch the diet coach, helping people get off the dieting roller coaster once and for all. She shows people how to lose the food guilt and develop eating habits that bring ease, health and pleasure. If you are ready for a different approach to feeling hot and healthy, visit her at HannahMayMarshall.com.
Happiness comes from within.
For sure 🙂
What a great post. I can imagine the freedom you must have felt in that moment. You painted such a great picture of what that dress meant. And great advice!! Loved it!!
So true.
Thanks so much Tara.
Same old same old
Oh my goodness. It felt like someone was reading out of my journal the whole time I was reading this article. It feels like this has been my thought process since I was fifteen. I haven’t experienced the freedom you have quite yet, but I hope to. This is very inspiring. Thank you.
Loved this Hannah! I can totally relate to giving myself permission to just go ahead and be happy. The other things I want to fix usually fall into place after that. It’s wonderful to hear that someone else goes straight to happy too. All the best!
You are not alone Laur, the trouble is most people keep those thoughts very much to themselves. Thank you for reaching out. There is always hope for freedom. It’s who you are underneath all the layers. Love to you.
Thanks Anne. Permission is so important.
I cringe because this is so powerful. Ive lost about 50lbs and going after another 45. Its like these words couldn’t be more true but in my mind, it makes sense. Why would I buy clothes for a body I am trying to get rid of? As a guy its like, We have these issues as well. I just feel like im so close, I can hold off just a little longer. I mean who wouldn’t feel better doing all of those things once you reach your goal? no more second class citizen feeling. Its like bam! im here world, look at this magnificent piece of art Ive created…..like right? AM I CRAZY?
It can be so difficult can’t it? Especially with that ‘second class citizen’ feeling, I am sure MANY people can relate to that. Thank you for sharing Cold Fire.
I did go to a club with my brother back around new years time. My first in 7 years. So I did go buy clothes and actually make an effort and I did look great. Ive made some good progress. But I just wanna go for the gold!
Many times we just need to learn how to eat to live rather than feed our emotions and live to eat. Dealing with the internal does keep us from binge eating or emotional eating. I had the same propensity to eat at night, and I’m changing that habit one issue at a time. Thank you for the great words.
Great to hear MJ.
Thanks for this wonderful article, Hannah! I so much see where you are coming from. I went through similar processes and I’m glad I realized that I don’t first need to look like a model in order to accept myself and be happy. I actually realized that first, we need to accept and fall in love with ourselves and happiness and the belief in oneself is the result. This is when we start to feel that we are indeed good enough and deserve to take care of ourselves, eat healthy, do exercises, nourish our bodies and souls, etc. Not the other way around.
Thank you for your kind words Marina. I so agree with you! We are told and sold into believing that we need to lose weight/fix our food problem etc to get happy and healthy, when what we really need is to get happy and healthy first!
This article really hit home for me. I have been struggling with an eating disorder since I was, believe it or not, 13 years old. Only this year, 10 years later, have I been to able to embrace normal eating and accepting my body as it is. This article was so refreshing to read because you always hear that you should reward yourself only when you make a goal. I really was miserable trying to control my weight and shaming my body. Thank you so much for this article.
Thank you for sharing your story Lauren, it is very encouraging and inspiring to others x
Hey Hannah, have you gotten back on the diet train to lose weight again after you’ve recovered from BED? Since you said you put your desire for thinness at the time on hold?