3-Days with Phil – May 5 – 7 – Bradenton, Florida
3-Days with Phil – May 19 – 21 – Bradenton, FL
Primary Intensive – May 26 – Bradenton, FL
3-Days with Phil – May 5 – 7 – Bradenton, Florida
3-Days with Phil – May 19 – 21 – Bradenton, FL
Primary Intensive – May 26 – Bradenton, FL
Hello,
I can’t believe it is April already and that Spring has arrived. I am currently in Florida enjoying the beautiful sunshine and warmth so it actually feels like summer.
March was a very busy month for ACORN. We had a 3-Day program, a 5-Day Intensive and a week of process groups in between. Once again I was privy to witnessing amazing healing, recovery, surrender and abstinence. What a true gift I have been given to do this as my career.
Some of the comments we received regarding these recent events are:
It was truly an amazing couple of weeks! Phil flew off to New York the next day to hold a 3-Day event. It went extremely well, so well that those folks have asked us to hold a 5-Day Intensive in New York April 26 – May 1. They experienced some deep recovery and want to keep it going. So for all of those that ask us if we ever do events in New York, here’s your chance. Call us to find out the details 941-378-2122.
While Phil has been in New York, Mary, Raynea and I have been gearing up for our next events in Florida. We have two events scheduled for May in Bradenton, Florida. A 3-Day with Phil & Amanda May 5th-7th and a 5-Day Intensive May 26th-31st. Click here to register or call us if you have any questions 941-378-2122.
The Spring months also bring a few other dates to celebrate. One of them is right around the corner on April 7th. It’s World Health Day. This year’s focus is depression. The World Health Organization chooses a specific health topic to focus on every year that is a concern for people all over the world. Depression affects people of all ages, from all walks of life and from all countries. It causes mental anguish and impacts on people’s ability to carry out even the simplest everyday tasks, with sometimes devastating consequences.
Depression and addiction feed into each other and one condition can often make the other worse. I personally can relate to this. As a food addict whose life was spiraling out of control I often battled depression. Who knows what came first, the depression so then I reached for food to numb me out and give me that “high” feeling, or the food addiction which was so debilitating and, therefore, caused the deep depressions I would often experience. When my depression and addiction were at their worst I could barely get out of bed. I couldn’t work. I couldn’t sleep. I had many thoughts of suicide and truly didn’t want to be alive. I remember thinking, “If this is what life is, then I don’t want to be part of it.” Today I am incredibly grateful that I do want to be part of life and that I have found recovery. Yes, there are still many ups and downs in my life, after all that is the reality of life. However, now when I feel the depression coming on I have tools, resources and a support system to help me through it. As an addict I couldn’t deal with the depression until I had first dealt with my addiction. I could not get healthy mentally and spiritually until I got clean and, for me, that meant becoming abstinent from all the foods my body had become addicted to. So yes, when we have addiction and depression it can be incredibly hard. But there is a way out. I am living proof!
So, in recognition of World Health Day, let’s talk openly about depression and addiction as it is a vital component of recovery. The stigma surrounding all mental illness is a major barrier to people seeking help, and talking about it helps break down this stigma and ultimately leads to more people getting the help they need. Click here for more information on World Health Day.
This year in April many people are also celebrating Passover and Easter. These holidays are often full of family, friends and FOOD!! The food part can be a struggle with those of us affected by food addiction. In recovery I choose to focus on the people I am with rather than the food being the focus, and I always contribute an abstinent dish to the occasion. Click here for a link to an abstinent Passover recipe contributed by an ACORN alumnae, Taube from Boston.
Drop me a line and let me know how you celebrate Passover and Easter or any other Spring holidays that are important in your life.
Happy Spring, World Health Day, Passover, Easter and anything else you are celebrating.
With love & abstinence,
Amanda
Today is International Day of Happiness. When asked to write an article about this day of celebration I realized that I had never heard about International Day of Happiness. So I did a little research on the dayofhappiness.net website and discovered how this special day got started and what it is all about. Here is what I found:
What is the International Day of Happiness? It’s a day to be happy, of course! Since 2013, the United Nations has celebrated the International Day of Happiness as a way to recognize the importance of happiness in the lives of people around the world. In 2015 the UN launched 17 Sustainable Development Goals that seek to end poverty, reduce inequality, and protect our planet – three key aspects that lead to well-being and happiness.
I began to reflect upon what Happiness means to me. I thought about Happiness being an amazing benefit of abstinence and recovery. Happiness is part of having positive energy as I go about my day and interact with those around me. My dog Ellie makes me happy. My husband Phil makes me happy. My friends make me happy. Looking at a flower or enjoying a beautiful sunset over the Gulf of Mexico makes me happy. Laughter makes me happy. Holding a newborn baby makes me happy. There are many people, places and things in my life today that make me happy.
Page 133 in “Big Book” Alcoholics Anonymous says,” We are sure God wants us to be happy, joyous, and free. We cannot subscribe to the belief that this life is a vale of tears, though it once was just that for many of us.” So Happiness – for those of us who follow a Twelve Step program – is something we can pretty much trust as a result of recovery.
I can also relate with what the BB reading says because life was a “vale of tears” for much of my life as a food addict who was active in her disease. I was deeply unhappy for many, many years. However, I imagine that most people around me didn’t have a clue as to just how unhappy I truly was. I was the little fat girl – and adult – who always had a smile on my face while inside I felt sad, worthless and depressed. I was unhappy.
Over the last week I’ve read several things on Happiness. One quote stands out to me:
This beautiful quote by Dutch Philosopher, Desiderius Erasmus (born in 1466), speaks to my heart. Becoming willing to be what I truly am has been life-saving, life-changing, life-enhancing and completely liberating for me.
When I denied who I am (not was) as a food addict I was never truly happy. I was always fighting against reality. I did everything I could to deny reality. I tried diet after diet. I gained weight and lost weight. I attempted to be a “normal” eater to the point of watching how “those people” ate and then trying my best to copy them. I gave myself permission to not deprive myself of any foods. This experiment worked for about 10 minutes. I spent hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars working on my “issues” thinking that if I only uncovered “why” I ate then I wouldn’t eat! Whew! That was exhausting! Although I got some help with my “issues,” I never got the support I needed to sustain abstinence from out-of-control eating.
Once I learned that food addiction is a real and treatable disease, received appropriate treatment for this disease, and surrendered to the needed structure and support to maintain abstinence and recovery, I not only lost 200 pounds but also began to experience freedom from the obsession while no longer living in bondage to food or my thinking. This is real Happiness.
So, how might I celebrate International Day of Happiness today … and every day?
My hope for you today is that you celebrate International Day of Happiness in whatever way makes you truly and profoundly Happy.
With love and deep Happiness,
Mary
Hello All,
It’s almost Spring, however, you would never know that if you were in Vancouver. We received another dump of snow over the weekend, and I think most Vancouverites would agree that we are done with the snow and cold this year. Vancouver’s climate is pretty mild and the continued low temperatures and amount of snow are rare for us. Looking out the window with the sun reflecting off the snow is quite pretty, but it’s not so pretty when I am out on the road fighting with the other Vancouver drivers who, like me, do not know how to drive in this white stuff! Needless to say, I will be happy to get on a plane next week and head to the warmth of Florida for a few weeks.
Wednesday March 8th is International Women’s Day. What does that bring up for you? It instantly reminds me of being in Cambodia in 2008 where Women’s Day is huge. I was in Cambodia volunteering with women in the sex-trade industry and women from the impoverished outer provinces. I was leading two programs: a gender equality program and a women’s empowerment program. Gender equality, women’s empowerment and International Women’s Day mean very different things to the women in Cambodia than it did to me, the white girl from a wealthy nation. For me, among other things, it means working towards women receiving equal wages in the work force. For the Cambodian woman, it means fighting on a daily basis to be able to be in the work force at all. Girls are encouraged to quit school around the age of 10 because – as told from birth – an education is not needed for the domestic work they will spend their lives doing once they marry and have children.
Cambodia was also an escape for me; just another attempt to remove myself from my life. I thought if I moved to Cambodia for a few months I could deal with my eating, lose weight and come home later a new person. People would be amazed and in awe of me. I would be freed from the lonely, aching desperation I felt inside because I would be thin (don’t you know one can get thin through a move to Cambodia or any other geographical?), happy and free, and, most importantly, people would notice me and I would be important; always on the search to be filled up by something outside of myself. Cambodia in 2008 would be my answer!
This clearly wasn’t the answer for me yet it was my best thinking at the time. I would love to hear any crazy schemes you have had and where your best thinking has taken you.
In this picture (I’m in the front row, bottom left) I have just arrived in Cambodia and met some of the students I was going to be leading through the Gender Equality program. Grateful to be there but fully in the disease of food addiction, I was constantly distracted by thoughts of when and what I was going to eat next, uncomfortable in my obese body, hot and sweaty and embarrassed as I was, once again, the largest person there. Everywhere I went people would openly stare and often poke at my body as they were not used to seeing large people. I pretended it was all ok but inside I was deeply ashamed. Again, I was so obsessed with what was happening with me that I couldn’t actually be there with all these beautiful people; yes, I was there physically but not mentally, emotionally or spiritually, which is what both they and I deserved. Maybe one day I will go back to Cambodia and be able to show up differently. But in the meantime my amends to these folks is to commit to living in recovery and being present in everything I do.
Anyways, I digressed – International Women’s Day is what I was talking about and their 2017 theme is “Be Bold for Change”: take groundbreaking action and celebrate respect, appreciation and love for all people. For me, when I accepted that I was a food addict and needed treatment for that particular disease – and not for obesity or an eating disorder – I took groundbreaking action by following the plan of abstinence and recovery laid out by ACORN. This has turned into the ultimate celebration of respect, love and appreciation for myself and for everyone in my life.
How about you…Are you up for change? Are you up for taking groundbreaking action? Are you up for giving yourself and your family the ultimate gift of respect, appreciation and love? There is nothing more empowering you can do for yourself, for women in your life, and, for that matter, all human beings in your life than take care of what is ailing you, take care of your needs and live boldly and courageously.
We have several upcoming events to help you do just that:
Wishing you all a week of abstinence, love, courage and appreciation,
Amanda
“One of our Wednesday “Nuts & Bolts of Abstinence” telephone meetings focused on how to work our recovery programs when we feel devastated by events that are out of our control and that threaten our serenity and abstinence. At the time, we were feeling strong emotions over the same event. But some of us, including me, have lost their abstinence over more personal events, such as the fatal illness of a parent, the death of a child, miscarriage, divorce, estrangement from children or other of Life’s curveballs. These suggestions may be applied in any situation, and so we would like to pass along what we shared on the call:
In addition to the March 3 – Days with Phil and the Primary Intensive we are offering a Spring Special if you would like to combine events and add process groups in between. Please call the ACORN office at 941-378-2122 or email rmccumber@foodaddiction.com to register.
OPTION 1: $3,100 – YOU SAVE $865!
Package includes:
Regular price $3,965
OPTION 2: $1,550 – YOU SAVE $490!
Package includes:
Regular price $2,040