Welcome
This is the kitchen where we talk about food, life, and recovery—a spiritual path to healing and peace.

Invitation
You are invited to keep coming back to A Cup of Kindness to share your experience, strength and hope; fears, doubts and insecurities; and to pick up information, inspiration … and have a little fun!

My story
In January 2007, at the age of 51, I joined a 12-step program and began my recovery from food addiction, losing 75 pounds in the process. Read more…

In January 2011, at the age of 55, I began my recovery from a multi-trauma accident, 36 fractures, damaged lungs, and post traumatic stress. Read more…

I am deeply grateful for all the kindnesses, large and small, offered to me in recovery. Here I am... alive… still making progress … still not perfect … finding a new way forward in a growing community of women and men who share a lot in common around food and life.

I hope you'll join me in this kitchen and let me know what's cooking with you.

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Talk amongst yourselves…

 

 

Gregory and I are on our way to our first real vacation since the accident. We will be in Nova Scotia and Maine! Woo-hoo!

I’m aiming for abstinence, gratitude, love, peace, health recovery, and fun. I’ll be wearing my program like a loose garment. I’ll be swimming in the lake, taking my naps, cooking, reading, ambulating with Miranda-the-Labradoodle, watching the stars, and enjoying the love of a good man. [Hey! See the new movie “Hope Springs”. It’s quite wonderful.]

Two towns we visit in Maine actually have meetings of my 12-Step program. I plan to attend.

Once I return I will have lots of new ideas to post… and hopefully some pictures of the wild, wonderful North.

Until then…

Love & Light,

Valerie

Anonymity

 

 

 

Anonymity is the spiritual foundation of 12 Step Programs. It provides a restraint that upholds the principles of the programs over personalities. It ensures that no one person is seen as representing a particular 12 Step Program as a whole.

These are the reasons that, at the public level, I don’t say what specific 12 Step Program has made the difference for me. It’s very tempting to promote my 12 Step food program because I love it. It has changed my life. However, it’s been proven to me that these are meant to be programs of attraction not promotion; and when a food addict is ready, the program will appear.

Anonymity is also great way to reduce comparing. If I’m talking about someone else in the program, I am very likely comparing. If I’m saying that this person is so great, then I’m making myself less than. If I’m saying this person is having trouble, then I’m making myself better than. Not good. Anonymity also protects me from telling someone else’s story and getting it wrong. Each person’s story is his or hers to tell.

In private conversations, if asked, I definitely name the program and invite anyone who is curious to come to a meeting. If you are curious about 12 Step Programs for food, please see the links to the left. They are there for anyone to explore. And please know that my recovery is one day at a time. I’m a food addict like any other food addict. I’m not the poster child for the Program.

I set my intentions and make the effort to match my actions to my intentions. I work at staying conscious. However, there are times that my attention drifts and the habits I’ve cultivated begin to get sloppy. That’s one reason I stay in Program. If I were perfect I wouldn’t need it. It’s about progress not perfection. So, I’ll keep coming back.

Love & Light,

Valerie

… image from Kara Rosenlund

 

Connectivity

morning glories along the fence

 

I’m back into a stretch of abstinence from flour, sugar, and quantities of food and leaning into a vegan life. It feels wonderful. The food fog is lifted. Work is getting done. I’m happy and peaceful.

It all began during a recent 12-step study group meeting. I had been struggling for and against abstinence over several days. It was an inspiring meeting and afterwards I said very candidly to the friend sitting next to me, “I’m going to have trouble on the way home. I know I’m going to want to stop and get something.” My friend told me to call for a conversation. Flippantly, I agreed and said, “I promise not to stop.”

As soon as I got into the car the struggle began. I didn’t make the call to my friend. During the 20 minutes up the pike, my mind was circling around and around over the plan to stop. I would pass that last turn towards home and go to the restaurant where I could sit at the bar and have a quick, sugary drink. What would satisfy me? How quickly could I drink it so that I could get home before Gregory started to wonder why I was late? I promised my fellow not to stop, but what’s a promise? It’s just a word. A promise is just a word. A promise is just a word.

Suddenly, out of the blue, my marriage vows came to me. I made those promises to Gregory. He’s my husband. This would be lying to him. It would be a lie out of the intoxicating infatuation with sugar. It would be something like taking a step into an affair.

And then the war stopped. I made the turn towards home with immense gratitude and relief.

Thinking of Gregory and our marriage vows was my Higher Power’s way of re-connecting me to my Higher Self, my 12-step fellows, my program, and to Gregory. My promise was no longer just a word. it meant something because I made it person-to-person and to myself.

My sponsor’s sponsor recently asked me to think about what it is that wants to be nourished when addiction calls its siren song. It’s connection that wants to be nourished. For whatever reason I’ve disassociated and the connectivity has failed.

How have I been nourishing connection since she asked me that question? Conscious contact. I’ve been practicing conscious contact with my Higher Self and G-d through 30 minutes of daily Quiet Time and daily prayers; conscious contact with Gregory through 30 minutes of daily Sharing Time; conscious contact with friends through phone calls and visits; conscious contact with Program through meetings; and conscious contact with Nature and with Miranda, the Labradoodle, on our three-times-daily walks.

Perhaps it’s the connection with Nature that’s supporting a lean into the vegan life. It just seems to be happening.

So far, so good. Thank you, G-d.

Here’s a poem by Mary Oliver.

Why I Wake Early

Hello, sun in my face.
Hello, you who made the morning
and spread it over the fields
and into the faces of the tulips
and the nodding morning glories,
and into the windows of, even, the
miserable and the crotchety –

best preacher that ever was,
dear star, that just happens
to be where you are in the universe
to keep us from ever-darkness,
to ease us with warm touching,
to hold us in the great hands of light –
good morning, good morning, good morning.

Watch, now, how I start the day
in happiness, in kindness.

~ Mary Oliver ~

(Why I Wake Early, 2004)

 

 

My brain on metaphor

Angela Farmer

Yoga Teacher Angela Farmer

 

Last week I was at the gym, looking in the mirror, standing on one leg with Carrie, my trainer/physical therapist, behind me, lightly holding onto my hips. As I fell out of the pose it struck me that this was a metaphor for something. I couldn’t say what that “something” was.

At the time, I asked myself, could this standing on one leg be a metaphor for finding the right balance between the energies of rooting down and lifting up? Could be, but doesn’t feel true. Could it be about finding the right balance of activity and rest? Maybe, but not really. What about the right balance of physical, mental, relational and spiritual practices? Would my food life be perfect with the right balance of the 12 steps, the tools of the program, protein, grain, fruit and vegetables?

This afternoon, I was eating lunch and I remembered that balance pose at the gym. Actually, I remembered falling out of the pose, catching myself, laughing with Carrie, and trying it again… and again… and again. The metaphor was not in the balance. It was in the falling, catching myself, laughing, and trying again with the help of a friend.

I love how I feel when I’m abstinent, eating three weighed and measured meals a day, no flour, no sugar and nothing in between. There is an ease about it. It’s standing on one foot, rooted, grounded, balanced, without judgment, without effort, without clinging or aversion, and trusting that the structure of my food program will hold me. I am grateful. However, that’s not where I am all of the time.

There’s a big part of me that thinks I can force my imperfect body, mind and spirit into perfect alignment; and that any mistakes are my fault. If I felt that way while trying to stand on one foot, I’d be sprawled on the floor in a hot second; no catching myself and no laughing allowed.

Now I’m getting it. We are told that “white knuckling it” doesn’t help. We are told “progress not perfection.” We are told to “ask for help” and “keep coming back.” We are told to “wait for the miracles.”

I can enjoy the time that I am abstinent. And I can notice what’s happening on the way out of balance with gentle attention. I can talk about it with my sponsor and my fellows. I can can trust that releasing into the tools will provide the structure for transformation.

Right now, it feels good to know that I don’t have to struggle with Recovery. The more I “act as if”, the more I improve, and the more my life improves.

Actually, maybe my food program is a metaphor for standing on one leg. The more I go back to the gym and work with Carrie, the more my balance improves.

What about you?

Love & Light,

Valerie