
I love being subversive. When baking chocolate chip cookies, I sneak bites of dough like a goddamn renegade.
During my senior year at a religious high school, I quit the school-sanctioned OH, LET’S JUST CUT ALL PERSONALITY AND STUDENT VOICE FROM OUR STORIES newspaper to create an underground one, wanting to make that sanctimonious haven into a heaven of rebels. (Did I worry about publishing the “What it’s like to be gay at a catholic school” article in 2001? Yes. But I didn’t get kicked out. #thankgodpunintended)
And when the food giants like Nestle and Lay’s try to hook us with their seductive mouthfeel and bliss points (ow ow!), I am riot-ready with a self-imposed no-sugar challenge.
The past ninety days haven’t been easy (BUT WHAT IF THIS REALLY IS THE BEST BROWNIE IN THE WORLD AND THIS RESTAURANT THAT MAKES THEM GOES OUT OF BUSINESS BEFORE JUNE 15TH? WHAT THEN?!), but I’ve made it here.
Lessons have been learned, and the most important one is:
I can do fucking anything.
Believe me, I thought I’d be the last person who could break the habit, especially because I was the person who, in February, was sitting in a HomeGoods parking lot gorging myself on a loaf of chocolate-orange bread, one of the FOUR BIG LOAVES I had to SPECIALLY ORDER because Great Harvest Bread Company doesn’t make it often and its store in Naperville might as well be in Dubai. There are few things more pathetic than gnawing on a sugarloaf inside your car, hoping no one pulls up next to you.
But I made it through these 90 days. Because I had reasons.
Reason #1:
When I was seven years old, my Grandma Rose and I both learned how to write in cursive.
In school, under Mrs. MacIntyre’s close watch, the classroom’s desks were each dolloped with a puff of shaving cream, and when I smoothed it out, it became an endlessly blank canvas for my tentative fingertip attempts at the swirling letters.
My fingers glided across the white, dancing letters from left to right instead of having them sit there in print, block-like and unsophisticated as a 1st grader.
When I came home, Grandma Rose and I would practice with pen and ink. I needed to practice for school, and she needed to practice to regain her ability lost from her first stroke. She’d come to live with us, which was hard for me to understand given that this woman had been so strong and independent, forever gardening under the hot sun in a straw hat or walking to the grocery store to save gas.
And now, she held onto my arm as we walked slowly up and down the hallway, up and down, up and down, coaxing the right side of her body to remember how to walk again.
When I was a couple of years older, I helped my other grandma after she’d suffered a stroke by being summoned with a bell because her voice was too weak to call out and lifting her into her wheelchair and helping her go to the bathroom.
What did these women think, being helped by their granddaughter? Were they humbled? Embarrassed? Does it ever become easier to ask for help?
I’ve wondered what death my body holds in its web of veins, blood humming with the genetic promise of stroke, stroke, stroke.
Thanks to my peanut butter cookie – sour cream cheesecake – “Oh, let her have another. She’s my angel” grandmas who died before they should have, I’ve been warned.
This challenge was for them. I’m trying.
Reason #2:
Everything I mentioned in my previous post from March 22nd about wanting to LEARN AND REMEMBER INFORMATION (check out this study), cuz I like goin’ to the smarty party on the daily.
Reason #3:
I knew it was improving me.
On the outset, I said that I was going to read Infinite Jest and avoid sugar for 90 days. Confession: Couldn’t get through Infinite Jest. (I take comfort that Amy, my childhood friend who has lived five minutes from me my whole life—except college—also didn’t finish it. p.s. Amy – LONG LIVE SHAVING CREAM CURSIVE, AMIRIGHT?)
But hey, check out the 1,872 pages I soared through just since May 15th when I was supposed to be turning Infinite’s infinite pages:
Modern Romance by Azia Ansari, Shrill by Lindy West, Anna and the Swallow Man by Gavriel Savit, The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt, and Women, Food and Desire by Alexandra Jamieson.
It wasn’t a matter of not reading. It was a matter of not wanting to read that particular book.
I didn’t feel as though I was becoming a better thinker or writer or reader. On the sugar-fast, I felt like my mood was more stable, my head was more clear, and my body was more mine.
There have been BRUTAL things I’ve made myself do because I felt like they were making me stronger/faster/better ::cough 3-hour-long Tracy Anderson workouts! cough:: but the Jester just wasn’t happening for me.
And that’s okay.
When I wake up tomorrow, I’m not gonna pull a Gilmore Girls Movie Night and down four boxes of Red Vines. Have I been keeping track of the things I want to try? Yes. (Don’t think I forgot about you, $10 dark chocolate and peanut butter bar that I hid from myself!) But my plan is this: Indulge less often to enjoy more.
And first on my list is a walk to the Lombard Dairy Queen with Amy because it doesn’t feel like summer without clinking a toast with our Blizzard cups. Cheers!






