The zipper on the insulation bag snagged for the 18th time today. I was standing in the middle of my sister’s driveway, the heat of a July afternoon pressing down on my neck like a heavy, damp towel. Inside that bag was a container of grilled chicken, some quinoa, and a heap of spinach that I’d prepped with the kind of precision usually reserved for bomb disposal. I could already hear the rhythmic thwack of the screen door and the low-frequency rumble of my brother-in-law’s laughter. I knew what was waiting for me. It wasn’t just a barbecue; it was a gauntlet.
I walked in just as the first tray of burgers-dripping with American cheese and 28 types of preservatives-hit the table. “Oh, look out,” my cousin Gary shouted, waving a spatula like a scepter. “Here comes the health police. Hide the bacon, boys, or we’re all going to jail.”
There is a specific, quiet loneliness that comes with being the only person in a room who is trying to change. It’s not a loneliness of isolation, but a loneliness of contrast.
I sat down my Tupperware. I felt like a foreign exchange student who had forgotten how to speak the local dialect. I tried to remember why I’d even walked into the kitchen five minutes earlier-was it for a napkin? A glass of water? The thought had evaporated, replaced by the stinging realization that my salad was an uninvited guest at a festival of grease.
The Crab Bucket Effect
I think about my friend Omar L.M. quite a bit in these moments. Omar is a wilderness survival instructor who has spent roughly 88 days of his life completely alone in the northern bush, teaching people how to survive on willow bark and sheer spite. He’s the kind of man who can start a fire with two damp sticks in under 48 seconds, yet he told me once over a cup of black coffee that the hardest environment he ever had to survive wasn’t a blizzard in the Yukon-it was his mother’s 68th birthday dinner. Omar has this theory that human groups are essentially biological units that hate being reminded of their own fragility. When he showed up to that dinner with his own meal, his family didn’t see a man taking care of his heart; they saw a traitor. They saw someone who was implicitly saying that the way they had lived for 58 years was wrong.
Social Anchor
Shared bad habits provide comfort and camaraderie.
Personal Project
New habits force others to examine their own trajectory.
It’s a bizarre contradiction of the human experience. We claim to want the best for our family members, yet when one of those members starts making progress that we haven’t made ourselves, we subconsciously try to pull them back into the crab bucket. I remember a time back in 2008 when I was at my heaviest, around 288 pounds, and everyone was so “supportive” because I wasn’t a threat to their own comfort. Now that I’m lighter, faster, and more conscious of what I put in my body, I’m suddenly the “health police.” I’m the one who is “no fun.”
The Weight of Explanation
This social friction is why so many people fail. It’s not the lack of willpower; it’s the exhaustion of being the odd one out. It’s the 48th time you have to explain that no, you aren’t on a “diet,” you’re just trying to not feel like a pile of damp laundry every morning. It’s the way your sister looks at you when you pass on the 88-layer chocolate cake she spent all morning baking. It’s a guilt that is designed to keep the status quo intact.
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If I eat my chicken and stay quiet, I am a silent reproach. If I join in the laughter, I am consenting to my own marginalization. It is a tightrope walk that requires more balance than a yoga class.
I found myself drifting off, thinking about the survival kits Omar L.M. makes his students carry. They include 8 feet of paracord and enough emergency rations to last 48 hours. The mental load is heavy. It’s the same mental load that made me forget why I walked into the room this morning. When your brain is constantly scanning for social landmines, it doesn’t have much room left for remembering where you put the car keys or why you’re standing in front of the refrigerator at 8:08 PM staring at a jar of pickles.
The Loss of the Food Coma
There is a weird sense of loss that comes with health. You lose the shared experience of overindulgence. You lose the camaraderie of the “food coma.” That collective surrender, while comforting, is the surrender of progress itself.
Anchors and Investments
But the alternative is worse. The alternative is going back to the person I was in 2018, when I felt like a stranger in my own skin. I spent $878 that year on various “quick fixes” that didn’t work because I hadn’t addressed the social component of my health. I hadn’t realized that my body was a project, but my social life was an anchor. To move forward, I had to learn how to be okay with the silence that follows a declined offer of a beer.
Shared Misery
Personal Capacity
Finding a way to navigate this without becoming a hermit is the real challenge. You have to find your people-the ones who don’t call you the health police, but instead ask you how you’re feeling. Utilizing resources like LipoLess can provide the structural support you need when your own social circle is acting like a headwind. It’s about having a toolkit that goes beyond just what’s on your plate.
The Guide on the Cliff Edge
Omar L.M. once told me that in the wilderness, the most dangerous thing you can do is lie to yourself about your situation. If you’re cold, you’re cold. If you’re hungry, you’re hungry. If you pretend everything is fine when it’s not, you die. I think the same applies to our social health. If it hurts when my family makes fun of me, I have to acknowledge that. I can’t just pretend I’m above it. I have to admit that I want their approval, but I want my longevity more. It’s a transaction I make every single time I open that Tupperware container.
I looked at my brother-in-law, who was on his second burger and his third beer. His face was flushed, the same shade of red as the 188-milliliter bottle of hot sauce on the table. He’s a good man… But he won’t give me a pass on the chicken salad. And that’s okay. I’ve realized that his jokes are just a way of saying he doesn’t know how to talk to this new version of me. He’s mourning the guy who used to split a 48-ounce steak with him.
I took a bite of my chicken. It was a bit dry-I probably overcooked it by about 8 minutes-but it was exactly what my body needed. I looked around the yard. There were 28 people here… And then there was me. I was an outlier. A statistical anomaly in a floral print shirt.
Sometimes, being the healthy one in the family is like being that guide. You aren’t trying to be a martyr; you’re just trying to stay on the path that doesn’t end in a cliff.
The hardest distance to travel is the three feet between your plate and the person sitting next to you.
Freedom in the Silence
As I packed up my empty container and zipped the bag-it didn’t snag this time-I realized I’d finally remembered what I went into the kitchen for earlier. I’d gone in there to hide for a second, to take a breath away from the scrutiny. I’d forgotten that I don’t need to hide. My choices aren’t a secret, and they aren’t a crime. They’re just a different way of surviving the wilderness of modern life.
I walked back to my car, the sound of the crickets rising to 88 decibels in the tall grass, and I felt okay. I felt like me. And in the end, that’s the only person I really have to live with for the next 48 or 58 or 68 years. The loneliness is a small price to pay for the freedom of moving through the world without a heavy heart-literally and figuratively.