It’s slightly annoying that I have to write this. Especially since no one has really directly asked me to share why I’ve changed how I eat or changed how I workout. They just go on “hate blogs” to talk about me and other people in this community. It’s a very strange thing. People care more about what others are doing, how others are eating or how those people look, than they seem to care about their own diets, figures, and well, lives. I get it. Those people have boring lives. They do. I will look at instagram and see some of the top female CrossFitters post pictures of their jacked bodies and people talk sh*t about them. Right there. They say “I wouldn’t want to look like that” or “Why would you want to look like a man?” Oh, you know what’s crazy? That is THEIR life. Their non-boring life. Not yours. Theirs. People are entitled to eat what they want, drink what they want, workout how they want to, and really do whatever the eff they want to do. But people just have to voice their negative opinions?

I hate negative people.

I went off on a tangent there, so let me get to why I’m writing this. I recently came across a forum saying things like I have disordered eating or I don’t really eat paleo anymore and I should be living up to the brand I created, and things I posted in the past don’t live up to how I live my life now. And that I should post about why these things have changed. They didn’t come to my blog and request that in the comments, they just posted it on a hateful website. Makes sense, right? It’s ok, I get it. They’re scared. So I’ll help those scared people out and post this blog post.

I used to compete in CrossFit, I used to do 2-3 workouts per day, I used to restrict my diet because I was gaining weight and couldn’t figure out why, I used to say I didn’t mind getting bigger because I wanted to compete at a high level, I used to constantly talk about my frustrations with my body, etc, etc, etc. And recently, I stopped talking about all those things. I stopped talking sh*t about my body, I stopped posting what I ate in a day in blog posts, I stopped working out multiple times a day. I stopped all of it.

In my 26 short years of life, I’ve come to figure out that people seem to talk more about the things they are insecure about. Their relationships, their bodies, their jobs, their diets. Whatever. So I constantly talked about my body and appreciating it because I was trying to cover up all those insecurities I had and come to terms with how I looked. When I was competing in CrossFit, I put on 30 pounds. I wasn’t comfortable at that weight or with how I looked. I didn’t care what other people thought, but I wasn’t comfortable with it. I didn’t fit in my clothes, I didn’t feel sexy, I just didn’t feel like me. So I constantly wrote blog posts trying to come to terms with those insecurities.

I would look to other competitive CrossFitters who were jacked and shredded and even though I could beat some of them in workouts, I didn’t look like that. And I was really insecure about it. And frustrated. So I would try to eat completely strict, restrict my intake of fat, carbs and protein, and just drive myself crazy with restrictions. It was so frustrating. I was looking everywhere for control: In my workouts, in my diet, everywhere.

When I look back, I was completely overtrained. I worked out way too much for my body, I didn’t eat enough, and because of all of this, my hormones were out of control. I finally injured myself (my shoulder), was forced to cut back, and slowly over time started to live a more normal lifestyle. I worked out once a day, I cut back on weights to work on my form and I decided that cutting portions wasn’t working and started eating more of the foods I wanted. My hormones began to level out more, my body felt way better than it ever had, and I lost some of the extra weight I had gained from working out too much.

My body is different than every single other person in this world. Completely different. I could workout the exact same, eat the same, sleep the same and do everything the same as one of my jacked competitive CrossFit friends, and I would look nothing like her. That’s because my body is different. And my goals are now different than they were. Before, I wanted to compete. That’s it. I did that and then I changed my mind so I could live a happier lifestyle. I didn’t think I would ever stop training and stop competing, but I did. Have you ever thought you wanted something and changed your mind along the way? If you haven’t, you’re boring.

So here’s the conclusion for all the a**holes out there that want to talk sh*t behind their computer screens on a website dedicated to hating people: you’re right. You can pat yourself on the back. I’ve had disordered eating habits in the past, along with probably 80% of the female population. I’ve tried all kinds of things to feel better about myself like dieting and excessive working out, along with probably 80% of the female population.  I would absolutely love to say that I’m 100% cured and will never have those feelings again, but I think that is a really childish thing to say. I can’t see the future, can you? I can’t see how my body will change, can you? I can’t see the battles I will face someday, can you? Answer: no.

I am absolutely happy where I am now. I sometimes workout 5-6 days per week (I usually do my CrossFit workouts lighter now but sometimes feel like going heavier) then I sometimes take lots of rest days when I feel like it (like the 4 days off last week I took). I’m not as strong as I used to be and I’m ok with that because I’m more comfortable in my skin, but I’m also better with some of my skills like muscle ups since I don’t constantly obsess over them. I eat when I’m hungry, I eat gluten free breads that don’t upset my stomach, I eat a paleo cookies when I want to because it doesn’t upset my stomach like a normal cookie would, and I try to live a life of moderation. Like eating the wedding cake I had this past weekend. It wasn’t paleo, it wasn’t gluten free, it was just delicious and covered with icing. Did I feel bad about it? Nope. Not in the slightest. I want to live a happy life at the end of the day. Not a life of restrictions.

So here’s what I recommend to everyone. Live the life that makes YOU the happiest. Whether that’s paleo, gluten free, pure gluten, CrossFit, jazzercise, marriage, single, muscular, skinny, really whatever. I don’t care. It’s your life. Do what makes YOU the best kind of person. Not because other people do it, but because you love it. And while you’re at it, try to keep your negative comments to yourself. No, don’t try. Just do it.

And that’s how I feel about that.

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419 Comments

  1. Rhonda says:

    I love this. Thank your for such a real and relatable post. I’m sure this was hard/annoying to have to write, but I’m so glad you did bc sometimes I feel exactly the same way! Thanks for being a great example, girl! 🙂

    Rhonda
    http://www.theskinnyarm.com

  2. Tallulah says:

    Hi Juli,
    I am strictly no label, I go through stages with my eating and try to eat everything in moderation however when I do jump on the ‘paleo’ bandwagon I know exactly where to come to for easy and delicious paleo recipes. Without your website my paleo journey would have been very boring and you have even added a bit of laughter in with it, now that’s a great recipe!! So I just wanted to say “thank you”!! At least you are keepin it real by being true to yourelf.

  3. Anne says:

    I just wanted to say that you are amazing and an inspiration to me! Thank you for your honesty and your willingness to share your struggles. Please ignore all of your haters, because you are the only one who can decide how to live your life, and your blog and recipes are incredible!

  4. Megan says:

    Hopefully, you see what I do, as it took me like 10 minutes to scroll down your page of comments, that you have directly impacted and helped more lives than any group of Negative Nancy’s.

    I too have disordered eating. I’ll save the life story but my mom’s continuous dieting of the latest fad really ducked up my view on healthy. Finding Paleo made so much SENSE to me, but finding ways to cook are not my forte. Enter PaleOMG, which not only provides me with some amazing go-to recipes but following you made me realize, perfection is not happiness. I feel better eating mostly paleo most of the time and not fretting about the Times I don’t as long as I am happy. And I came to that realization king before this post.

    Lots of people suck. But you don’t. You’re hilarious, inspirational, dedicated, and a damn good cook and blog writer. I frankly try to be more like you a lot. Keep doing what you do and being you, cause that’s why we follow you. <3

  5. Jen says:

    Well said! Keep up with the good life 🙂

  6. rmbj says:

    There so many supportive, positive comments here. Wanna know why? Cuz you are awesome! Thanks for keeping it real, and introducing me to cross fit as I was looking for food. Only props from this corner here. No hating!

  7. Rachel Mac says:

    So sorry you had to read this but praise all heavens you have found something that usually takes a lifetime! Be strong, be YOUR strong. Screw the haters. They gonna hate. I read your blog occasionally and mostly just drool at the awesome stuff you post on IG, but I am a fan. A fellow CO fan actually. Do your thang girl.

  8. Kristen says:

    I’ve visited your site a few times for specific recipes but I’ve never read any other posts. For some reason today I did. This is a wonderful, honest open post. You’ve definitely got a lot more figured out at 26 than I did and you’re ahead of a lot of people a lot older.

  9. Michelle says:

    Well you obviously have a gazillion more supporters than you have critics. It seems like any time anyone puts themselves out there and becomes successful from it, people have to gripe about the dumbest things. You’re sooo right, they are boring people! I can’t imagine having enough time on my hands to complain about the way someone eats. I have been following you for about a year and a half, after I found that eating paleo cured a long time bowel disease. Every once in a while I eat gluten free and it doesn’t hurt my guts in moderation. I eat the way I do so I can keep my colon, and if it wasn’t for your blog me and my family would be eating very boring meals. I love love love all of your recipes. They are delicious and easy. I just wanted to thank you soooo much for sharing your recipes. I remember being really nervous about having to be so restricted because I used to eat a whole bunch of processed food, but you have made it possible for me to eat healthier, better tasting food than I ate before, with simple ingredients! I started healing myself with food during a time when gluten free and paleo are considered fad diets and something for everyone to jump on and try, when all I’ve been trying to do is not have to have major organs removed. Even my friends and family who have seen me at my sickest are confused by my diet choices and act like I’m just doing it for funzies. I read a person earlier saying that if u don’t eat %100 paleo then its disingenuous for u to have a paleo blog…well I don’t care if you solely live off of loaves of wheat bread and have a paleo blog (maybe I would be a little concerned cuz you’d probably feel really awful) but what you eat and how you work out and your own personal goals are REALLY nobodies business. Thanks again for all that you do!

  10. Kara says:

    Great Post! I think it is normal that you changing as time goes by. People evolve and their desires and interests change. What worked for me three years ago doesn’t work for me now. Things change. Change scares most people. Bravo for being honest and saying that you have tweaked things so that they are better for YOU.