Leatherdos are a girl’s best friend

Leatherdos

It’s all too easy to purchase material possessions we don’t need and won’t use more than once or twice. Oftentimes we find solace in owning things rather than getting them because we need them. If you’re a more practical type who prefers to make all of their purchases count, than any item great or small is going to have to be worth its salt.

When it comes to hair accessories, you would think that bobby pins and clips would mainly be used keeping your hair in place. If you’ve ever seen basically any movie that involves getting into a locked door, you know these can be used for picking locks. If you don’t find yourself in need of breaking an entering, then you might like to have other tools handy. The Leatherdos is a mini tools clip that will keep the hair out of your face, as well as take on life’s little challenges.

This can function as as a Flat Philips, large, and small screwdriver, a 5/16 wrench, trolly coin, ruler, and cutting edge. This multi-tool is made of stainless steel, and is perfect for those who want to be ready for any situation, but don’t want to carry one more thing in their bag. One of these will cost you $9. While this is less likely to disappear than a bobby pin, chances are you’ll want to stock up on a few just in case this falls out and is hard to find. At the moment, they’re on backstock until September, but they are taking orders and filling them as more are made.

Available for purchase on mnkbusiness

 
[ Leatherdos are a girl’s best friend copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Sony Xperia Z2 Survives After Six Week Stint On Sea Bed

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One of the features that Sony highlights most in its flagship products is the fact that they can hold their own against the elements pretty well. Although the company is quick to point out limitations. For example its water resistant devices are said to be good for up to 30 minutes under 1.5m of fresh water. However Alexander Maxén from Gothenburg found that his Xperia Z2 survived even after spending six weeks on the sea bed.

Maxén’s story first emerged in Swedish press. He was water-skiing with friends on a holiday and accidently dropped his Xperia Z2 in the water as he jumped in. As the sea bed was over ten meters deep he couldn’t recover it at that point.

When they reached shore they tried calling the phone and surprisingly got through but since they couldn’t retrieve it they let it be. After about six weeks a friend of Maxén went scuba diving in the same area and managed to find and bring back the device.

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Even though the device had experience some external damage, the back screen had cracked, and the battery had discharged completely they were surprised to see the phone’s LED indicator light up when the charger was connected. The Xperia Z2 worked fine when it booted up and was even able to make calls.

This isn’t the first time that a Sony smartphone has survived beyond its stated limits. Last year a Sony Xperia V was recovered after four days at sea and it too functioned perfectly. Obviously this shouldn’t be taken as an invitation to chuck your Sony smartphone in the water, but Xperia Z2 owners will no doubt be glad to see just how sturdy their device really is.

Sony Xperia Z2 Survives After Six Week Stint On Sea Bed

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Microsoft Teases Lumia 730 ‘Selfie Phone’

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We first heard about Microsoft’s upcoming “selfie phone” a couple of months back, apparently the company is looking to cash in on the selfie craze that’s gripping the world right now. Over the past couple of weeks there have been many rumors about this device believed to be called the Lumia 730. Microsoft today rolled out invites to the press for its IFA event next month and its evidently teasing the launch of the Lumia 730.

“Join us for more face time,” the invite reads, Microsoft’s IFA event is going to take place on September 4th in Berlin. The invite doesn’t mention the Lumia 730 label but there’s consensus in the rumor mill that this is what the company will brand its selfie phone.

Merely a fortnight ago it was reported that the head of Microsoft devices, former Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, showed off two new devices at an internal company meeting. One of them was said to be the selfie focused Lumia 730. This is one of the reasons why its popular belief right now that the Lumia 730 is certainly destined for an announcement at IFA 2014.

Obviously this smartphone is going to have a good front facing camera if it wants to live up to its ambitions. Rumor has it that there will be a 5 megapixel shooter up front, apart from the device’s 4.7-inch display. Details about other specifications are slim right now but on the bright side we don’t have to wait for too long, September 4th is less than a month away.

Microsoft Teases Lumia 730 ‘Selfie Phone’

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

SKULLY AR-1 Smart Helmet Pre-Orders Open Now

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Its one thing to slap the “smart” label on ordinary things without giving them too much though, its another to actually build something that really does push the boundaries. The SKULLY AR-1 smart helmet fits the latter description. Its a vertically integrated smart HUD motorcycle helmet that features a heads-up display, GPS mapping features, a rear view camera and smartphone connectivity. Pre-orders for the helmet are now open although it costs significantly more than a conventional motorcyle helmet.

The heads-up display is placed outside the rider’s primary field of view and appears to be nearly six feet away. The picture-in-picture display is good for showing blind spot information, navigation and feed from a rear view camera that offers a 180 degree viewing angle. Smartphone connectivity provides the rider with voice control over music, calls and more. The battery is said to be good for nine hours and it can be charged via microUSB.

We had a chat with Dr. Marcus Weller, CEO, Founder of Skully.

When did you start developing the Skully helmet?

The first SKULLY prototype was built in early 2012 and announced at Demo 2013.

What is the total available market for this product?

Several million helmets are sold worldwide every year.

Did you get any funding ?

We are a privately held company.

Who are the founders?

Dr. Marcus Weller, CEO, Founder

Marcus attended the University of Minnesota, where he assisted research on Intelligent Transportation Systems and developed his lifelong passion for Human Factors Engineering and Industrial Psychology. After years of working in the automotive and semiconductor industries, a motorcycle accident inspired him to found SKULLY in 2013. Marcus holds a Ph.D. in Industrial Psychology and is a motorcycle fanatic with an obsession for human-centered technology and design.

Mitchell Weller, VP Business Operations, Co-Founder

Mitchell has shared his brother’s passion for motorcycling since before he can remember. This same passion eventually led him to join SKULLY in 2013 after holding Director positions in human resources, operations, and materials logistics. Mitchell served in the US Army, holds a B.A. in Psychology from the University of Minnesota, and enjoys getting his hands dirty working on motorcycles and cars.

With over twenty years of combined riding experience, the Weller brothers are deeply passionate about enhancing motorcycle safety through technology.

How is your team composed?

We have over a dozen hardware engineers, software engineers, and creatives with diverse backgrounds in engineering, business and marketing.

Do you have any patent?

We have a suite of IP that is growing every day.

Could the technology be applied to cars?

SKULLY Synapse can be applied widely across many verticals.

Pre-orders for the SKULLY AR-1 helmet are now being taken through Indiegogo. For the first 30 days the helmet can be pre-ordered at an introductory price of $1,399. Full retail price will be $1,499 with shipments expected in May 2015.

SKULLY AR-1 Smart Helmet Pre-Orders Open Now

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Acer Chromebook 13 With Tegra K1: Hands-On

acer chromebook 13 nvidia k1  12 640x426Acer and NVIDIA have announced the Acer Chromebook 13, a Chrome OS laptop powered by NVIDIA’s Tegra K1 mobile processor. This laptop contributes to the rising number of non-Windows laptop designs that use a low-power mobile processor. While this is still a nascent trend, it is very encouraging because it creates an opportunity to offer an awesome battery life. This is precisely what Acer has opted for, and according to NVIDIA and ACER, the Acer Chromebook 13 is capable of staying up for up to 13 hours – that’s an extraordinary value to the user.

I’ve had a chance to play with an Acer Chromebook 13, so there was ample time to look at the design, although not really enough time to vouch for the battery performance. For a $279 computer, I found the build quality to be very good, and it used quality plastic that did not look cheap. There are three things that I look at with every laptops: Display, keyboard and trackpad.

Display

acer chromebook 13 nvidia k1  01 640x426The Acer Chromebook 13 has two display options. One with a regular 1366×768 resolution and a more expensive model with a 1920×1080 (1080p) resolution, which sells for a mere $30 more. With all things being equal, I would simply opt for adding $30, but I found that the color rendering and contrast on the 1366×768 display to be better than on the 1080p display. Sharpness or color rendering: you may need to think about which you want more.

Keyboard

acer chromebook 13 nvidia k1  04 640x426I’m a big fan of Chiclet keyboards, and I was pretty happy with the Acer Chromebook 13’s full-size one. The keys felt pretty good to type with and I’d give a thumbs-up for the keyboard construction. This is no ChromePixel or MacBook Pro keyboard, but it is just as good as many keyboards found in $600-$800 laptops. If you wonder, the keyboard is not backlit, which is too bad, but not unreasonable for a $279 laptop…

Trackpad

acer chromebook 13 nvidia k1  13 640x426The trackpad is big and feels very decent. The size factor is pretty important because it relates directly to the over comfort. You don’t have to exert as much muscle control to get the cursor where you want it to be and that’s why large trackpads are so much better. I’m not sure what the surface of this particular one is made of, but it didn’t feel like a high-end trackpad that uses glass. Again, it’s all about quality for the price, and this is very decent here.

Performance

It is legitimate to be wary of performance when using a laptop which is powered by a tablet processor. I have tested a number of demos, and web applications were running pretty well in general. In my experience, PC processors tend to lead to slightly more responsive in terms of user interface, but I would need to use it for a few days to have a better idea of how it perform with my specific use case.

The graphics performance was fairly impressive for this level of power consumption and price point. The Laptop was able to run 3D graphics that can challenge integrated graphics on processors that gobble much more power than this.

I’m not sure how much 3D graphics *you* will use, but it is good to know that even web browsers now heavily use graphics hardware, so I suspect that web page composition will be 97% of the graphics power usage. The good thing about using the graphics chip (GPU) to do the composition is that it is not only higher-performance, but it also consumes less power when compared to using the general purpose processor (CPU) to do it.

Casual games, action games and educational web apps can also benefit from this, and with the rise of WebGL and the ability for C++ games to be recompiled in JavaScript, there are more opportunities to use the graphics processor, which has the exact same feature set as a high-end PC, minus the raw horsepower.

Wrap-up

acer chromebook 13 nvidia k1  05 640x426In conclusion, the Acer Chromebook 13 seems extremely promising. It is very affordable, offers unpatrolled graphics in this power envelope and offers what seems to be the longest battery life on Chromebook. Note that there are three different models. If you want to open a lot of tabs, I recommend getting 4GB of RAM. What do you think?

Acer Chromebook 13 CB5-311-T9B0: 1920×1080 full HD display, 2GB of RAM, 16GB SSD. $299.99 at BestBuy.com.

Acer Chromebook 13 CB5-311-T1UU: 1920×1080 full HD display, 4GB of RAM, 32GB SSD. $379.99 on Amazon.com.

Acer Chromebook 13 CB5-311-T7NN: 1366×768 display, 2GB of RAM, 16GB SSD on Amazon.com.

Acer Chromebook 13 With Tegra K1: Hands-On

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Man Convicted Of Rape And Murder Of College Student Wants To Skip Own Sentencing

DOVER, N.H. (AP) — A man who faces life imprisonment for raping and killing a University of New Hampshire student in 2012 does not want to appear for his sentencing this week.

Seth Mazzaglia was convicted June 27 of first-degree murder and other felonies in the death of Elizabeth “Lizzi” Marriott of Westborough, Massachusetts. Prosecutors say he strangled, then raped the 19-year-old Marriott in his Dover apartment after she rebuffed his sexual advances. Mazzaglia’s girlfriend, Kathryn McDonough, is already serving jail time for hindering prosecution.

Mazzaglia, 31, is facing a mandatory sentence of life without parole. He is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday, and at least 11 family and friends of the victim are expected to give statements. In a brief motion filed Friday, Mazzaglia said it is his constitutional right to not appear.

In his response, prosecutor Peter Hinckley wrote, “To be sure, the defendant has a constitutional right to be present, and can waive that right.” But he said Mazzaglia has not set forth any reasons he should be absent, and that the interests in having him present outweigh his objection.

Prosecutors will argue against the motion at a hearing Tuesday in Dover.

Hinckley said Mazzaglia should be held accountable for the crime, that his presence in court will help avoid any unnecessary and unwanted confusion, and that the interests of the victim and her family are “hardly more compelling than in this case.”

“The defendant received his fair trial,” Hinckley wrote. “It is now fair for him to personally receive the sentence that will result from such.”

Albert “Buzz” Scherr, a University of New Hampshire law professor, said such requests are “not remarkably unusual,” and he’s seen judges grant them.

“What’s he going to miss? He’s going to miss the judge probably saying nasty things about him, and other people saying nasty things about him,” Scherr said.

He added, “I think it will be painful to the victim’s family that he’s not going to be there, I would imagine.”

Jurors heard testimony over the course of 19 days and convicted Mazzaglia after a full day of deliberations.

The key witness, the 20-year-old McDonough, lured Marriott to their Dover apartment. She testified that Mazzaglia wanted another woman to join their sexual escapades, which included bondage.

McDonough first told investigators that Marriott died during rough sex between the two women that involved restraints. After getting immunity from prosecution, McDonough changed her story and said Mazzaglia strangled Marriott, then raped her.

Mazzaglia did not testify.

Inside Paris with an Urban Explorer

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Anne Ditmeyer is many things: fashionable, savvy, cultured, a jetsetter. It’s all this and more that she brings to table for her numerous Paris experiences, meaning that travelers are guaranteed to be given a truly authentic behind-the-scenes peek of the world’s (possibly) most famous city. Between blogging, being an Insider, and general exploring, she leads a very busy life — but we were able to catch up with her for long enough to gain her insights on working with Vayable, the city she lives in, and the people she meets on the road.

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Q: How long have you been an Insider?
Anne: I started offering experiences through Vayable in June of 2012. I tend to average ~2 tours per week, which is perfect for me and my workload. I love the excuse to disconnect from my computer for a few hours, meet awesome people, and feel inspired by the world around me. I truly meet wonderful people by offering tours.

Q: How do you feel connected to Paris?
Anne: I’m a freelance designer/editor/traveler whose mission is to help connect creatives across continents. I started Prêt à Voyager in 2007 to explore the intersection of travel and design. In 2009 I moved to Paris (where I had lived on two other occasions), and my blog became an amazing tool to uncover another side of Paris and connect with other creatives. In school I had studied anthropology and in my MA thesis I explored the ideas of tourism and new media, so for me when it came to actually giving “tours” I wanted to find a way to present the city in a less “touristy” way. My offerings are not your typical tour; it honestly feels more like hanging out with old friends.

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Q: Why did you decide to become an Insider?
Anne: I’ve always shared a lot of information about Paris on my blog, and over the years I’ve been fortunate to connect with many internet friends in person. However there just aren’t enough in the day to show everyone who comes to Paris around, not to mention trying to pay the bills at the same time. I still share a lot of great Paris tips on my blog (especially on my Visit Paris page), but I see giving tours through Vayable as my paid model of business, where I can earn money doing what I love, and help give my guests a memorable experience (check out the reviews for my tours, and I think you’ll see they agree it’s worth it). I also find that when someone is paying for a tour they value it more, and get more out of the experience than by just reading a blog post or seeing a photo on Instagram. In the digital world we live in, it’s so nice to have face-to-face human contact.

Q: What is the most important thing you hope to offer the people who you guide?
Anne: Often when we live in a place we take for granted simple things like how we get around, or our favorite things at the grocery store. I like to help give people confidence to explore Paris on their own, and dig a little deeper under the skin of the city than they would have otherwise. I’m always surprised when people are nervous to take the metro, but by the end of our time together they feel like pros and are ready to go anywhere. Really it’s the simple things that go a long way, and not taking the basics for granted.

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Q: What is your favorite part of your experience?
Anne: I love that no two of my tours are ever the same. While I have my basic information I like to share, and favorite spots to highlight, I love that each of my offerings is customizable according to the interests of my guests. For my Navigate Paris offering I meet my guests wherever they are staying, which means it’s always interesting and fresh for me, and highly practical for my guests (who don’t yet know how to get around). On my Paris Design tour we have engaging discussions about our favorite designers, and their observations bring a lot to the experience.

Most of the time people who sign up for my Vayable tours are game for anything, but one of my favorite tours was with a mother who was a florist, and her daughter who worked in museums. They wanted to discover ribbon and flower shops, which we did, and it felt like such a unique way to see the city. What I loved most about this experience is that they were trying to see the city according to their own interests, not just following a guide book or check list that someone gave them.

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You can check out some of Anne’s experiences here. Also follow Anne as @pretavoyager on Twitter and Instagram to follow her adventures in Paris – and around the world.

Watch This Teen Age From 12 To 19 In Just Over A Minute

Ever wondered how much your face ages in a day, or a year, or even over the course of seven years? Well, 19-year-old Hugo Cornellier has the answer — and the video to prove it.

From age 12 to 19, Hugo took a selfie every single day, resulting in what is most likely the coolest 1 minute and 34 seconds you will see today. Throughout the video, his long hair, beard, and background guests come and go, but all the while we’re able to recognize Hugo’s face, maintaining the same expression throughout.

Check out the video above to see the seven year time lapse and join us in wishing our selfies were this awesome.

[h/t: Elite Daily]

Become the Change You Want; Correcting Police With a Discipline Movement

Over the weekend, National Action Network (NAN) and I renewed our commitment towards seeking justice for Eric Garner, the father of six who died after NYPD officers placed him in an illegal chokehold according to videotape capturing the horrific incident. On August 23, justice caravans of cars and buses will be crossing the Verrazano-Narrows bridge into Staten Island and to the site where he was killed. We will march tot he office of the Staten Island District Attorney and demand that those responsible for Garner’s death be held accountable without delay. As I was touring churches and mobilizing people for this “We Won’t Go Back” march, I received a distressing call from Leslie McSpadden, grandfather of 18-year-old Michael Brown. Through his pain and grief, he told me the story of how his unarmed grandchild was shot multiple times by police in Ferguson, MO (as is widely reported now in several outlets). He knew of my work in this area, and asked for my assistance. I assured him that NAN will stand with the family, as we have done numerous times for families around the country, and assist in any way that we can through the peaceful tradition of this nation’s greatest civil rights leader, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. For those distracting from the family’s wishes, I have a message: Don’t become what you are fighting.



As I have often stated, not all police officers are bad. In fact, I believe most of them truly are doing their best to protect people and reduce crime. But it is blatantly clear that there are some bad ones who have violated their own policing protocol, and it is those that must be dealt with immediately. Just like police officers don’t think everyone in our community is bad, we don’t believe all of them are bad, but we want to catch the bad ones just like they want to catch the bad ones. If we do not prosecute and discipline officers who break the law and who abuse their positions, then what sort of message does that send to the others? What kind of police culture does that create? And what does that say to the people they were hired to serve and protect? Whether it’s Staten Island or Ferguson, one incident is one too many.



After my call with Michael Brown’s grandfather, I read reports of alleged looting and violence (mostly property damage) in Ferguson. Like many, including the family of Brown, I was saddened by these images and stories. Instead of keeping the focus on justice for the deceased teenager, the behavior of some attempted to take attention away from the fact that another unarmed child was reportedly shot and killed by police. While there is understandable frustration and outrage in the community, we cannot push back against the disregard for human life by threatening it ourselves. We cannot fight a police officer’s inability to control his/her anger and emotions by demonstrating our own inability to control ours. The moment we lose our pledge to a non-violent movement, we become part of what we claim to be fighting. Do not allow this to happen; we must remain dedicated to a higher moral commitment.



Now there are some who simply may not believe in the ethical principles of Dr. King and Gandhi like I do, but they should at least have the strategic intelligence to know that they are playing into the hands of their adversaries. When you loot or behave violently, you give grounds to those that try to justify illegal police abuse. You become the poster child for them to say, see, we have no choice but to shoot and kill, or use a chokehold, because just look at the way they behave. When negative images and stereotypes are already etched in their minds from popular culture, do not validate their preconceived ideas. This does nothing to alleviate the root problem of some officers violating their own procedures and killing unarmed men and women. We must keep the focus on this and nothing else. We must get justice for the families of victims like Brown and Garner.



“Violence as a way of achieving racial justice is both impractical and immoral,” stated Dr. King.

It solves no social problem: it merely creates new and more complicated ones. Violence is impractical because it is a descending spiral ending in destruction for all. It is immoral because it seeks to humiliate the opponent rather than win his understanding: it seeks to annihilate rather than convert. Violence is immoral because it thrives on hatred rather than love. It destroys community and makes brotherhood impossible. It leaves society in monologue rather than dialogue. Violence ends up defeating itself. It creates bitterness in the survivors and brutality in the destroyers.

He continued: “Nonviolence is a powerful and just weapon. Indeed, it is a weapon unique in history, which cuts without wounding and ennobles the man who wields it.”

As we continue to push for accountability and justice from Staten Island to Ferguson and around the nation, let us all remember that we achieve much more by arming ourselves with knowledge and peaceful strategy than anything else.

We must always be the change we want to see.

What Recovery From an Eating Disorder Is Really Like

The content of this post may be sensitive for some readers.

“A single day is enough to make us a little larger or, another time, a little smaller.” (Paul Klee)

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What does recovery from an eating disorder look like? What does it feel like? Taste like? It’s not always the pretty picture that you (or your family and friends) might have hoped for. I wish it was sunshine and rainbows and kittens and ice-cream-sundaes-whenever-you-feel-like-it, but that would be a terrible misrepresentation and would not expose the real depth and struggle that “recovery” is. I decided to write this piece to help dispel some of the thoughts about recovery, and to acknowledge the equally challenging struggle that families, friends, spouses, partners, neighbors, and coworkers face when someone they love is walking this journey of recovery. Mostly, though, I wrote this to give a voice to my own roundabout journey of recovery from anorexia and ED NOS, which I’m still very much coming to terms with.

Recovery is both personal and political. Every person will experience a slightly different version of highs and lows, triumphs and defeats, loves and losses. It’s a statement you are making to the world — and to yourself — that you (yes, you!) are worthy and valuable and lovable at a normal, healthy weight. That your life can mean something beautiful absent restriction, scales, measuring cups, and constant guilt. It’s a f*ck you to the advertising world, fashion magazines, and all of the negative media images of what a body should look like. It is also a testament to your own personal strength and power, of which you clearly needed to be reminded you have.

Remaining in recovery, post-treatment, is very difficult. Don’t get me wrong — when you’re in a treatment facility, it’s pretty damn hard to physically eat all of the food, snacks, and supplements you’re prescribed when you’re used to eating and tolerating far, far less than what’s served to you. It’s sad to have to hear your own voice cry out in group discussions that you cannot stand yourself at the amount of weight you’re supposed to gain. I would later learn that gaining weight was the easy part.

When you are home and back in the “real” world (e.g., going to work, feeding the cat, doing your laundry, etc.) there is no one “watching you” like you’ve been watched while receiving inpatient treatment. Sure, you have your therapist, physician, nutritionist, family, and friends, who all keep a close eye on you, but at the end of the day, you have to make the choice to eat what you are supposed to eat to maintain your goal weight.

And, you have to actually deal with rush of feelings that come back when you begin to eat fairly normally again. Eating disorders are, in a sense, crazy. But, they also make quite a bit of sense for those who live with them. At one point they were a helpful crutch, a way to make it through a difficult period of time, a means of making sense of a painful situation, a way to deal with life. Now what? What are you supposed to do without it? Even years later, you may find yourself asking this same question. You may miss the old crutch.

For me, the eating disorder was the way to cope with a chaotic childhood, and feelings of violation, anger, inadequacy, and suffocating guilt. I felt really awful when I had to deal with all of that stuff while not in a full-blown bout of anorexia. Some days, I would feel pretty good — heck, some days I felt incredible! Other times, I loathed looking in the mirror because the reflection made me want to jump out of my own skin. While in recovery, I have gained weight and lost weight, relapsed and gained weight, relapsed, gained weight, thought about losing weight, etc.

I’ll be honest with you, I don’t like the way I feel sometimes. I wish I could be smaller. However, I notice my thinking has shifted — feel and look are no longer interchangeable. Feelings are crucial to living a full life, which I seem to deserve. Every day, I weigh (no pun) the benefits of doing the best I can to grown and learn, roll with the punches (e.g., not starve) vs. leaving this all behind and going back down the black hole of an eating disorder. I think the former choice is the better one for me. The accomplishments I’ve made over the past few years are worth far more than losing 10 pounds. So, I continue forward.

Be mindful: People will comment, “Ooh, you look so good!” which is physically painful to hear because you’d really rather they did not comment at all on your body. Many people will assume that because you look “better” you are better. When, in fact, this is terribly incorrect. The worst part of an eating disorder is, by far, the aftermath. You are just beginning to deal with the underpinnings of the disorder and the havoc it’s wrecked on your life. You have to make the choice every day to find meaning in your life sans eating disorder.

You also have to accept that recovery is going to be a roller coaster of ups and downs and twists and turns you probably didn’t plan for. You will slip up and you may even relapse. Families may not understand. You’ll feel guilty. You’ll make new friends and lose old friends. The competency of your therapist and nutritionist may be criticized. At the sign of struggle will come the predictable, “Why don’t you just see a different therapist?” Well, thank you for that helpful suggestion, but a therapeutic relationship is like any relationship — both parties own a share of responsibility — so perhaps you should keep your opinion to yourself and let me do the work I need to do.

Be careful in whom you confide. It’s sad — but true — some folks just don’t have the capacity to deal with topics like this one, and they will have no idea what to say. You’ll be left holding the heavy weight of silence. Others will suddenly become psychological experts and dispense helpful advice and tips you that really did not ask for. Bear in mind, many of these comments, tips, and recipes-for-life come from a place of fierce love and care. So, accept the love. But don’t take it personally. Slowly, you’ll learn to use your voice. And find your roar.

Finding humor in recovery helps. Holding onto your true friends and people closest to you also helps. Learning to help you help yourself is the best thing of all, though.

I hope that, for those of you in recovery, you are finding some meaning in this crazy journey, and that you know you are not alone. Recovery is one of the most amazing gifts you can offer yourself, despite its unpredictable nature. It’s okay to fall down because (surprise!) no one is perfect. But that’s the point. Learning to embrace the imperfect pieces of me — both physical and emotional — has been the most challenging piece of all this.

For those readers who know someone in recovery from an eating disorder, just love them like you would love anyone else. It may not always look like it, but I promise you, that person is doing the best she or he can.

If you’re struggling with an eating disorder, call the National Eating Disorder Association hotline at 1-800-931-2237.