Hello my friends. I began this blog to share how I lost 100 pounds without
GLP-1 drugs or
weight loss surgery. And then it morphed into my space to heal childhood trauma from narcissistic parent abuse. For a long time, I thought these were two separate battles. I now realize they are the same war. Today, I’m sharing how I lost 100 pounds by finally feeding the right person: my
inner child and "starving out" the ones who started this war in the first place.
Stop feeding abusive parents their narcissistic supply
It's no exaggerations to say that my enmeshed narcissistic parents thrived on abusing, neglecting, endangering abandoning, exploiting, parentifying, invalidating, scapegoating and gaslighting me. A major source of my parents' narcissistic supply came from or through me. So a big source of my childhood trauma was from "feeding" them. By going no contact with them, I'm cutting off their narcissistic supply at the source. What does that have to do with how I lost 100 pounds? I basically lost my inner child.
Reverse role-reversal
In their enmeshed role-reversal game of
parentification, I became my narcissistic parents' caregiver. All four of them, both bio and step-parents. They literally lived off me, in all the parental roles I filled for them. But there's only room for the narcissist at the dinner table. They hog all the resources and leave the scapegoat child only crumbs. I was starved of basic care, taught that self-care was selfish, and made to care only for them with no thought for myself. I got overweight from food deprivation. And the stress of having to tend to parents, like children. My body clung to pounds for dear life because it didn't know when or if food would be available. So I'm working to reverse this role-reversal they gaslit me into playing.
Change parent-embedded self image
As a result of all their chaos, weight was always a problem. My mom let the doctor to put me on a
1,000 calorie a day diet at 8 because I weighed 100 pounds (I don't think I look that overweight in the picture below). And I was also sick all the time with tonsilitis. And the doctor's only solution was the diet and to keep me on
penicillin for months on end.
Antibiotics, as studies have shown can cause significant weight gain in childhood. See AI's discussion on that at the end of this article. So I missed 40 days of school in one year and finally had my tonsils out. But mother didn't follow up or notice I wasn't eating until I had starved for three weeks. I lost 12 pounds in those 21 days. Picture below is prior to that weight loss.
But I always felt fat
Replace people-pleasing with self-care
So you may still be asking, again what does this have to do with how I lost 100 pounds. When you are constantly in
fawn trauma response mode, people pleasing at your own expense is all you know. You don't eat, sleep or live healthy. You develop very unhealthy relationships with food. You are always hungry and also too tired to eat. With no parent making sure you eat right, you often do without. Or end up scrounging and eating whatever junk you can find to fill the gap. You eat too much when you can because mostly you eat too little. You crave sugar because you don't get enough good food and your brain is starved for it.
And still I saw myself as fat.
Feed my hungry inner child
When my narcissistic parents moved us to Alaska on a whim, and then went and did their own thing leaving me on my own, I sometimes stole food. We flopped at various strangers' homes. Neither of my parents provided for me. I would sneak into the kitchen and make myself a brown sugar sandwich for breakfast because that was all there was to eat. I never got the message that parents cared for kids, not the other way around. Then they divorced and married new narcissists for me to care for. None of them provided anything like proper care for me. I was kicked out periodically, made to live off strangers. I was cold, exhausted, sick and hungry a lot from malnourishment and neglect. If someone demanded what I had, I was made to give it and do without. That younger me now needs warmth, rest, comfort and nourishment for her mind, heart, body and soul. She needs to know someone cares for her, if her narcissistic parents don't.
But I still thought I was fat.
Starve their selfishness
Being destabilized so much taught me no self-care skills. It was mostly just about survival. With my parents, food was scarce but only for me. My dad bought himself treats every day and his obese wife (who ate herself to death) spent all the grocery money on her expensive diet food and cigarettes. Then they started selling (or should I say buying) Shaklee and I was fed vitamins and a daily Energy Bar. As a teen living on my own and even a young adult, I ate as cheaply as possible. I bought low quality junk because I was taught that eating right was selfish. I gained and also lost weight from this weird dysfunctional dynamic. Ironically you gain weight when you are malnourished because your body stores fat. When I went away to college, I lived on ramen noodles because they were all I could afford. I dropped to 108 pounds on what was basically my own self-starvation diet.
And yes, I still saw myself fat.
Because narcissistic abuse, really took a toll on my emotional and physical health and I still suffer from their stupid selfish chaos. So now I'm starving that out by feeding myself.
Eat to lose weight and childhood trauma
For the brief time I lived with my grandparents, after high school, they fed me properly. For the first time in my life, food and meal times were consistent. Someone cooked for me! I actually lost weight with no calorie counting, carb or portion control, just good food prepared with love. Grampa even packed my lunch with braunschweiger sandwiches and a Little Debbie oatmeal cream pie! And still, I was at my healthiest weight, about 124 pounds. Because you have to eat and eat right to lose weight.
"The consistency and love behind those meals regulated my nervous system, which is often why the body finally feels safe enough to let go of weight."
Eat comfort foods to lose weight and trauma
Weight loss is about comfort eating of comfort food as much or more than calorie restricting. Not the junk food, necessarily, that we're told is comfort food. But there's a place for a bit of junk food, if only just to avoid food deprivation mode binging. It all relates back to childhood trauma, because healing childhood that needs comfort too. My inner child requires provision, now for the things she was deprived of. And things she suffered as a result. Abuse and neglect in childhood lost me a stillborn daughter and gained me massive anxiety, panic attacks, depression. And the antidepressants (namely
Paxil) lost me another baby and gained me obesity. Paxil took out my limit switches and ability to think clearly. I wasn't comfort eating, I was overeating without even knowing it. Nothing brought me comfort, just more pain and weight gain.
And by then, I really was fat.
Losing weight meant losing the antidepressant and depression.
A major part of how I lost 100 pounds was by cutting a lot more than calories. Namely, I had to lose not only the Paxil, but the source of my depression, anxiety, stress which in four words were my narcissistic parents. So despite a doctor warning me that I should wean off with another antidepressant, I just took the plunge. And it was easy, but
the last part, not so much. I am working to erase their old gaslighting messages and rewrite healthy new ones. I'm eating warm, satisfying, nourishing comfort foods I enjoy. I'm loving and serving my now loved ones because I want to not because I have to.
AI Discussion on how Antibiotics Impact Weight
Researchers have identified several "obesogenic" mechanisms that occur when the gut is disrupted by antibiotics:
Increased Energy Harvesting: A disrupted microbiome can become "hyper-efficient" at extracting calories. For example, your body might normally digest 250 calories from a 300-calorie snack, but an antibiotic-altered microbiome might harvest 280 calories from that same snack, storing the extra as fat.
Metabolic Slowdown: Beneficial gut bacteria produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) that help regulate metabolism and appetite. When these bacteria are killed off, your "metabolic set point" can shift, leading to slower energy expenditure.
Hormonal Disruption: Antibiotics can interfere with the signals between your gut and your liver, specifically affecting how your body processes fats and cholesterol.
Chronic Low-Grade Inflammation: The loss of protective bacteria can weaken the intestinal barrier, allowing inflammatory molecules to enter your system. This "metainflammation" is a known driver of insulin resistance and fat accumulation.
The "Early Life" Connection
The impact is often most significant when antibiotics are used frequently during infancy or adolescence. Studies have shown that children exposed to multiple courses of antibiotics before age two often have a higher Body Mass Index (BMI) later in childhood. This is because early childhood is a "critical window" for the development of a healthy, stable metabolism.
The Cumulative Impact (Ages 2–10)
While early exposure (under age 2) sets the metabolic stage, frequent use during the preadolescent years continues to compound the risk:
The "Dose-Response" Effect: Large-scale studies, including data from Epic Research, show that children receiving 5–9 courses before age 5 are 7% more likely to be obese by age 6. Those with 10 or more courses see that risk jump to 14%.
Broad-Spectrum Risks: The risk is significantly higher with broad-spectrum antibiotics (like macrolides or cephalosporins) compared to narrow-spectrum ones (like simple penicillin). Broad-spectrum drugs act like a "scorched earth" policy in the gut, wiping out a much wider variety of protective bacteria.
Slow Recovery Time: Research indicates that the gut microbiome can take up to 24 months to fully recover from a single course of broad-spectrum antibiotics. If a child is prescribed antibiotics annually (or more) for ear infections or strep throat, their gut stays in a permanent state of disruption throughout their entire childhood.
Biological Mechanisms in Older Children
In preadolescent children, the mechanisms for weight gain shift from "metabolic programming" to active energy harvesting and inflammation:
Hyper-Efficient Calorie Harvesting: A disrupted microbiome becomes overly efficient at breaking down complex carbohydrates that would normally pass through the system. This can lead to an extra 30–50 calories absorbed per day—which sounds small, but adds up to several pounds of fat per year.
Metabolic Endotoxemia: Antibiotics often reduce Bifidobacteria, which protect the gut lining. Without them, the gut becomes "leaky," allowing lipopolysaccharides (LPS) to enter the bloodstream. This triggers low-grade chronic inflammation, a major driver of insulin resistance and weight gain even in children.
Hormonal "Famine" Signals: The gut produces hormones like ghrelin (hunger) and leptin (fullness). When the microbiome is wiped out, these signals can get crossed, leaving a child feeling perpetually "starved" even if they are eating enough, leading to the "scrounging" or sugar cravings you mentioned in your post.
The "Safe" Threshold
Interestingly, the research suggests that limited exposure (1–4 courses total before age 5) is not significantly linked to obesity. The risk becomes pronounced only when the use is frequent and recurrent, which was often the case in the 1970s and 80s when antibiotics were used as a "catch-all" for viral symptoms or chronic tonsillitis.
Given your history with tonsillitis and months-long penicillin courses, your body was likely dealing with a "continuously disrupted state" rather than a one-time event, which physically reinforced the "starvation mode" your environment was already creating.
(note from Mar: so my childhood obesity was likely the combination of overly restrictive calorie counting, plus overuse of antibiotics, plus frequent illness.)
And here's what AI had to say about other parts of this article.
Wait, didn't you mention Shaklee and Paxil?
In the context of your earlier notes about your journey:
Shaklee/Vitamins: While Shaklee supplements themselves aren't antibiotics, the specific "diet culture" of the 70s often focused on restriction, which (as you noted) can put the body into a "starvation mode" that mimics the metabolic stress of a disrupted microbiome.
Antidepressants (Paxil): You mentioned Paxil caused significant weight gain for you. Interestingly, some research suggests that the weight gain associated with certain antidepressants may also be linked to how those drugs interact with gut bacteria, similar to the way antibiotics do.
The Good News: This metabolic shift isn't necessarily permanent. Restoring gut health through consistent, nourishing meals—much like the ones your grandfather provided—is one of the most effective ways to tell your nervous system and your metabolism that it is finally "safe" to let go of the weight.