Monday, October 18, 2004
Fat Girl Thoughts
by V Kingsley
by V Kingsley
Psssst. Hey! Come in to the bathroom stall. Come on in and we can purge it all!
No way, I said, I hate to throw up.
Hate to throw up? Grow up! It’s the only way - the only way that you can stay the way they say you’re supposed to look.
Yeah -well I managed to escape the stall but being a teenaged girl and all is not exactly what I would call easy.
Heifer was my nickname and that was back when I was realitively thin.
60 pounds later was when the real fun would begin.
And 60 pounds after that, well, I guess I was truly fat.
So---I decided to go with it and bought elastic waists to fit.
I found that that the pounds felt good on me, that I was a diet free, redefining beauty in a way that challenged our super model society.
I laughed when they put a hand to my belly and asked when I was due. I could have said fuck you!
But I smiled instead and shook my head - No baby I said.
I’m just fat.
I’m a woman of size, a big boned gal with serious thighs.
I read fat chick zines and no lose lists. I take up space and shake my fists.
Heather MacAllister rocked my world when she honored me and all the rest of the fat girls.
-----
But that was before and now everything has changed - cancer has meant that nothing will ever be the same.
I couldn’t eat for almost two years - I suffered, I fought, I hid my fears.
For months on end i threw up every day - no matter what went in, nothing would stay.
I was sick, so sick I didn’t really care. I had no fingernails, I had no hair.
I didn’t notice the sagging of my dress. I didn’t notice the hollow of my chest.
I lost almost everything except my life - my job, my body, my home, my wife.
130 pounds was gone by then. I went from a size 28 down to a ten.
I looked in the mirror one day. Who the hell was I? Shock and dismay.
My identity was gone, I didn’t recognize the woman I could see.
What happened to me? I’m still a fat girl I used to be but now no one can see!
Oh! You look great they say - I hear it every day. But what they don’t get is that I didn’t choose this way.
So now I don’t know my fate but I do know that I miss my weight.
It’s interesting to have new clothes, the attention, some hair. I’m a kick ass survivor still fighting with flair.
So when I was asked to share tonight, I wrote a little poem about the fight:
Hi My name is V
But you’re only seeing half of me.
Cancer took the other half away
And I have no idea what size my body will stay.
Yeah - it’s true - I miss being fat
The trick is to love myself where I’m at.
10/18/04
V Kingsley
www.alotoflife.com
Originally written for Love Your Body Day. Please feel free to re-post with credit to authorship.
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