Lindsay: 25, Indianapolis. Is not one of those feisty "i will survive" types. Makes fun of what you're wearing. Trying to figure out what to do after whitewashing her "future plans" board. Has no opinion on dragons.

Latest Posts
- As far as I will go
- A Text from Cera
- Important things
- Dazzlingly Apropos
- On Fashion
- A Lot Like a Thing You Believe In
- During which I make an art form out of parenthesis...
- Not a Very Bad Day
- A Text from Cera
- brief rundown

Favorite Old Chestnuts
- sighted
- crash, crash, crescendo
- the imagined hazard of watching
- prepare yourselves for ludicrous speed
- which road to el dorado
- lesson one, california
- coats and overcoats
- inheritance
- on the road
- a fine philosophical distinction
- it's that time of year again

Contact Me
email
myspace

Sites I Like
a girl and a boy
andy!
a softer world
belgian waffle
compulsive reading
dooce
erin o'brien
fingers malloy
frank
haven kimmel
look back in anger
mike doughty
nothing but bonfires
post secret
the sartorialist
this fish
yes, andy!

powered by


Archives
- April 2003
- October 2003
- November 2003
- January 2004
- February 2004
- June 2004
- August 2004
- September 2004
- December 2004
- January 2005
- February 2005
- March 2005
- April 2005
- June 2005
- July 2005
- October 2005
- November 2005
- December 2005
- March 2006
- May 2006
- June 2006
- July 2006
- August 2006
- September 2006
- October 2006
- November 2006
- December 2006
- January 2007
- February 2007
- March 2007
- April 2007
- May 2007
- June 2007
- July 2007
- August 2007
- September 2007
- October 2007
- December 2007
- January 2008
- February 2008
- April 2008
- July 2008
- August 2008
- September 2008
- October 2008
- December 2008
- January 2009
- April 2009
- May 2009





11 October 2008 : Digging at the Base of the Mountain.

I like to think that I have forever been the kind of woman who knows her body, and knows that she knows her body, not in a pretentious way but the most static way imaginable. This is how it is supposed to be, so this is how it is.

Mostly that is not true. Mostly, until maybe four years ago, I lived a life outside the body. One that was constrained, maybe, by the ways I could move, constrained but never colored. Never shadowed.

There are a lot of things I can say, about bodies. About all of your bodies. About the bodies I have known. My mother's, soft and warm in all the beaten blood ways of archetype. My father's, rough hewn all my life until it was - in a moment - reduced to the too-pink cheeks and grim smile that are the sum total of my memory, that lifeless facsimile in his casket. My best friends and myself engaged carelessly, glorying in the contact sport that is adolescence.

Our bodies are nothing short of miraculous and this is both a wonder and a dread fact, the undertow of which I tread against ceaselessly in recent days. My particular illness, my kind doctor with his furrowed brow, all these things have rolled me downhill to the dirty bottom where I run my fingers through my hair to catch tangles and spit dirt and detritus from my mouth, the dirty bottom this: the responsibility of being mortal.

If we are lucky, if we are smart, I think we learn to draw lines. We understand somewhere instinctively that there is a basic middle ground between Iron Man and the shaking drunk in the corner reeking of cigarettes and failure (what failure? the failure to rail against one's own baser pleasures?). My lines have been drawn for me this past year, baseball metaphors and tiny white pills that I never let linger long enough on the tongue to know if they were more than metaphorical in their bitterness.

I have been unkind to my body in so many ways. These were my three strikes: cigarettes, birth control, obesity. Then the ominous fourth, the omnipotent family history. A father dead at 45 from the same heart disease that killed his own father. I am lucky because I know my downfalls, I know exactly what I must not touch.

Cigarettes, birth control, obesity. Genetics.

Since March I have lost, on average, about one pound a week. This with careful deliberation, with a new kind of notebook constantly at my side, filled not with fanciful observations or brief snippets of poetry but with every single thing that crosses my lips. A handful of popcorn snatched from a friend, an ounce of creamer poured into my coffee. I have become a master of these things, I can eyeball a liquid ounce, weigh meat in my palm and know.

But even in this I have been unkind, because I have treated my body like a science experiment, and it has repaid me by becoming a stranger. The way it functions, the processes that make it mine, they have all changed, and it frustrates me, it infuriates me. I have been through something like this before, during that lost year in San Francisco, when the money was as tight as it was ever brave enough to be, and what I consumed was primarily found - day old pastries from my roommate's coffeehouse job, whatever Scott was kind enough to buy. Then I was calm with understanding; it was pure abuse, a price I paid for being inconsiderate, for never taking a moment to consider that truly this body is the one thing I'll ever have that is mine alone. Mine to own.

I am infuriated now because I do everything right. I read the labels and even if I want it, I put it back. I make my concessions, give up a midnight snack in favor of putting those two ounces of cream in my morning coffee. I have rigidly and without pity taken in 1400 calories a day, refused anything containing corn syrup, made the most of my allotment in stacks of vegetables, in carefully portioned lean protein consumed in at least a 1:2 ratio with carbohydrates. It feels ridiculous, it feels outrageous, it feels obsessive. But then I have to remind myself of this, which is an admission I have yet to make in a public forum: I have an eating disorder. It's not the sexy kind, it's not the acceptable kind. The media wouldn't give it much consideration because it's not the kind that makes you thin. But it's there, and I have to rage against it every day in the most basic of ways.

What I really want to rage against is the change. The loss of the simple comforts of knowing exactly what was going on in there and why. It isn't so bad that I get up some mornings and have to notch my belt a little tighter (though when it comes time to replace my clothes, my destitution may prove to be an issue), but there are things about being a woman - cycles and circles, rituals and rites - that feel utterly sacred. Like the fact of their existence should contain no loopholes.

Giving my body some of the respect it deserves, finally, should not have made us strangers. If anything, we should be falling in love all over again.

At the end, how will I wear it? When the mountain has fallen, I am a little uncertain about where I'm going to store my tools: someplace far enough away to be safe (from obsession, from envy, from the unrealistic expectation that being thin will change everything) but close enough to find at a moment's notice, should I need some visual reminder that I tunneled through. Where will I lay my hands in repose if not on the shelf of my belly?

The puzzles of the flesh I know will not be unraveled in a single day, metaphor being what it is, but terror holds me back even more than laziness and the unfortunate psychology of the world from which I come.

Labels: ,



posted by lindsay at 18:40 ::



2 Comments:

Give me your address IMMEDIATELY. I have something you must read.

By Blogger lindsay, at 1:38 AM  

thehippiesarelaughing@gmail.com, by the way.

By Blogger lindsay, at 1:39 AM  

Post a Comment