"In middle school, the lunch room is
the worst place for feeling invisible; I feel like
everyone is..."

In middle school, the lunch room is

the worst place for feeling invisible; I feel like

everyone is looking at my mouth. I think

if I swallow fast enough, maybe

I can pretend that I never ate anything, maybe

someone will even believe me.

My best friend buys candy from the vending machine

and won’t stop talking about what a pig she is.

Sydney is a runner on the track team–five foot one and

barely a hundred pounds and

her favorite word is “fat.”

It’s her own private joke and

it’s fucking hilarious. I guess I just

always forget to laugh. See–

I am twelve years old and

everyone who has ever called me fat

meant it.



Later, when another friend of ours–a girl who is

bigger than Sydney but smaller than me–

pats her stomach and cracks a joke about

“not being the thinnest little thing,” she

looks straight at me.

And while our other friends laugh, we only nod:

the smiles on our faces looking out from some place

far away and vacant. The difference between us and them is

we are in on the joke and

we both know it isn’t funny.



Seven years later, and the poet on the microphone

is talking about her body–badmouths it, like it’s

a warzone of a country we have no business being in,

like she is a factory of fun-house mirrors and amidst

the mirage of distorted reflection, she’s

forgotten who she really is.

She talks about being fat. She doesn’t use the word.

(Poets never do)

And I look down at my body: the one

I am still learning how to love.

The voice in the back of my head that

I thought I’d finally learned how to shut up,

rears it’s ugly little mouth and whispers,
if she’s fat,  just imagine how disgusting you must look.

It’s funny, right? It’s funny.



A year after that, I stand my brutal body on stage.

What nobody in the crowd knows is that the blue puddle

of my cardigan in my seat means that this

is the first time in years I’ve let this many people

see this much of me. What nobody knows is

I used to be bigger than this and it was everyone’s favorite joke.

But nobody knows. And now, I am five foot two,

only a hundred and sixty five pounds.

I am thinner than I used to be but

I will probably never been thin enough.

And I’m sorry.

I know how it feels to hear women smaller than you

talk about their body issues. I know

how it feels like swallowing your tongue.

I never wanted to be that for anyone.



But this isn’t a contest. And if it were,

we’d all lose, anyway.

We’re already expected to be flawless.

And the inside joke of the beauty industry is

making sure we all know

we never will be.

We expect such violent perfection from our bodies.

I know how it hurts listening to a girl who

doesn’t look the way you think they should

talk about the pain that matters to you,

but we can’t turn ourselves into gatekeepers

for heartache.

We are all hurting.

There’s no litmus test for low self esteem;

no one deserves to hate their body.



The fact that so many of us do

is exactly the problem.



- LITMUS TEST by Ashe Vernon (via latenightcornerstore)
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Published on September 29, 2015 22:20
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