I am sick of posting the same old
pictures on Facebook for Father's Day and what Himself now
understands is Throwback Thursday. I am organized to the extent that
all of the family photographs are in one place but there are only a
couple that I've scanned. My pop had a penchant for Kodachrome. There
are scads of great photos of my parents in the forties and myself in
sixties splendor. I'm sure there is at least one photo to represent
every year of my pre-digital life. This is perhaps why I've waited
so long to take on the scanning project.
I break down and fill a shopping bag
with photos and hook up the scanner to my work computer. I love the
old pictures of my parents and sister and of course my kids. There
are lots of snapshots of me grinning with my arm around people I have
no memory of whatsoever. I get a sense of how long my life has been.
Overall though, the bitterness of the experience out weighs the
sweet.
There is a picture of me with my dad
that I like. I was about four and wear a floral dress with a bright
red belt. I scan it and put it on Facebook. I remember loving this
dress and oddly, it is the same style of dress that I prefer to wear
now. As I drift off to sleep though I remember also telling my mom
that I didn't want to wear the lovely dress. At age four I noted
that it made me look fat. My mother eyed me up and down and agreed.
Henceforward there were no more belts or bright colors.
Over the last decade my weight has
stabilized and I keep pretty much between twenty and
thirty lbs overweight depending on my self control and what chart you
look at. Before this there were periods where I'd get my weight down
via some method of extreme deprivation like Optifast or the Rice
Diet. I go through fifty years of photos and am stricken. Fat. Not
so fat. Fatter than I ever remember being. I only scan the
relatively normal pictures but even these sadden me too because I
remember a measure so radical that my hair fell out to get my weight
below the category of morbidly obese.
I managed to find relatively decent
looking clothes but it was a huge challenge. At my heaviest I
resorted to having dresses made. I realize, looking at a lifetime of
photographs, that despite my herculean efforts to find non-hideous
garments, it didn't matter what I wore. I was fat, and only that.
Even at my very fattest, I smile in the
pictures. What if I were to wake up tomorrow and look like that
again? I don't think I could bear it. I wonder how, looking like I
did, I could have experienced even a moment of pleasure. But in the
aggregate, I know my life has not been tragic or a waste. It is
enormously challenging to navigate the world with nearly 200 extra
pounds. You have to be smarter, funnier, more generous and jump
through a million hoops to assure the species that under the blubber
you are essentially a normal person. I guess I am a better equipped
as a mildly overweight person for having been a morbidly obese one.
Our anniversary approaches. I pull out
our wedding pictures. I went on to gain about fifty pounds more with
each kid but I am flabbergasted at how fat I was as a bride. My
mother-in-law scowls in all of the photos, which now makes sense. I
would have been deeply unhappy if my son married someone who looked
like I did. I had a dress made out of beautiful silk brocade and a
short jacket made out of an antique embroidered piano shawl. These
still hang in my closet. I suppose someday they can be cut down to
outfit some Mormon brides. I guess the kids will find the pictures
after I'm dead but until then I will show them to no one.
I think it's taken a decade of being
closer than I've ever been to normal to realize how very massive I
was. I'm sure I saw these photos soon after they were taken but some
sort of self preservation instinct probably kicked in and I perceived
them differently somehow. It's weird to think that the person who
saw the photos that I cannot bear to look at, soon after they were
taken, is the same person I am now. Instead, I guess, of obsessing
over finding clothing that would somehow magically make me look cute,
now I fret constantly about what I eat, ate or will eat and how much
exercise is required to mitigate this.
I have spent more very fat years than
not so fat years on the planet. Sometimes I see my reflection in the
mirror and don't recognize myself. It is weird to not feel compelled
to buy any garment that isn't disgusting just because it fits. Air
travel is less traumatic now that I don't have to bother the flight
attendant for a seat belt extender. Plus it is no big deal to fit a
couple weeks worth of clothes into a small suitcase. I can sit in a
chair and not worry that it will break. I appreciate the perquisites
of being closer to normal as much as I worry about staying this way.
Seeing a very fat person is
disconcerting as I am flooded with conflicting and powerful emotions.
I do indeed feel sorrow and compassion. There have been some
improvements since I was at my most expansive, as a much greater
percentage of the population is now obese. It is easier to find
clothing and fat teens at least have a handful of fairly decent role
models. Still, fat bashing is commonplace and for all the lip
service to fat acceptance I truly believe there isn't a person on the
planet who would choose fat over thin. Except maybe a sumo wrestler.
There is a brilliant episode of the show Louie that is dead-on in its
depiction of a fat woman's plight. I will always identify as a fat
girl, yet when I see one I feel more than sorry for her. I feel
ashamed. I feel angry. It is a challenge, even knowing that I am
no more or less lovable now than when I was at my heaviest, to feel
anything but contempt for a fat person. I hope that some day I
overcome my hatred and shame for the person who I was and will always
be.
3 comments:
When we first met, your eyes saw mine. That is the memory I hold. Happy near-anniversary, too. xxx me
Layne,
I love your blog, I identify with the way you think and wish I could write half as well, but alas my interests and meager skills took me down a different path.
The only other comment I have ever left here was about avocado salads, I will try to treat this one more seriously.
My best friend of nearly 60 years is the gold medalist of diet experiments.
Her mother was what would have been called zaftig back in the day, with showgirl legs. She wore spike heels even on the day she died.. My friend is much the same, without the heels. She has never been really fat or thin, but she sees herself as a fat person, thus the constant trials of the 'latest' diet, most of which last no more than a few days. What I do know about her is that she loves to cook, eat and entertain, so it follows in her mind, that she must be fat. I wish I could illustrate it better, but I think the dieting is her idea of punishment for what she sees as her hedonistic tendencies. The fact that she is neither Jewish nor Catholic is surprising, under the circumstances.
I can affirm that she always looks the same size to me, which is somewhere between a twelve and a 14..
I weigh the same as when I was first married, which isn't saying much, I think my wedding dress was a 12, but no one in my large family has ever been really thin or fat, we are all just 'average', and we love to eat too, but we don't box each other's ears over it.
I am convinced that weight issues are genetic, and the way we handle them is part of the pattern.
My mother and her six siblings were all decidedly slender all their lives, and pretty healthy, but they also all had a sort of nervous energy that made it difficult to sit through a long movie, or just relax. The women were always knitting, or wallpapering, or shopping. The men tended to go for DIY projects at which they were all skilled.
Maybe it's in the DNA, as a retiree, I now walk shelter dogs a few times a week, in addition to walking my own two at home. I will do it as long as I can, as long as no one dares call it 'exercise'. I just prefer hanging with dogs to golf or card games.
Conversely, my dear friend mentioned above thinks nothing of reading a book in one sitting, and will stay up all night to do so. She then feels guilty in the morning for being too tired to exercise.
I have come to see weight as a complicated issue, made worse by popular culture. It seems that most of us are programmed early on, one way or another. We compare ourselves to others far too much. We don't beat ourselves up over having blue or brown eyes, or brown or red hair, at least most of us don't. So why should we make ourselves miserable over other things we have little control over ?
In my soon to be dotage, I plan to aim for staying functional, and doing the NYT crossword almost every day, for as long as my mind will allow. I go to Mass almost every morning, an old habit from years of Catholic school, now I mostly light candles for my dear departed, and lay my sorrows or worries at the feet of one statue or another. It gets me out and moving anyway, which I think has become the point of it all.
I'm not sure I've explained any of this properly, but I wish you well, and you are lovely in your photos.
Regards,
sophie
Thanks to Sophie for some very thoughtful comments!
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