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A Creative Writing Piece on Bulimia

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  • #196001
    Lucas
    Participant

    Hello, everyone. I have introduced my poems and creative work on here before. I have always loved to write, since I was a kid, but I always feared that I was never good enough, and so I stopped doing it. Recently, to help me deal with depression, I have took up writing again at the suggestion of my therapist, and it really does make a difference.

    I am developing the courage now to show some of my work, and I am working on a creative writing piece dealing with bulimia. I understand that the topic is very serious, and I have tried to write my material with a conscientious mind. If anyone on these forums would mind looking at what I have so far and telling me if they feel that the work is unauthentic or that there is something missing, I would love to hear about it.

    It may sound silly, but I am hoping that my writing will change somebody’s life, and I would like this to be as genuine as possible.

    *fair warning: there is a mild amount of cussing (to add humor)

     

    #196003
    Lucas
    Participant

    Today is the day I find out what I’m made of. Today is the day that I see for myself just how pretty I can be.

    I shower my body with cold drops of water, a pentecostal fire renewing me with every freezing drop of liquid. My heart beats with the intensity of a snare drum as the facet creaks off. The ritual is about to begin, and the priest is waiting to pass judgement upon me.

     

    The scale of my life shifts with the weight of the scale in the bathroom. I breathe in, the oxygen escaping the room and into my lungs.  This was the moment, my moment, the arbiter of my destiny. The scale begins to whir like the gears of a complex machine roaring to life, and I brace myself for the judgement I am about to receive.

     

    126.5 the scale flashes back at me. The number cuts deep, deeper than any knife ever could. This kind of wound is the wound of the heart, one that cannot be seen, only felt.  I look into the mirror and a menacing reflection of myself laughs in triumph at my despair.  Margie, I call her, a name just as despicable and pathetic as my own.

     

    “Ha, that proves it, I hear her say. You are worthless after all. You think you’re beautiful, sweetie? You’re not. You want to feel beautiful, sweetie? You got to be beautiful.’

     

    I get ready for the day, putting my business skirt and shoes on. My coat hangs past my arms as if I were a kid trying to wear his dad’s jacket. “A small? I hear Margie say in a mock tone of voice. “Surely, you can do better than that, fat ass.”  I didn’t say anything, but the worst part is knowing deep down that Margie was right.

     

    As I walk to work ,every glass window, bathroom mirror, and cafe is a reflection, a reflection of the fat, ugly monster on the inside.

     

    The world I see is not one of qualities and colors, but of numbers.  I deal with a lot of numbers in a day.  Number of hours on the job, number of clients helped on business calls. Numbers are everywhere, numbers are life,  but the most important numbers are in food, in calories. You see,  Calories are more than a number. They are an identifier. Just as everyone has different eye color, facial features, and birthmarks, everyone has a different number of calories. If I didn’t know anything else in my life, I knew this: the number 500.

     

    500, 500 card game, 500 Days of Summer, 500 Miles, the Proclaimers.  Da, da, da, da, da, da, the music of my life always and everywhere followed the rhythm of 500. This was who I was, not Margie, not a girl. 500. If someone came up to meet me, I would respond: “Hello, 500 is my name, nice to meet you.” But sometimes I admittedly was not 500, sometimes I got tired of carrying this name around with me and was 2,000, maybe 3,000. I could hide it for awhile, stuffing the Twinkie’s rappers underneath my bed, but it wasn’t long until Margie found out that I had my hands in the cookie jar, and she was not happy.

     

    “3,000! 3,000!  You think you’re 3000! You’re not! You’re 500 and you know it!” Margie points a long bony finger to the bathroom door, as if putting a disobedient dog in its kennel, a menacing smile appears on her face.“ You know what you have to do.” I shake my head in protest, but Margie is resolute, as firm as a statue. She puts a long bony arm around my neck, as if she were a serpent squeezing its prey. “

    You want to be beautiful, don’t you? Well, you better start acting like it sweetie. Now get in there and do your business!”

     

    I saunder to the porcelain throne, obeying the orders of my queen. The queen and the throne in history were one in the same. They are the same.

     

    The human body is meant to eliminate waste, it is proper, it is natural.  To go against this is to go against the laws of nature. Expulsion, then, is not a burden but a necessity, expulsion of food in particular is a necessity. Let me be clear: what I was doing was what every single religion ever  taught has ever done: seeking repentance. Ridding myself of all those awful, awful calories was a form of confession. I was confessing,  confessing my sins to Margie that I was no longer 500, and that by going through the proper rituals of initiation on the pew, phew. I, too, could be born again, a 500.

     

    I wonder now as I did then just how many women were indoctrinated into the cult of 500, seeking repentance everyday by ridding themselves of all that envious glucose and sugar and fat, only to find that like a drug dealer, you were always waiting for that wonderful dose of self-punishment, that burst of adrenaline that reminds you just how wonderful it can feel to truly hate yourself.

     

    Make no mistake, I was a drug dealer, but the drugs I dealt were not cocaine, nicotine, or heroin. No, the drugs I dealt were the ones I gave myself. Hatred and imperfection were like a drug, giving me an inescapable high everytime I could purge myself of all the awful crap inside of me just to do it all over again. It was more exhilarating than a roller coaster,  more pleasurable  than sex.

     

    I don’t think most people go through life intending to harm themselves, to make themselves purposely think that they are the most ugly piece of crap in the world, but I guess it just kind of happens. Somewhere along the line someone makes a comment about how fat we are, how we have zits on our nose, or something like that, and apart of us just dies on the inside. It doesn’t help, of course, that women are constantly bombarded with images of starving models, rail thin bodies, and utterly ridiculous crap like: “nothing tastes as good as skinny feels.” Clearly, whoever wrote that has never tried cheesecake because cheesecake is just fucking amazing.

     

    My initiation rituals with Margie continued on a daily, weekly, and monthly basis. Every week the scale got lower and lower, but my confidence in myself did not get any higher. It didn’t matter if the scale read 122: I wanted to push the envelope. “122? Screw that, why not go to 115, 110, 90 lbs?” It was like a game of limbo with myself where everyday I would repeat the same sing-song mantra “how low can you go,” “how low can you go?” Sometimes I wonder if I wasn’t testing at what point I would just disappear into thin air, like some kind of screwed up David Copperfield trick  because that was exactly what I was doing.

     

    As the weeks went on, dressing in my small clothes was like a baby wearing a business suit: far too baggy. So I began to shop for extra small, kid’s– sometimes I wonder if some of the shoppers didn’t stop to look at me, but I quite frankly didn’t care. I was agent 500, and I was on a mission to stay that way.

    #196051
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Lucas:

    You shared a few poems only a few days ago. I enjoyed them and posted to you my input there on Feb 28. I thought my input was honest, kind and encouraging, but you didn’t reply to me, did not acknowledge my post to you. Why?

    In regard to this thread, I was wondering what you meant by this: “Hatred and imperfection were like a drug, giving me an inescapable high everytime I could purge myself of all the awful crap inside me.. it was more exhilarating than a roller coaster”‘

    Did I understand correctly: hating yourself, or expressing your hate for yourself (in what ways?) gave you a high, an exhilarating feeling? I hope you will elaborate.

    anita

    #196053
    Lucas
    Participant

    Yes, I’m sorry. I did get your reply. I found that your comments were very helpful. I’m sorry if I didn’t make that clear before. My goal at the moment is to deal with my depression through creative writing and expression. This piece on bulimia came to me when I thought of how very few people understand what it is like. Suffering from mental illnesses most of my life has allowed me to look at the world in different and unique ways.

    My goal with this piece is to be as authentic and wholesome as possible. Although I have suffered from major eating disorders in the past, I have never experienced bulimia.

    I am hoping that I can submit my work to a literary magazine and hopefully change the rather narrow viewpoint a lot of people seem to have on mental illnesses.

    As for hating yourself being a drug, I certainly think it can be. You become used to the feeling and develop a strange kind of addiction to it. A lot of people with eating disorders carry the immense burden of self-hatred and guilt, myself included, which is why when you view it as removing parts of your toxic self, it can be exhilarating.

    I hope that makes sense.

    #196055
    Lucas
    Participant

    It is said that the most dehumanizing thing that a person can ever do is to remove their name, which is why the girl in the story is no longer referred to as Margie, but 500, as in 500 calories.  When the only thing that you are is a number, your sense of worth is immediately eradicated, which is exactly what an eating disorder is.

    I think that this also gives an objective view into the mind of someone with a disorder such as bulimia because they don’t necessarily see themselves as an individual. Eating disorders are very obsessive-compulsive type behavior, and that’s what I was really looking to get across.

    #196059
    Lucas
    Participant

    I meant to say that I found your comments insightful and that they have actually inspired me to develop the courage to submit my work.

    #196061
    Lucas
    Participant

    When I said I feared that my work would not be good enough, I am referring to before I  put my work on a public forum.

    #196063
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Lucas:

    You wrote that you would like to “hopefully change the rather narrow viewpoint a lot of people seem to have on mental illnesses”- it may read to some as if most people are not mentally ill and are not viewing mental illness correctly. I think that most people at any one time suffer from significant anxiety or depression and that lots of that “narrow viewpoint” you referred to, regarding mental illnesses is held by mentally ill people no less than people doing well at any one time.

    You wrote: “You become used to the feeling (hating yourself) and develop a strange kind of addiction to it”- whatever we get used to, whatever habit we develop, mental and otherwise, we tend to repeat and find some comfort in it, for a while, at the least, and to some extent. It is in the nature of habits, good habits, bad habits and all in between.

    anita

     

    #196069
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Lucas: double postings. I appreciate your comment to me in the post before last. Keep the good work of posting here.

    anita

    #196071
    Lucas
    Participant

    What I mean is that I feel there is a misunderstanding as to what an eating disorder actually is.  Some people, unfortunately, have the belief that a person with some sort of mental illness can just snap out of it– think happy thoughts, etc.. but that’s just not how it works. When you have a mental illness, you don’t control your thoughts, they control you.

    I wanted to specifically target eating disordered behavior because of how uncommonly it is talked about in our society.  Everyone that I have shared this piece with so far knows someone that was bulimic, anorexia, etc.. it is not well understood at all, and I think that there is simply a lack of perspective on it.

    Our perspective is our story. By changing our perspective, we also change our story.

    #196075
    Lucas
    Participant

    Yeah, I am working on finishing it at the moment, but I want it to be really wholesome so that it kind of makes the reader stop and think a bit. I want to touch on every aspect of bulimia and make the person understand that it isn’t just some rich white girl problem: eating disorders affect everyone, regardless of background or size. So if you have ideas on how to incorporate elements of that into the story, I would love to hear about it.

     

    #196077
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Lucas:

    I agree with you: it is indeed impossible to “snap out of it”. People who suggest that do misunderstand the nature of let’s say, bulimia. Because they don’t experience bulimia. Yes, I agree. It is a good thing that you put this out for others to read, to increase awareness and help those suffering.

    anita

    #196079
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Lucas:

    My comments on your story:

    1. A gender mistake here that you might want to correct: “My coat hangs post my arms… wearing his dad’s jacket”- you mean her mother’s (clothing), right?

    2. I didn’t understand the shower scene, the purpose of the freezing water. Maybe other people won’t understand it either, you might want to add something to explain it or eliminate that paragraph.

    3. Regarding numbers, I would limit the obsession and compulsion regarding numbers to calories and weight, but not mention number of clients at work etc., it takes away from the affect of the focus a person with an eating disorder has specifically on calories and on body weight.

    4. I recommend you keep your style of writing simple. Your paragraph starting with “I don’t think most people” is an excellent paragraph, for its simplicity and authenticity. It reads … real and authentic. On the other hand the shower scene, other than the issue of my misunderstanding of the content, reads too flowery to feel real, to me. Also the two liner paragraph starting with “I saunder to the porcelain throne” reads too flowery to me and I didn’t get that either.

    This part: “The number cuts deep, deeper…” is excellent. The added expressions, the symbolism of the knife adds well to the affect you aimed at, I think.

    anita

     

    #196121
    Lucas
    Participant

    Hello, Anita. Thank you very much for your constructive feedback. I would just like to clarify a few things: the shower scene doesn’t hold any relevance in particular, except for the fact that it’s a daily ritual that people typically do: use the bathroom, shower, step on the scale, etc..

    The idea of the cold water being a Pentecostal fire was supposed to establish a somewhat religious theme to the text, as the Pentecost in the Bible is the showering down of the Holy Spirit. Just as the Pentecostal fire lead to a feeling of renewal and refreshment, so too, does the act of taking a shower.

    As far as the numbers that she mentions. I am using the art of show, don’t tell, which is that I want the reader to ascertain from the paragraph that the author works in some kind of field involving numbers, but whether she is an accountant or anything else is not mentioned. So numbers play a big role in her life, but the most important numbers for her are the ones in food.

    I hope that clears up any confusion. I appreciate the feedback. If it still doesn’t seem to fit, then I may just remove it entirely.

    #196123
    Lucas
    Participant

    I also was actually aiming for the flowery feeling to catch the reader off guard when they find out that this person has an eating disorder. It’s supposed to be somewhat jarring.

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