Member-only story
Displaced Hunger
Poetry
Another day, another battle as you step out of bed
to look down at a self that is lacking, extra flesh
pooling around you to remind you of your flaws.
Even as you pinch yourself — flabby, you cringe —
there’s no relief except a painful reckoning
where you don’t know if you’ll even eat breakfast.
You wish your hands could tear away all the extremes
of your body — the waist, the hips, the thighs, the calves —
and each one has been the subject of your ire for years.
It’s just so much easier to hate yourself for not changing
than actually working to make the parts better for the whole.
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But it’s not just about the skin in all its excess
or even the ways you loathe what you see.
Every extra inch exhausts you, rails at you,
because you weren’t always this picture
of the “before” side of the photoshoot.
You remember being better, feeling better,
before you went to cakes and pastries