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- - - - - - - - - - T A B L E_T A L K Getting straight with those two humans who made you. Discuss your parents in the Mothers Who Think section of Table Talk - - - - - - - - - - R E C E N T L Y We believe you, Juanita (we think) The road to hell was paved with handbags In the tub with Leadbelly Mother Time Amnesia BROWSE THE WORD BY WORD ARCHIVES - - - - - - - - - - Mamafesto
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_[_W O R D__B Y__W O R D_]
But I have gone to three parties recently. (I felt I had to go to all
three, for reasons I won't go into here.) At two of these parties, I spent the
entire time thinking about how much I hated everyone on earth and wondering
what kind of nightmarish roommates one gets in heaven if one thinks such ugly
thoughts: survivalists, jazzercise instructors, the GOP House managers and
their ilky ilk. But at the third of these parties, with a good friend on
either side, I realized once again that there is only one person any of us
really hates. It's the gift our parents gave us that just keeps on giving.
It's the potted plant of self-loathing they asked us to hold for a moment
-- like one of those old "Candid Camera" setups where the innocent bystander is
asked to hold a plant, or a cat, for a troubled but friendly stranger who
then never shows up again. And so the nice person like me stands there
holding the damn cat, wanting to do the right thing.
So, it was a birthday party that moved outdoors when the winter sun
surprised us all one afternoon, and I plopped down on a rough wooden bench
between these two old friends. Both are women in their 50s who had come
alone. Both are brilliant, and a little fat.
One of them has always been zaftig from the waist down: Her
granddaughter says to her with enthusiasm and admiration, "You have a great
big butt!" But the second woman has always been thin and beautiful and
ambitious, in a distinctly soft and soulful way. She has been considered a
player in Hollywood, an actress turned director of art-house movies. Then she
got cancer. She had surgery and chemo; then she went to convalesce at a
nearby Zen center.
I had not seen her since then, but when I walked into this party, I
saw that she had gained a lot of weight. Some of us old bulimics are
like people at carnivals who can guess weights within two pounds. So I'm
guessing 25 or 26 new pounds. I kept noticing her hands resting on the swell
of her belly under a simple stylish black linen dress and I was secretly
shocked. I know this does not make me look very spiritually evolved, but here
goes anyway: It was like seeing Kate Moss with fat arms.
"You look so wonderful," I said. And that is true -- she looked
stunning -- but what I wanted to say was, "Oh my God! You got fat!"
She has the most exquisite eyes: soft heathery green, stormy sea green.
"I'm used to you being so skinny," I said. "You look so much better."
She really did; she looked softer, rounder, this big soft sweet pillow of
tummy rising out of her dress. But I wanted to ask, "Would you mind coming
into the bathroom with me and hopping up on the scales?"
It's a very complicated dynamic for me. In the last year, I have joined
the big comfy underpants set,
and it has taken me a year to stop thinking of myself as morbidly obese. People tell me I look normal now, but what I hear is that they think I look like Marlon Brando.
It's so automatic in me: I recently saw a beautiful woman I knew when I
was still drinking, who betrayed one of my best friends. She used to be one
of those shapely sylph types, and now -- this may sound harsh -- she looked
like a really pretty manatee. And I thought, Hah hah!
So there I was at the party, with all my usual feelings of shyness and
dread and social retardation, talking to these two women I've known forever
and adore. And for a while I comforted myself by thinking, Well, at least my
butt is not half as fat as HERS, and my stomach is not as fat as HERS. But
then I'd feel misery, hold my little potted plant of shame.
N E X T_ P A G E: The eat-no-evil monkey |
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