Today was the Purim carnival and that meant today there was a cake walk. Because we have two children who like cake and are willing to commit a large number of carnival tickets to the cause, we came home with two cakes and so today we ate cake, two kinds.

Also today we were tired because that’s what a Purim carnival will do to a person and so Madison and I spent some time snuggling in bed recovering from the noise and the crowd and the sugar. Madison is a fiddler by nature — she is soothed by fiddling with the seams on our clothes — and so she was fiddling with my collar and she sighed.

“When I grow up,” she told me. “I hope I grow up skinny.”

Now here’s the deal about Madison: her body type is not skinny. There is no way she is going to grow up skinny, which is what I told her. I said, “Hmmm. I think your body will be just right but I don’t think it will be a skinny body.”

She found this assertion annoying.

“Listen,” I told her. “Bodies are not just skinny or fat. They are much more complicated than that. Most bodies are skinny in some ways and fat in other ways and all different. You don’t have the type of body that will be all skinny because that’s just the way your body is and that is fine.”

I told her that she is built a lot like Pennie and Pennie is, as you know, gorgeous but she is not skinny and it would be weird on her frame if she were. She does not have a skinny body. She has a lovely body, mind you. I hasten to say this because we have this unfortunate habit of equating skinny with pretty even when we know that’s not necessarily true.

I said, “I think when you grow up you will be built a lot like Pennie. I don’t think you will be all-over skinny like [insert name here].”

She said, “Well, I would like to be skinny. I would just like to.”

Are you disturbed yet? I was but I also felt like it was a great opportunity to discuss body image yet again. Because here’s the thing — my girl isn’t going to be skinny and that’s no tragedy. But it will be if she isn’t able to accept that about herself and love the self she is. She wouldn’t say but obviously she believes skinny is better than not skinny because she is not immune to the whole damn world telling her that this is so. So I talked some more.

“People get confused about skinny,” I told her. “They think skinny is the thing to be because we only really get to see one kind of body on tv and in a lot of magazines. We really see mostly skinny all of the time. That is just WRONG and it is silly. And then sometimes women think they HAVE to be skinny even if that’s not the type of body they have. I know a lot of unhappy women who spend all of their time trying to be skinny and it’s a sad sad thing. Those women have been fooled into thinking that it’s all about skinny. They believe those lies and it makes them hurt and it makes them sad. I don’t want you to do that.”

She rolled her eyes and said, “I know it! I know it!”

“Then listen up because this is important,” I told her. “If you want people to see the prettiness in you, you have to see it first. You have to walk around knowing how awesome you are and that’s how pretty happens — when all that love shines through, that love you have for yourself. You don’t want to try to be another person, Madison, because then all the people who are meant to love MADISON might miss you because they won’t see YOU. They’ll get all confused seeing the person you think you have to be instead of the person you are supposed to be. You will not grow up to be a skinny woman, Madison, but don’t waste your time regretting THAT. You know you are beautiful and perfectly Madison-sized. You just keep on being fabulous.”

I know this is part of what will be an on-going conversation. I know that even in my fat-friendly life with my husband who has never ever ever said, “Hey, honey, haven’t you let yourself go?” but very clearly worships the ground I tread upon, I know that Madison is up against steep odds. But I also have faith in her.

I started this post off with us having cake because people do eat cake in the world. People do have cake walks and they eat cake, even people who are not skinny. Even people who are skinny. Today we ate cake because we get drunk on sugar on Purim instead of alcohol. I want to raise a strong, healthy daughter who can eat cake on Purim without regrets (and most especially without feeling like she has to stick her finger down her throat after) and who grows up to say, “I love my Madison-sized self!” But it sure ain’t gonna be easy.

exerciseI am blurry on the details. Both my parents were home, which makes me think it may have been a weekend. (My dad traveled most weekdays.) Also it was summer. I know this because I was in my underwear and a t-shirt. We were not a walk-around-in-your-underwear kind of family (not like my kids who regularly streak down the hall in little else) and I remember feeling quite daring for wearing a t-shirt and underwear to bed like my friend said she did. So I know I was already feeling a little over-exposed. And it must have been evening since I was (un)dressed for bed but I’m not sure how old I was. I want to say ten, maybe. Maybe eleven. It was before the divorce (because my dad was there) so let’s say ten.

I can’t remember — did my parents call me downstairs? Or did I come down to tell them something on my own? I also don’t remember exactly what they said but I do remember their worried, compassionate wrinkled brows and their assurances that they loved me. And I remember something vague about my dad having been a fat kid and how he didn’t want me to suffer the way he’d suffered. (But this adds to my confusion — maybe my father wasn’t there. Maybe he left it to my mom to tell me and I remember him being there because I remember my mom saying this. Or maybe she said this after this initial confrontation. It’s all a blur.)

I know they told me I was putting on a little too much weight, that maybe I needed to watch it a little because I was getting, well, I was getting chubby.

This is what stays with me: The cold, cold shame freezing my stomach and making my vision turn wide then small. My awareness of my physical vulnerability in my t-shirt and underwear. My want to disappear, pull a blanket over me. And my shock because no one — NO ONE — ever told me I was fat. No one had ever said these words to me. So the irony is that my parents wanted to protect me from the cruelty of other children but the only people who had ever told me I was fat were my parents who were telling me now. And this is also what stays with me: that spinning, empty feeling around my limbs as I realized that I did not know myself or my body. That my legs and arms and tummy were no longer close and familiar but were enemies bent on fooling me. Where I had felt strong and pretty, I now knew I had been mistaken and then I realized I had been a fool walking around in the world feeling good about myself because it was a secret from me, the way that other people saw me. And that was the shame that has, frankly, never left me. And this is a shame that I still feel around my family more than I feel it around anyone else because they were the ones to tell me.

It sounds like I’m damning my parents and I’m not. My parents really were trying to be helpful. I believe their intentions were good and loving because the bulk of my experiences otherwise at that time in my childhood were good and loving and supportive and encouraging. So I forgive them for doing their best even though it ended up causing me harm. My father was a fat kid and he carried those scars. On the other hand, my mom was always a skinny, skinny kid and likely didn’t know what to make of her sturdy, stocky daughter. Perhaps I was getting too chubby although pictures I have of that time show only me at my most Dawnest self — neither big nor small. Plain, sturdy, short of limb and stern of face.

I do wonder though what they thought I would do as a ten or eleven year old. We already ate well because my mom controlled the food in our cupboards and on our dining room table. We had lots of fruits and veggies; we had few sweets or processed food. I was one of the few kids who never had Hostess cupcakes in my lunch and when we drank kool-aid, she made it with a fraction of the sugar. I rode my bike a lot, too, although truth be told, I was more of a bookworm. My body at that age (I say, gazing at the pictures) was simply a sturdy, stocky body and this I already knew. My best friend was younger and a full head taller with long, long legs and her tummy never curved out in her bathing suit. But that was how she looked and this was how I looked and it didn’t occur to me that one was better than the other until I heard it. Until my parents told me directly and until I overhead adults talking about Annie’s body and how they envied her her legs, shaking their heads in rueful admiration.

What happened after this momentous day is that I quit walking like I was the person inhabiting my limbs. I felt self-conscious as I moved through space. I doubted the me I saw in the mirror and no longer trusted my ability to know what I looked like. I began to look at other people with suspicion and self-consciousness. In short, I became less likely to want to run or ride or dance or be active anyplace people might see. Which is obviously what my parents were trying to avoid. And this has never left me. Nor has the feeling of powerlessness over my body, this sense that it will do what it wants and I am disconnected — body separate from soul. This is a disconnect that feels like I am a poorly dubbed movie with a body that will not co-operate with my thoughts.

I think about this so much lately because I am now a mother to a sturdy, stocky daughter and I feel like high-kicking the world under its collective chin when I think of anyone — ANYONE — visiting any of this on her. I know she is beautiful like I knew I was beautiful. Because looking back, I can see that my parents were wrong. They were wrong to tell me and they were wrong in their assumptions in the first place because I wasn’t fat. I was lovely. And strong and sturdy and exactly how I was meant to be. I know this because my mom fed me well and I rode my bike and ran around the neighborhood and so the body I carried was the perfect body for me. But I can’t get back to that place and so I’m deathly afraid that someone with the best intentions will steal Madison’s sense of self.

So I will tell you now: My daughter is perfect. And so is my son. They are exactly who they are meant to be. They own the ground they walk over. They own the air they move through. They are grace even when they stumble. They are strong and free and masters of their beings. Their bodies will change — filling and stretching — and the change will be perfect even during those awkward times when their knees don’t seem to work right and their elbows knock into things. I feed them well, they run around — they are nourished and active and so I won’t let anyone else’s worries come to visit them.

When we talk about health, we don’t talk about weight. When we say “diet” we mean “food you put in your body.” We mean vitamins and minerals and diversity in your menu. We get off the elliptical trainer or back home from a walk or a run and say, “Wow, that really helped my stress levels! That made me feel strong! I’m going to sleep well tonight!” Because that’s the equation that will build the bodies they are meant to have and those bodies may be slim or round. They may be heavier or lighter or taller or shorter but they will be perfect and my children will never ever ever (god willing) have to lose ownership the way I did when I was ten.

Madison’s life is better now that her birthmama is back in town. As we pulled into the airport to pick Pennie up, she sighed and said, “This feels better — having Pennie home.”

After we dropped Pennie off, Madison said that she noticed that Pennie’s pants were falling down. This isn’t quite true. See, most jeans nowadays are low-rise jeans and not every woman has a low-rise body unless she’s comfortable showing some of her tush. 

“So I saw Pennie’s butt,” Madison informed me, exaggerating things.

“Well, how about that!” I responded. “Does she have a cute butt?”

“She does. It’s also kinda big. But not as big as yours.”

I don’t wear low-rise anything seeing as how I inherited my dad’s high waist (meaning my waist is somewhere around my armpits) but now I know I also shouldn’t because I have a big butt. 

Children are precious!

(A note here: I am not at all one of those mom’s who gets her feelings hurt when my children tell me my butt is big, my tummy is squishy or that I’m fat. These things are true and my children say them warmly and usually while patting me kindly or cuddling up. I always say, “Yes, that’s true; my butt is big and I am beautiful.” The beautiful part is technically a fib but they don’t know this because they love me. I figure one of the kindest, most loving things I can do for my kids is to love my own self unconditionally or at the very least fake like I do. So I fake it and sometimes I believe it. Mostly, it works out.)

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