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By Lisa M. Zaran She bought into the hype that states, nothing tastes as good as thin feels. Proving on this she decided nothing tastes worth eating. So she didn't or when she did rectified it by pointing a finger at the back of her throat. She equated thinness with beauty and so, when the flesh of her face began falling away so the skin grew taut, it's beauty stretched thin like canvas over bone and when her collarbones began resembling the sinking part of an anchor, she thought these good things, steps in her right direction. Blind to everyone and everything except her own reflection she never noticed the wide-eyed stares from strangers or the gaping mouths of her family members. She thought nobody was looking. As her weight went down her symptoms increased. Hair loss, sallow skin, the last of her menstrual cycles. Growing smaller she also grew tired and began napping at all hours, dreaming herself a lithe mermaid, the pounds skimming off her frame like silver finned fish before bellying away. Her parents never surrendered or rendered her hopeless, force feeding her spoonfuls of their aching hearts, but, they did agree that she was drowning and pinned their hopes on the myth that even a body whose drowned, surely, must surface again. © Copyright 2001, Lisa M. Zaran |
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Document last modified on: 11/05/2004