The Half-Drunk Winner Is?

by Sarah on December 13, 2009

Jen and I have read every entry. We have talked, emailed and Instant Messaged all week. We are awestruck. We are honored. Every one of our participants gave this community something brave and daring. Something that we, ourselves, found difficult to do.

Time and time again we both came back to Kitch. Her words pummeled me with honesty and depth and heartache. With introspection and reflection alike. I am proud to name The Kitchen Witch as the winner of our Half-Drunk Challenge. But dare I say we all are winners? Dare I?

Has it not been an amazing week? More than I could have imagined, I tell you. More. Just so much more.

This week has inspired the development of a completely new site. In conjunction with Goldfish of On Three Kids we are working on DaringVerse.com, a place where you can come to post anonymously. 100% anonymously. Not even we will know from where the entries come unless an author chooses to submit their information. I know that this blogging community we have formed is safe. That we are safe with one another. But we all have times when we need to write something a little uncomfortable. A little “out there.” A little more private from our friends and family that may read our blogs. The opportunity for feedback on these words may drive us to open our laptops and click over to Daring Verse instead of pulling our journals out from the underwear drawer.

I know that many of you have also read all of the Half-Drunk entries, and may have already read Kitch’s post and commented. However, I think Kitch deserves a spot of her own here on Momalom. Please read. Or reread. Comment again. Show her your love. Show her your support and understanding. Congratulate her like I know that you can.

I tip my hat to you, The Kitchen Witch, and I commend you for your wit, your honesty, your freedom. For joining us here and sharing your courage. Thank you.

And here is the post that takes the cake (although I’m pretty sure Kitch will be making her own chocolate layer miracle to celebrate):

F-Bomb Alert: Skeletor Issues

A few months back, Miss D. was at a swanky birthday party (snark about parents who have stinking PONIES at their kids’ parties is forthcoming). A ginormous cake was brought out, the ice cream followed, and portions were doled out to eager partygoers. Miss D., who doesn’t have a subtle bone in her body, dug into her piece with ferocity. And then a girl, adorable in her frilly dress, looked askance at my child and said, in a sing-song voice…”Eww. That’s going to make you fat.”

That little bitch. Yeah, I just called a little girl a bitch. In fact, I wanted to punch her in her pretty freckled face. And sure, it’s wrong to want to deck a 2nd grader, but when I saw Miss D., formerly so enthusiastic about her cake, take in what this girl had said, stricken, and hesitate….

Fuck. Why, why, why did I wish for girls?

Because get this. That little girl at the party? The Future President of the Bulimic Club in high school? I hate her. But I hate her Mommy more.

Yeppers. I blame that girl’s Mommy. Without hesitation. Because, let’s face it, that’s what Mommies do. We fuck up our daughters about food.

Which, as I write this, makes the hair stand up on the back of my neck. Because if Miss D. or Miss M. gets fucked up about food, I will slit my throat.

Because once, I was fucked up about food, and it almost killed me. And even though it was ME bent over the toilet, puking up my dinner, was ME exercising until my muscles screamed, was ME who fainted in the college dorm shower after three days without food, was ME who came home for Christmas break weighing 85 pounds Freshman year of college…everyone blamed my mother.

Because that’s who people blame when a daughter runs amok.

But I will tell you with utmost certainty that my mother did not fuck me up about food. She was slender but didn’t seem to work at it, nor did she ever utter the phrase, “I feel/look fat.” Our family sat down together for dinner every night of the week. My sister and I were neither praised nor berated if we cleaned our plates. Everyone ate the same meal; there was no spaghetti-for-the-family-while-Mommy-eats-a-lettuce-leaf bullshit going on. We kept candy and cookies in the house, openly and always. My sister and I were loved and told that we were beautiful and had good brains. My mother and father never, not once, snidely commented on my body.

And yet I got fucked up–dangerously fucked up–about food.

And I will tell you how easy, how mind-numbingly easy it is to start being fucked up about food. Because I remember the exact moment I started.

February 23, 1984. It is my birthday. I am in the 8th grade. The week before, I’d injured my knee skiing, so I was on crutches and rocking a glamorous leg brace. As per family tradition, we were eating at the restaurant of my choice. I can’t remember the name of the place, but I do remember my order: Fried Shrimp. Which I loved.(I mean, shit, who doesn’t?)

I was happy. My parents had given me my first pair of diamond earrings; little chips of things, but in my eyes, they signified that I was growing up, and cherished, and trusted to have such nice things. The waiter was charming and teased me gently about my injury. My dinner was delicious and the banter at the table lively.

And then halfway through dinner, my sister, almost four years my senior, looked at my plate and said sotto vocce, “You keep eating like that and you’re going to get fat. Especially on crutches.”

I don’t think she really meant much by it. Although, knowing her, it is possible. But the reason I remember this moment so clearly is that there was, for me, a complete seismic shift. You think I exaggerate, but I don’t. My dinner, my Happy Birthday to Me plate of exactly the food that I wanted, turned traitor, blurred in a swell of tears. I am 14. I have boys who flirt with me and I am a thin 5’7 and 110 pounds, but suddenly, things are different, newly clear.

I bow my head, mutter an excuse, grab my crutches and limp to the bathroom, where I stick my finger down my throat for the first time. The bile burns and my eyes leak and I keep gagging clumsily, but after I am emptied, I feel clean.

I was 14 years old. It took one moment. Just one thoughtless comment. And my life is de-railed for 10 years.

So who, caterpillars, is to blame?

Not Mama. Not Daddy. Not my sister, although she was an asshole. Not the fashion magazines. Not my peers.

I am to blame.

There are plenty of excuses out there: It’s about control issues. It’s about depression. It’s about perfectionism. It’s about society’s focus on appearance…

Well, pardon me, but fuck those excuses and the horse they rode in on.

I am to blame.

Deep down, I didn’t trust myself to be enough. Of anything. All my life I’d been told that I was good and sweet and smart and beautiful, but I’d never once believed it.

Instead, I chose to believe the bully who told me I had ugly legs. I chose to believe the sister, who in moments of anger said she hated me. I chose to believe the gym teacher who said I was weak. I chose to believe the math test that screamed–Moron! I chose to believe the boys who never asked me to dance.

You know what’s amazing about those 10 years I spent being immensely fucked up about food?

I functioned.

Somehow, I functioned quite well. I aced tests, graduated Phi Beta Kappa. I wore baggy clothes and had boys willing to kiss me. I rarely got sick and had amazing stamina. I got into graduate school.

And I remember almost zero of it.

That’s right. I don’t remember books I read, lectures I attended, concepts I studied, conversations I had, places I went. Damn near zero.

Being fucked up about food cost me 10 years of my life. And I am to blame. Because I was given everything a girl could ask for but I still had this thing–a fault line running through me–deep and wicked and shrieking that I was no good. And that was what I chose to believe.

I don’t know why some girls have fault lines and others escape. That’s what keeps me up at night, now that I’m the mother of girls.

I do what my Mama did. I cuddle them and tell them to try again, because it’s rare that someone succeeds on the first try. I tell them that they have quick minds and gentle hearts. I laugh as they help me in the kitchen, offer up a spoon to a willing mouth.

But part of me is standing in the shadows, waiting. Wringing her hands.

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December 14, 2009 at 2:30 pm

{ 19 comments… read them below or add one }

becca December 13, 2009 at 9:34 pm

Made me cry again. Seriously. Having a daughter and having gone through some similar food issues and wanting SO badly to avoid them with Hannah… it overwhelmed me.

This post absolutely deserves more than praise. It was a true example of putting your heart and sole out there. Kitch – I commend you AGAIN on this. You may have blamed yourself for the eating disorder but you should take FULL OWNERSHIP for overcoming it. And being so much stronger and AWARE in the end. Your girls will thank you for it because even if you don’t know HOW you’ll avoid it happening to them, I know you will.

Congratulations – you deserve this “win”.

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Bre December 13, 2009 at 9:40 pm

Breathtaking.
This embodies man vs self so well.
Thank you for sharing, @TheKitchenWitch!!

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momalomsmom December 13, 2009 at 9:41 pm

Thank you Kitch. You do indeed take the cake. There were so many wonderful, thoughtful, funny, touching, and yes, brave posts. But yours took the cake – and the prize. Your honesty and courage flabbergasts and humbles me. And encourages me. I, like Becca, always seem to be editing in my head, and what comes out always seems a diluted version of my meaning. But I will keep your bravery in my mind, and try to squelch that inner-critic, the omni-present editor, and just write it. The real it.

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Kristen December 13, 2009 at 10:05 pm

Since first reading TKW’s post, I haven’t been able to get it out of my head.

Kitch, this is an absolutely remarkable piece of writing. Did I already tell you that I think it should be required reading for all parents? for anyone who knows kids, who knows people?

Thank you for sharing your story with us.

And Jen & Sarah, thank you for inspiring all of us to write those stories that were lurking just under the surface – that needed a budge (or maybe some bubbly) to come out.

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The Wild Mind December 13, 2009 at 10:27 pm

Yep, that’s a winner alright. I’ve got three girls of my own. I never had that kind of eating disorder (I can’t stand throwing up, lucky me) but I totally get why people do it. I hate, hate, hate, HATE the pressure placed on women to look a certain way and be a certain size. I could go off.

I love Kitch’s perspective of taking total responsibility. In a world where blaming others is the standard. When it would be so easy to blame the world, media, our fucked up societal expectations and perspectives of beauty (because skinny sells, baby!), Kitch does none of this and places responsibility squarely where it belongs. Something tells me that she her girls are going to be just fine.

I’m dying to know what she actually said to the little girl when she made the comment about the cake!

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The Wild Mind December 13, 2009 at 10:30 pm

Ugh, totally bad grammar on that last comment. I meant to say “In a world where blaming others is the stand and where it would be so easy to blame…”
My bad. I think I’m still half-drunk. ;)

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The Wild Mind December 13, 2009 at 10:31 pm

And I even got my correction wrong! I give up. Great job, Kitch! I’m going to sit down and be quiet now.

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Corinne December 13, 2009 at 10:49 pm

I just loved that post! Congrats to Kitch!
(and it sounds like such a great project that is in the works!)

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Boy Crazy (@claritychaos) December 13, 2009 at 10:56 pm

So glad you posted this here. I haven’t been able to read every single entry, and this was one I had missed.

Damn, woman. Thank you for sharing.

I just wrote a whole long comment and then deleted it, because this isn’t about me. Just wanted to say I’m glad you shared, and it will stick with me.

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TheKitchenWitch December 13, 2009 at 11:20 pm

I am so proud that y’all read my emotional vomit and found something worthwhile in there…I’m always just on the line of sanity, but it’s seriously touch and go. I think maybe that post resonated so much because I was balls-to-the-wall-scared to write it. I also knew that my parents would read it, and be wounded all over again, and I didn’t feel good about that, but luckily, they forgave me.

The older I get, the less I believe in keeping shame secret. It’s ugly, and awful, but it’s yours. Own it, learn from it, and hopefully stare it in the face when it comes knockin’ round on your daughters’ (or, as some of you noted, sons’) doors. Because you are going to recognize it, and all the better if you aren’t taken off guard.

There’s an amazing community of voices out there; thanks, Jen and Sarah, for making us look in the mirror, even if we’ve been afraid to for a long time.

I’ve learned a lot about courage and authenticity from all of you. Now pardon me while I grind my teeth and try not to kill the child who refuses to go to bed. :) Love you.

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Kelly December 13, 2009 at 11:51 pm

I was slammed with deadlines last week and am just now getting time to read through the half-drunk entries. I am amazed and astounded and in awe of this post. I still struggle with disordered eating and have become very active in To Write Love On Her Arms (www.twloha.com) because it seems like our girls are so vulnerable and I have to do something – SOMETHING – to protect mine, and anyone else’s that I can. Sharing a post like this one is another great way, and so I shall.

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Nicki December 14, 2009 at 6:52 am

TKW – Congrats! You so deserve the win. I am still taken aback by the brave writings so many did. I also was taken back in time as I read your words. Not myself, but the sorority house in college. The bathroom was not a pretty place. You could always hear someone vomiting in there.

Thank you to all of you who wrote, beared your souls, discussed your fetishes and loves.

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Goldfish December 14, 2009 at 8:38 am

Good choice. So many good posts to choose from, but this one absolutely embodies the spirit of daring writing, of stretching…. And as I re-read it, I am struck how deeply this resonates with me, mothering three boys. I consider my own body image, and what they absorb from me, and what they come to understand about femaleness/maleness. Two sides of the same coin.

Thanks for taking a chance, TKW. Thanks for hosting this, Jen and Sarah. And thanks to everyone who had a drink (or not), took a deep breath, and wrote.

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Jen December 14, 2009 at 10:08 am

Amazing. Heartbreakingly beautiful & honest post. I am a new mom with a 7 month old baby girl, and my heart wrenched in my chest as I read.

Thank you for sharing!! I for one appreciate it.

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Amy at Never-True Tales December 14, 2009 at 10:33 am

Shoot. Thanks for reminding me of yet ANOTHER fear I have for my kids. ;) Seriously, this post is such a good reminder, Kitch, of why I cannot afford to be a freak about food and exercise. Because yeah, I am too. I have let my kids see weeks where all I’ll eat are slim fast shakes while I bake cookies for them. I’ve let them see me get all excited about losing 2 fucking pounds or be in a bad mood for gaining 2. The only thing I do right in this department is let them see me exercise every day.

And I have all boys. But that’s just as scary, because they’ll pass on this idea of women’s body image to their future girlfriends and wives. So yeah. I’m going to stop eating lettuce while they eat spaghetti.

Thank you.

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Jillian December 14, 2009 at 12:52 pm

This challenge was incredibly insightful and I am so glad that I was a part of it.

What I discovered was that it is not easy to speak from the heart about an uncomfortable topic and The Kitchen Witch did it magnificently. It is scary to know that it takes so little to fuck us up when we are young and impressionable.

Anyway, big congrats, you deserved this award. As for all the other posts?? What fun I had reading all of your deep inner thoughts. I am glad that we have more opportunities to go there now.

When I have the time I will revisit all of you and make sure that I follow you or to help me speed up our budding relationship please come to my website http://isdisnormal.com and say hello!!

Thank you Sarah and Jen, you rock!!!

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Liz December 14, 2009 at 12:55 pm

I hadn’t read it until now. It was just one of the posts I had not gotten around to amidst the snot running amok in my house. Wow, am I glad it won and am I glad I read it. This is amazing. I am speechless, and that does not happen often.

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robin December 14, 2009 at 3:24 pm

That makes me so glad I have boys. Seriously.

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Shawna December 24, 2009 at 4:37 pm

Three daughters. Three of them. Thanks Kitch. I think about this often and appreciate your candidness!

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