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I’m a Barbie girl in a Barbie world. Life’s fantastic! I feel like plastic, aiming for an 18-inch waist because I can afford to throw my internal organs away. I feel like plastic, a neck so slender I have to choose between eating and breathing; there’s not enough space for two tubes. I feel like plastic, a 38-inch bust and 3-times the average amount of forehead. I feel like plastic, a size nine shoe squeezed to a three, spending three to nine avoiding meal time because my weight-loss book says, “Don’t eat.” I’m a Barbie girl, in a Barbie world. Life’s fantastic, but I’m not plastic. Bile tastes all too organic, its taste chasing after me if I exceed my daily nutritional limit of 2,000 calories. I’m skinny enough that people think I’m healthy. I’m not skinny enough for people to think I’m unhealthy. Anorexia is as familiar as the back of my hand, poised like a gun to the back of my throat, waiting and ready to blow. I’m a sixteen-year-old suicide case, product of the war of production, wearing battle wounds in the form of uniform lines across the tops of my thighs. I’ve been rewriting this poem since its conception. I feel like the rough draft: concision is key. (Be smaller.) I’m trying rewriting, trying to leave out things that aren’t important enough, like: four of my ribs and my esophagus and my stomach and my small intestine. I’m testing the limits of realism. But here’s the thing: I’m a real girl in a real world. Life’s not always fantastic, but I am not plastic. I am not plastic. I refuse to be plastic, aiming for generic weight range based on content, not scale number. I refuse to be plastic, eating and breathing like both are vital aspects to living. I refuse to be plastic, an actual hip-to-bust ratio for not a thirty-year-old but a teenager. I refuse to be plastic, shoe size nine in size nine shoes, trying to start enjoying mealtimes because my “weight-loss book” has been chucked down the chute. I’m a living girl in a terrifying world, trying to remind myself that “Life in Plastic!” is not fantastic.
0
Sep 13, 2017
Sep 13, 2017 at 8:00 PM UTC
revisiting Barbie Girl
I’m a Barbie girl in a Barbie world. Life’s fantastic! I feel like plastic, aiming for an 18-inch waist because I can afford to throw my internal organs away. I feel like plastic, a neck so slender I have to choose between eating and breathing; there’s not enough space for two tubes. I feel like plastic, a 38-inch bust and 3-times the average amount of forehead. I feel like plastic, a size nine shoe squeezed to a three, spending three to nine avoiding meal time because my weight-loss book says, “Don’t eat.” I’m a Barbie girl, in a Barbie world. Life’s fantastic, but I’m not plastic. Bile tastes all too organic, its taste chasing after me if I exceed my daily nutritional limit of 2,000 calories. I’m skinny enough that people think I’m healthy. I’m not skinny enough for people to think I’m unhealthy. Anorexia is as familiar as the back of my hand, poised like a gun to the back of my throat, waiting and ready to blow. I’m a sixteen-year-old suicide case, product of the war of production, wearing battle wounds in the form of uniform lines across the tops of my thighs. I’ve been rewriting this poem since its conception. I feel like the rough draft: concision is key. (Be smaller.) I’m trying rewriting, trying to leave out things that aren’t important enough, like: four of my ribs and my esophagus and my stomach and my small intestine. I’m testing the limits of realism. But here’s the thing: I’m a real girl in a real world. Life’s not always fantastic, but I am not plastic. I am not plastic. I refuse to be plastic, aiming for generic weight range based on content, not scale number. I refuse to be plastic, eating and breathing like both are vital aspects to living. I refuse to be plastic, an actual hip-to-bust ratio for not a thirty-year-old but a teenager. I refuse to be plastic, shoe size nine in size nine shoes, trying to start enjoying mealtimes because my “weight-loss book” has been chucked down the chute. I’m a living girl in a terrifying world, trying to remind myself that “Life in Plastic!” is not fantastic.
the first time i ever wrote Barbie Girl was back like 3-4 years ago, and it's been stuck in my head ever since. the original can be found on HP here: https://hellopoetry.com/poem/1077573/barbie-girl/ I always had mixed feelings about the original interlude, and I feel like this revision is much more true to the place I was in back in my sophomore year of high school. Plus, this is just one of the poems where I want to be able to freestyle the interlude whenever I feel the need to change it. It's a living thing, and honestly a poem I'm most proud of.
hutchinson
Written by
20/English
Sep 13, 2017
Sep 13, 2017 at 8:00 PM UTC
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