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I tell myself I will stop after this bite. The first bite. The last bite. I have said that sentence so many times It has lost its meaning. Sweet turns to salt, Salt turns to grease, grease turns to a numb kind of warmth That settles into my stomach like a stone in a river. My heart speeds up. My jaw aches. My hands shake, but they don’t stop. It’s not hunger. It’s never hunger. It’s the silence I’m trying to fill. It’s the ache in my chest That food seems to answer for a moment— until it doesn’t. The wrappers pile up. My teeth feel heavy. My stomach swells, tight and hot. And that’s when it comes— the thought, sharp as glass: Get it out. Now. I move quickly— bathroom door shut, light too bright, mirror watching me like a witness I wish I could be blind. Knees to cold tile. Porcelain beneath my hands. My breath uneven, My throat is already aching from the nights before. I lean forward. My body knows the drill. The convulsion comes, violent, an unnatural surrender. From my stomach out of my mouth My guilt goes— Or so I tell myself. The taste—acid, bitter, familiar in a way that makes me sick in more ways than one. Eyes water. Nose burns. Skin flushed with the effort. And then— nothing. My mind is blank, The feeling has stopped. I feel an emptiness- An emptiness that should feel like relief but only feels hollow, like I’ve scooped myself out and left the shell behind. I wash my face. I rinse my mouth. I pretend it’s over. My reflection is a stranger. Hair clings to damp skin. Mascara bleeds down my cheeks like black rivers. Lips swollen. Eyes dull. My shirt smells of laundry detergent and bile. My stomach is empty, And my chest feels heavy. I’ve purged the food, but the shame stays— coiled around my ribs like it owns me. I tell myself never again. I say it out loud, to make it real. But the words are paper-thin, And I know how easily they burn. I tell myself this is control, But my reflection’s eyes Do not believe me. They are tired eyes, Tired eyes that bulge out of my skull every time I heave- eyes that know the lie so well It tastes like metal in my mouth. The mirror watches me purge what my heart cannot carry— fear of failure, fear of fullness, fear of existing In a body I can’t forgive. My ribs are counting the days, My face counting the times. I’ve measured my worth in pounds. My throat is raw from the war I’ve waged on myself. But tomorrow, The cycle will begin again. - This is my sickening eating disorder.
0
Aug 11, 2025
Aug 11, 2025 at 5:37 PM UTC
The Cycle I Cannot Break
I tell myself I will stop after this bite. The first bite. The last bite. I have said that sentence so many times It has lost its meaning. Sweet turns to salt, Salt turns to grease, grease turns to a numb kind of warmth That settles into my stomach like a stone in a river. My heart speeds up. My jaw aches. My hands shake, but they don’t stop. It’s not hunger. It’s never hunger. It’s the silence I’m trying to fill. It’s the ache in my chest That food seems to answer for a moment— until it doesn’t. The wrappers pile up. My teeth feel heavy. My stomach swells, tight and hot. And that’s when it comes— the thought, sharp as glass: Get it out. Now. I move quickly— bathroom door shut, light too bright, mirror watching me like a witness I wish I could be blind. Knees to cold tile. Porcelain beneath my hands. My breath uneven, My throat is already aching from the nights before. I lean forward. My body knows the drill. The convulsion comes, violent, an unnatural surrender. From my stomach out of my mouth My guilt goes— Or so I tell myself. The taste—acid, bitter, familiar in a way that makes me sick in more ways than one. Eyes water. Nose burns. Skin flushed with the effort. And then— nothing. My mind is blank, The feeling has stopped. I feel an emptiness- An emptiness that should feel like relief but only feels hollow, like I’ve scooped myself out and left the shell behind. I wash my face. I rinse my mouth. I pretend it’s over. My reflection is a stranger. Hair clings to damp skin. Mascara bleeds down my cheeks like black rivers. Lips swollen. Eyes dull. My shirt smells of laundry detergent and bile. My stomach is empty, And my chest feels heavy. I’ve purged the food, but the shame stays— coiled around my ribs like it owns me. I tell myself never again. I say it out loud, to make it real. But the words are paper-thin, And I know how easily they burn. I tell myself this is control, But my reflection’s eyes Do not believe me. They are tired eyes, Tired eyes that bulge out of my skull every time I heave- eyes that know the lie so well It tastes like metal in my mouth. The mirror watches me purge what my heart cannot carry— fear of failure, fear of fullness, fear of existing In a body I can’t forgive. My ribs are counting the days, My face counting the times. I’ve measured my worth in pounds. My throat is raw from the war I’ve waged on myself. But tomorrow, The cycle will begin again. - This is my sickening eating disorder.
This follows my cycle from binge → purge → aftermath, with vivid detail so you feel the full weight of it.
Abbyslove
Written by
18/F/Al
Aug 11, 2025
Aug 11, 2025 at 5:37 PM UTC
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