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I wrote a poem about eating disorders. I wrote a poem about the pain in my heart. I said that weight is not equivalent to health because weight is not equivalent to health. I stand by that statement. I stand by the truth. in response, a woman who I have never met decided to ask me how much cake I ate that night. to that woman, and to anyone with the same judgement in their tiny hearts, I would like to give you an answer. I do not have an eating disorder. I lost a large amount of weight over a short period of time. because of that, I was complimented. but the truth is that when I was that skinny, I was the unhealthiest I have ever been. I had stopped eating. I was sick. something was physically wrong with me, going undetected because no one thought to ask me how I was feeling. they praised me for my sudden weight loss, not realizing that I wasn’t dieting. I was dying. I have since recovered. I have gained back all of the weight that I lost. I have not gained back any of this weight in fat; I gained all of my weight back in muscle. to the stranger who tried to shame me because she assumed that I must be fat, I run four miles every morning. before this pandemic, I went to the gym at least five out of seven nights a week. I had a promising career in competitive skateboarding, which was lost only because of an injury in which teenage me broke her legs. I ran cross-country back in high school and only a year ago, I ran an ultramarathon: 100 miles of terrain and 24 hours to run. I am physically fit and most likely stronger than you have ever been. I laughed to myself when I saw your comment because you just proved that everything I said was true. you provided the perfect example of society’s twisted views on weight loss, so I guess I should thank you. you immediately jumped to the conclusion that I must be fat, and therefore I must be unhealthy. your ignorance is sad. it will get you nowhere. I can almost guarantee that your anger and hatred has not helped you. your rudeness has made you the topic of this poem about judgement. and unless you are able to learn empathy, this might be your life’s biggest achievement. to the woman who thought that her words would somehow hurt me, I would like you to know that you were wrong. you have made me laugh at the irony of your ignorance, and you have made me sad for you and the awful life that you must live to have felt a need to make that comment. but you have not hurt me. to that woman, if one day we ever meet, or if one day I meet someone with the same attitude as you, let’s compete in an ultramarathon together. let’s cover those 100 miles of terrain and finish that 24 hours of almost nonstop running. I hope you realize that I could beat you. I could easily win with you as my competitor. and finally, to answer the original question that for some reason you felt so compelled to ask: no, I did not have any cake that night. but I hope you know that if we were to race, I am confident that I could still crush you with three slices of cake in my stomach.
0
Dec 13, 2020
Dec 13, 2020 at 7:10 AM UTC
to the complete stranger who commented on my body
I wrote a poem about eating disorders. I wrote a poem about the pain in my heart. I said that weight is not equivalent to health because weight is not equivalent to health. I stand by that statement. I stand by the truth. in response, a woman who I have never met decided to ask me how much cake I ate that night. to that woman, and to anyone with the same judgement in their tiny hearts, I would like to give you an answer. I do not have an eating disorder. I lost a large amount of weight over a short period of time. because of that, I was complimented. but the truth is that when I was that skinny, I was the unhealthiest I have ever been. I had stopped eating. I was sick. something was physically wrong with me, going undetected because no one thought to ask me how I was feeling. they praised me for my sudden weight loss, not realizing that I wasn’t dieting. I was dying. I have since recovered. I have gained back all of the weight that I lost. I have not gained back any of this weight in fat; I gained all of my weight back in muscle. to the stranger who tried to shame me because she assumed that I must be fat, I run four miles every morning. before this pandemic, I went to the gym at least five out of seven nights a week. I had a promising career in competitive skateboarding, which was lost only because of an injury in which teenage me broke her legs. I ran cross-country back in high school and only a year ago, I ran an ultramarathon: 100 miles of terrain and 24 hours to run. I am physically fit and most likely stronger than you have ever been. I laughed to myself when I saw your comment because you just proved that everything I said was true. you provided the perfect example of society’s twisted views on weight loss, so I guess I should thank you. you immediately jumped to the conclusion that I must be fat, and therefore I must be unhealthy. your ignorance is sad. it will get you nowhere. I can almost guarantee that your anger and hatred has not helped you. your rudeness has made you the topic of this poem about judgement. and unless you are able to learn empathy, this might be your life’s biggest achievement. to the woman who thought that her words would somehow hurt me, I would like you to know that you were wrong. you have made me laugh at the irony of your ignorance, and you have made me sad for you and the awful life that you must live to have felt a need to make that comment. but you have not hurt me. to that woman, if one day we ever meet, or if one day I meet someone with the same attitude as you, let’s compete in an ultramarathon together. let’s cover those 100 miles of terrain and finish that 24 hours of almost nonstop running. I hope you realize that I could beat you. I could easily win with you as my competitor. and finally, to answer the original question that for some reason you felt so compelled to ask: no, I did not have any cake that night. but I hope you know that if we were to race, I am confident that I could still crush you with three slices of cake in my stomach.
poetry-by-sf
Written by
F/Pennsylvania, USA
Dec 13, 2020
Dec 13, 2020 at 7:10 AM UTC
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