There is a snack size container of peanut butter sitting in the pantry And I'm sitting across the room but I can feel it's weight as acutely as my own I checked the package three times, hoping the numbers would change when i returned 282 282 282 calories I'm having a panic attack over a snack because the one thing I crave more than anything else in the world is the sticky, nutty taste of JIF brand peanut butter of which I am undeserving
My grandmother loved peanut butter So much that they had to hide it from her if they wanted any hope of a satisfactory sandwich My mom hid food too Stole it like kiss after kiss Sneaking cookies from the houses where she babysat Getting crumbs on her swelling chest in the dark embrace of her teenage bedroom A buffet for one And now I'm in my grandmothers house Hoping that there's peanut butter in heaven Because here there's just photographs and the lingering scent of her Chanel number 5 perfume
Like mother, like daughter, like granddaughter they say You can trace my family line as easily as the stretch marks that litter our bodies But I am breaking the cycle by falling into my own I have learned that hunger pangs are better than the climbing figures on the scale So I lift a glass of water to my lips And I leave the peanut butter in the pantry so no one will ever have to hide food from me
This is one of my most personal pieces. It's basically a disjointed rambling about some things I've been dealing with lately. It's a little strange written out like this, since it's meant to be a spoken word poem.