We blame society for everything. We fault magazines for turning innocent teenage girls Into anorexic beauty queens. We point fingers at the paper thin actresses on TV screens For bringing bulimia victims to their knees, ******* down their throat as they cough up that last bit dinner, Along with the guilt and shame that comes with it. We blame society, but we are society. Who wrote those magazines? Who created the ridiculous standard that you can only fit in If your bones are showing through your skin? Hunger is just a feeling; thin is a skill. Your stomach isn’t growling because you’re starving. No! It’s applauding you on a job well done, On another day of nothing but celery sticks and diet coke. Who cares if all of your hair falls out? Who cares if you get dizzy every time you stand? Who cares if the desire to be thin and meet this sick standard of beauty Is slowly killing you, taking another piece of that innocent teenage girl And turning her into a skeleton? We, as a society, don’t care. The magazines won’t stop printing Because another high school kid got carried away. Extreme, even deadly diets are a thing of today, And yes, yes, they’re here to stay. Sometimes eating healthy and exercising just aren’t enough. Desperate times call for desperate measures, And under this kind of pressure, It’s hard not to give in.