A body too much- a stomach that stretched and stuck and a waist left red, dented, stinging after a day in jeans.
A brain too much- a thought process that took flight without permission and dropped rogue missiles of ideas in phone calls with great aunts, deep in essays during state funded tests and leaked from brown paper bags in middle school lunchrooms, leaving me silent and sticky and only just fitting in.
Any conversation was secondary to the fuzzy way I could feel my mouth tripping hard to keep up with a dizzy brain and even before a sentence finished Feeling regret like warm honey coat my throat and seep down hot and solid to my roaring gut.
I was a heart too much. Tears ran forceful and free for so long. There was the heavy, lonely feeling that grabbed root at my pelvis and lounged, languid for days- ******* any hope I could muster out of tan hide until only leather shell remained.
Dawn would find me ushering in chilling spells of misery triggered by the whole wide world- a boy with a gun on the news, a teacher’s tight forehead while mean kids flexed their puberty, Or finding a picture of my parents before they were my parents, and wondering if they ever actually knew love.
At twelve years old my soul was stretched out and sagging. At twelve years old I held tight to being less At twelve years old I knew only one way dull the aches sprouting as fast and fresh as ivy inside my bones.
At twelve every birthday candle and eyelash, every wishbone and 11:11 was devoted to smallness and simplicity So certain that the less of me there was the less I would have to bear from the world.
More than half my life I’ve spent in pursuit of sharp bones to shield and a lithe tread to conceal. I have itched to be a sole shrinking girl among the growing and gaining of peers- to finally find quiet in a body that was beginning to ripen in a shrill, panicky way that would just not do.
More than decade I’ve spent with bile on my breath and scrappy knuckles desperately begging the arrangement of meat and bone I live in to contract; to fold back in on itself and strengthen into a place where I could catch my breath and learn to tend.
Now, too many seasons and too many mistakes later- I do wake up in a smaller body. Twelve year old me is beaming as she sneaks glances the XSs stitched in labels and the chorus of likes that coo and comment how darling I look in dresses.
Twelve year old me is quietly, solemnly psyched about the bruises that bloom across my paling curves after a good stretch on ground. She even nods her head gleefully to my swaying pulse as it dances to its own, faraway music.
Twelve year old me could care less about the bone-buried knots entombed along my spine and the putty-snap cracking bones I show off like party tricks. She sees the yolky shimmer of eyeballs and trail of hairs I shed like bread crumbs marking my path and she doesn’t bat an eyelash. She’s glad she managed it- and anyway the price is worth the discomfort, health in youth is mostly over-rated.
But I do wonder what greedy, vicious twelve year old me would think if she knew I am still, secretly, too much.
Could she muster any pride as she feels my heavy, fatigued heart expand to fill the bits and dark corner secrets I starved away? Or any pity as she watches empty-word fog crawl between ribs and bellow out like a pirate’s flag under raised hipbones. She meets the murky mass that fills my frame- heavy and suspended like a dark towering cumulous waiting for the bow to break and the storm to fall.
Maybe she’d find my brain chemistry unnerving. Seeing desperate fists pawing at ideas as they are born and implode and holding numbly to loose bits, reeling them in stunted fervor like kite strings. Thunder cracks and I’m not nearly electric.
So I grip tight; sinking decalcified teeth into the catch of the day, rowing a rusty canoe out of the whirling, mirrored lake of my mind and back to shore. I will attempt to fit my hard won ideas into any and all variables. I will drive myself crazy with inspiration but never create a **** thing.
The thoughts coursing through my almost-there body are flexed horses. They gallop around the same dirt track for days on end and I have bet what’s left of my youth on photo-finish losses. I’ve got nothing to show for who I am these days. Except for the dresses. I look good in the dresses.