My mother orders a smaller size for my leotard so I ***** in the gym bathroom, in the last stall. Later, I put on the outfit: small, shiny, with cutouts for a fashion statement, but I draw red circles around those patches of flesh--mistakes to fix.
Every day in the car, Mom gives me a lunch she packed: two rice cakes, peanut butter measured to exactly one tablespoon, carrots and ranch dip. Accepting her boundaries seems weak, so I never eat at all, my only spot of control set against the nightmare of a needle spinning around numbers in a sickening game of roulette.
She kneels in front of the stage during all eight routines that thinned me into a figure worthy of her photos, immortalizing me with vague curves, a slim face replacing pink round cheeks-- but that was enough for my mom because I know she sets the scale five pounds above zero. Inches disappeared, until that needle, sharp like her eyes, aligned with the big 85, causing mine to open in a room with blank walls and sterile-smelling sheets, the place of rest.