calories daily, making my total intake exactly that: 1,500. This fifty-percent balance somehow reassured me that Dr Messer and I were even; we were head to head. It was a truce. For now at least.
âGood afternoon!â Nurse Personality didnât bother to knock. I wouldnât earn that privilege until I was off bed rest and had graduated from the currency of three added pounds. I sat upright, forced my eyes open. She was looking more pregnant each day. She opened the blinds and let the sun flash into my eyes.
âI want my camera,â I blurted.
âGet to Phase Three, then youâll get the camera.â She dropped the tray of food onto my tray table. âThey didnât have green salad, so I got you carrot and raisin salad instead,â she said.
What gall, replacing an innocent green salad with that greasy, sugar-laden dessert they called salad, then expecting me to swallow it without objection.
âI donât want the carrot and raisin salad.â I crossed my arms over my chest. The feel of my ribs pleased me. I was proud of the work, time, and effort it took me to develop that bone and eliminate the breast.
âIf you donât eat the salad, youâll have to make it up somewhere else. If you donât, it will go on your record. You didnât make three pounds last weight day, Lila, so youâd better think about this.â
âThere is a difference of eighty calories between green salad and carrot salad.â
âThere will be no negotiating,â she told me.
âIâll have a Melba toast.â
âThere will be no negotiating.â
âIâll have apple juice instead of the salad.â
We argued more heatedly until she gave me an ultimatum. âIâm going to call Dr Messer.â
I agreed to eat the salad.
Exhausted and angry, I nibbled away. Feeling sick, I shivered as my lips touched the oily, cloying sweetness of the grated carrots. I chewed, swallowed, and cringed as numerous horrid button-sized raisins scratched against the back of my throat. I hated them; I hated those useless pieces of desiccated grapes that Iâd spent hours of my life plucking out of muffins and cereals.
Nurse Personality stood watching me as I ate. I had the uncanny feeling that she got a thrill from seeing me fattened up before her eyes, especially as her once-slim figure thickened from her pregnancy. I saw her tugging at her tightening belt, perhaps in a momentâs recognition that her body was swelling up and therewas absolutely nothing that she could do about it. I seemed to be more loathsome to her as that baby grew inside of her. The rest of the staff was just as hypocritical, always comparing dieting tips and secrets and exercise trends, always competing in some contest of self-control as they encouraged me to put on weight.
When Iâd finished the carrot and raisin salad, she took my tray and walked out. What followed was a silent tidal storm within me. Within half an hour, as I lay on my back with a full belly, a nightmarish torrent of guilt ensued and lasted a gruelling eighteen hours. I spent the day in a corner of my roomâone the nurses couldnât see unless they came inâunrelentingly running, skipping, and burning off that four-ounce salad.
Tomorrow was weight day. I was afraid to gain. I was afraid to lose. I was stuck in an irreconcilable middle. Between the fear of gaining weight and falling short, I faced the possibility of tougher restrictions or reliving the onslaught of guilt and anguish all over again. Which was worse? Dr Messer had warned me that if I didnât gain on the next weight day, Iâd be force-fed another 1,000 calories daily with a feeding tube and sedated until I had put on fifty pounds. Fifty!
At night I lay awake. I was not permitted to have a clock or watch in my room, but considering the turbulent relationship I had with time, it was just as well. After lights out, I could recognize the
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