I can’t
remember the last time I went a whole day without eating.
I used to
go on extreme diets, but that was a long time ago. When I look at pictures of how thin I
was BEFORE the diet, I plotz. In some photos I look like a ghost: it was at
that point that I felt I was “thin enough”, at least until I put back 5 pounds
or so.
I have had
an uneasy relationship with food, with eating. Whole industries have sprung up around it, billions of dollars’ worth. Buying
food, preparing food, eating in restaurants so we won’t have to put out any effort at all.
I remember
feeling a little shocked when a friend of mine (quite obese, and apparently
going to a nutritionist because she said she had no interest in food ) said to
me, after we’d finished eating in a restaurant, “So what's so great about it? It’s in one
end and out the other.”
Well, it’s
true, but we don’t think about that, do we?
Why make such a fuss about food? Everything
turns to shit anyway. Kind of like a metaphor for life.
I’m
thinking about all this, as I sit here already feeling hollow and groany in the
stomach. I’ve been doing “prep” for a colonoscopy for several days now, first
with a restricted diet (no this, no that), and today with a liquid diet
restricted to anything I can see through.
Meaning
limited Jell-o, limited chicken broth (these consumed as “meals”), ginger ale,
apple juice, and water and water and water. And water.
Already I
am feeling unmoored. For food isn’t just something that keeps us going, as in "calories in". It’s a way of marking the day, of orientation. “Haven’t you had
lunch yet?” “You mean you don’t eat breakfast? It’s the most important meal of
the day.” (Why?) “Let’s have dinner some time.” Etc. Not “let’s get together and talk trash", but “let’s get together and stuff food into our mouths”.
I won’t
write about the obesity crisis which seems to be blowing people up like
balloons. My theory (one that I have never seen anywhere else) is that people
are responding to the emotional stress of a harrowing, violent, climate-damaged
world by stuffing things in their mouths. They’ve been doing it since they were
babies.
It’s
self-comforting, and the thing is, when you walk into the average store, I mean
a drug store or department store like Walmart or Target or one of those, one of
the first things you see is a WALL of junk Sometimes walls and walls of it.
None of it is really edible and most of it consists of sugar, fat and other
empty calories. All of it is within easy reach and does not cost very much.
Ladies and
gentlemen, here’s your pacifier! Come stuff it in your mouth, and a few hours
later, shit it out in your diaper. Or wherever.
But I set
out to write about this strange fast, this abstinence, fortunately only
one-and-a-half days long. Later this day I must purge, and I’ve heard this
stuff is a Roto-Rooter to your insides. It scares me half to death because the whole reason
I am having this procedure is that I’ve been having abdominal pains. Might they
be made infinitely worse by this liquid Draino I have to drink tonight?
I am not
one of these people who wants to “watch”, by the way. I don’t know why they let
anyone watch the procedure. The whole reason it’s done is to screen for cancer,
tumors and other abnormalities of the colon. Who wants to be lying there
staring at the screen and suddenly hear the technician say, “Oh my God, that’s
the worst one I’ve ever seen"?
It’s seven
minutes after eleven, and all I’ve had today is coffee (black) and water
(clear). I thank the Lord I can have coffee at least. When I have my fasting
glucose test every few months, coffee is not allowed, and by the time my arm is
stuck and bled, my head is pounding. After the siphoning I run for Starbuck’s
or, even better, McDonald’s, which has surprisingly good coffee that is just
loaded with caffeine.
As I sit
here listening to my stomach make noises like a grizzly, my mind bounces back
and forth. I’ve been doing this for weeks now, but it has intensified over the
past few days. Of course everything will be all right. I’ve “passed” every
medical test I have ever had. Nothing is ever wrong. EVER.
There’s no
cancer in my family. Anywhere. But that turned out to be a lie, or a “mis-truth”, a form of selective amnesia. My Dad was indeed
treated for bladder cancer and completely cured and went on to live another 30
years. My mother had her uterus removed, but no one ever told me why (and in
fact I did not find out she had a hysterectomy until many years later. At the
time, she was just “in the hospital”.)
So it is
quite possible that BOTH my parents had cancer. A strange sort of flip-flop
from what I believed until quite recently. I wasn’t lying to myself. I just
didn’t “know”, though in fact I knew very well. I was protecting myself from
the truth.
So how do
I feel without the anchoring effect of food, the three meals a day that
prevents everything from blurring together into “blunch”, “linner” and
“dupper”? I find I’m already forgetting and almost grabbing something to eat.
Just a banana. (God, I had a lot of bananas yesterday.) I am holding off on my
feast of peach Jell-o and Knorr chicken broth (“Made from real chicken!” Hell’s
bells, what ELSE would it be made from?) until I am truly desperate.
I don’t
want this “procedure” to happen, but at the same time I want it over with. I
know the most likely result: no phone call, which is good news, isn’t it?
Better than the other kind.
I can’t
help but remember, though, all the friends I used to have, the ones who fell to
disease: cancer, heart attack, AIDS, more cancer. . . Oddly enough,
the one that bothered me most was the recent death of someone I could only call
an acquaintance. I had not seen her for years – she was once a member of my
former church and had just been ordained as a minister – and then suddenly I’m
getting a Facebook message inviting me to her memorial service.
MEMORIAL
SERVICE?
When you
leave a place you’ve been part of for years, it sort of freezes in time. If you
meet someone you knew years later, you can’t help but think, God, they look
old. But when someone dies at 50. . .
Someone you admired, liked, even though you weren’t really friends.
Someone whom you knew would make an outstanding minister because of her soaring
spirit and vibrant faith.
I am still
having trouble getting my head around it, don’t really believe it, can’t
associate her with death at all. And it was cancer, that looming shadow,
perhaps the main thing we are trying to rule out tomorrow, which is why I have
to be so cleaned out. If she could die like that, just vanish, so that I’ll
never see her again. . .
I can’t
finish that sentence.
This is
just a procedure. Millions of people have it. I haven’t had any real symptoms.
At least, I don’t think they are symptoms. I don’t know what they are, just
things that have been bothering me. I only know I am not allowed to eat, and the peach
Jell-o quivering in the fridge is beginning to look like coq au vin.
Not
eating, fasting, is like missing a step in a dance or a skipping rhythm. Or
maybe stepping back from everything. It feels weird, hollow. It leaves you
clutching at the air. And oddly depressed, your pacifier snatched out of your
mouth, so that you are forced to see, and feel, all the things that you would
really rather not.