june 1st, 1942: 927 calories, 63 deg. fahrenheit. by, meredith kathryn-case gipson hoogendam
March 29, 2008
what is it like, to measure time
in calories, each moment a caloric collection
of seconds, each month a record
of how many grapefruits eaten, how many
pieces of cake or slices of cheese denied,
days upon days stretching into the absense
of every fat gram you did not eat,
every desire you did not pursue,
every dream you did not have.
i know a girl with eyes as hollow
you can see
her soul beneath them.
she traces her lineage
with harsh bone fingers, counts
the birth that hangs like plump apples
from her family tree,
each little red ball
a reminder of her own
empty branch,
devoid of apples and menstruation.
her grandmother keeps a diary, records
calorie intake and degrees fahrenheit
on the same top line of each page.
june 1st, 1942: 927 cal, 63 deg. fahrenheit.
the girl imagines her grandmother, sixty
years younger, measuring
milk for cereal and checking
the window thermometer
for signs of change.
the girl wonders if her life, too, could be traced
with such precision, each bite
the anniversary of a birth or a death, each pound
weighing the girth
of her heart, the measure
of her place on the earth.
the girl asks God;
if i get so small that you take
my place, will my feet still press imprints
into the ground, or will i simply disappear?
but God gives no answer
and her feet become so light
she nearly vanishes;
like a levitating Eve,
who picks the apple
and then gives it to Adam,
so that he might ingest the calories
she does not deserve.