site under construction

II. The Miracle and the Lifter

A working theory of body dysmorphia
My experience through body dysmorphia
In three dances
Second: “Deceit is the second, without end”
My body changed.
At the same rate my old clothes stopped fitting my body

just the way I couldn’t wear my favorite shirt anymore
and none of my pants fit

the way people treated me changed.

People smiled more

Folks I had just met, 
hell, even old friends  
started hitting on me

The things I said seemed to be more interesting
the world was brighter

I felt seen
and valued

special

I felt strong
and unbeatable
in this new 
painless iron body

But if I didn’t train for a few weeks
the pain came back
and dragged me back to the gym

So I kept training
going to church
the weight on the bar kept rising
and I kept pushing

And when I went back home
the mirror flashed a smile back at me

I showed off
to myself, to others 
I grew shameless

I liked what I saw.
I liked how I felt.

But suddenly,
betrayal.

Perception 
like a poisoned dagger:
my vanity turned on me

The gym pump
so narcotic

You are, for a while
a bigger you, 
a better you
A mirage, in the flesh

In your own flesh.

A vision 
A promise

In my mind, 
I was that mirage

The way I looked
when I wasn’t big
paled in comparison
to my new expectations 

On the days I didn’t train
I looked weak, and fat

I felt inadequate
and small
and guilty

The mirror showed concern

A magnifying glass
of faults and hate

And the more I trained, 
the more vicious it grew

I couldn’t live up to it.
I hated my body.

But the high
made it all go away 
just for a day
I felt invincible

The pump is one hell of a drug
and I was hooked.

I could not fight it.

I needed a fix.

Why caballá?

Hablar caballá (caballadas, animaladas) means to talk whatever, to say nonsense. 

I'm no academic. I'm writing from my point of view, the way I feel them.

Let's talk caballá together.

4 responses to “II. The Miracle and the Lifter”

  1. Kay Avatar
    Kay

    Beautifully said 😍

    1. Joel Avatar

      Thank you very much for reading it.

  2. Rae Avatar
    Rae

    I think you did a great job at illustrating something that’s otherwise pretty hard to show – how working out, being thin or strong, can actually feed into a destructive feeling, sometimes. It felt visceral, and insidious, and made me feel uneasy from line one. I loved it.

    1. Joel Avatar

      Ah, Rae, thank you so much. It makes me so happy to read. That’s what I was going for. Thank you for reading it and for writing that.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *