A working theory of body dysmorphia
My experience through body dysmorphia
In three dances
First: “Death is the first dance, eternal”
It was pain that set it all in motion
Lighting loud, cackling pain
It started with a pop
like a champagne bottle
a lumbar disk moved out of place
and pain came bubbling out
Waves of pain,
splashing
soaking
everything
Every step,
like wet socks.
Brushing my teeth
laughing
coughing
even laying down
was wet with pain
I felt limited
and frustrated
I felt useless
But mostly, I felt pain.
I was told to do yoga
and it helped
I felt more like myself.
I could move again.
Laugh again.
But still
I felt pain.
I took up swimming, after
and soon, also running
and in time,
just some of the days
I felt
no pain
I felt whole again.
I felt able
and swift.
I loved swimming
even at five a.m. when the water was cold
I could think.
It was quiet.
I felt graceful
and calm.
I hated running.
It was all about push.
I wanted to stop.
My body screamed
and I ignored it
and it kept going
an agonizing perpetual motion machine.
I hated the burn
and the hustle.
But still
I felt
no pain
if I didn’t miss training
so I wanted to get better.
And this is how it found me
the iron path
my savior
and my shackle
Powerlifting.
My body shook at the thought
of breaking,
again.
But a friend preached:
this was the way
to run faster laps,
to slide through the water
like a dolphin
and I was converted.
I read a very complicated book
about pushing things over my head
without breaking in half.
It became my Bible.
I watched videos
on how to lift twice my body weight off the floor
without my disk popping off again.
They became my preachers.
And I went to Mass.
I loved it
so much
I stopped swimming
and I stopped running.
Lifting was brief,
five sets of five
three days a week.
No early alarms
No cold water
It was all push.
There was no burn and no hustle
and there was no pain
Soon
Something changed inside
I stopped feeling like I might break
this new feeling
It surged from within me
I felt
no pain
and where the pain used to be
I felt
strong.
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