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"You okay?" asked Samantha gently.
"I'm fine."
"Do you want to get a drink? Some dinner, maybe? Want to go see a
movie?"
I held the box tighter and closed my eyes so I wouldn't have to see where we
were, so I wouldn't have to follow the car's progress back down the roads that
used to lead me to him. "I think I just want to go home."
My answering machine was blinking triple-time when I got back to my
apartment. I ignored it. I shucked off my work clothes, pulled on my overalls
and a T-shirt, and padded, barefoot, into the kitchen. From the freezer I
retrieved a canister of frozen Minute Maid lemonade. From the top shelf of the
pantry I pulled down a pint of tequila. I dumped both in a mixing bowl, grabbed
a spoon, took a deep breath, a big slurp, settled myself on my blue denim couch,
and forced myself to start reading.
Loving a Larger Woman
by Bruce Guberman
I'll never forget the day I found out my girlfriend weighed more than I did.
She was out on a bike ride, and I was home watching football, leafing through
the magazines on her coffee table, when I found her Weight Watchers folder -- a
palm-sized folio with notations for what she'd eaten, and when, and what she
planned to eat next, and whether she'd been drinking her eight glasses of water
a day. There was her name. Her identification number. And her weight, which I am
too much of a gentleman to reveal here. Suffice it to say that the number
shocked me.
I knew that C. was a big girl. Certainly bigger than any of the women I'd
seen on TV, bouncing in bathing suits or drifting, reedlike, through sitcoms and
medical dramas. Definitely bigger than any of the women I'd ever dated before.
What, I thought scornfully. Both of them?
I never thought of myself as a chubby chaser. But when I met C., I fell for
her wit, her laugh, her sparkling eyes. Her body, I decided, was something I
could learn to live with.
Her shoulders were as broad as mine, her hands were almost as big, and from
her breasts to her belly, from her hips down the slope of her thighs, she was
all sweet curves and warm welcome. Holding her felt like a safe haven. It felt
like coming home.
But being out with her didn't feel nearly as comfortable. Maybe it was the
way I'd absorbed society's expectations, its dictates of what men are supposed
to want and how women are supposed to appear. More likely, it was the way she
had. C. was a dedicated foot soldier in the body wars. At five foot ten inches,
with a linebacker's build and a weight that would have put her right at home on
a pro football team's roster, C. couldn't make herself invisible.
But I know that if it were possible, if all the slouching and slumping and
shapeless black jumpers could have erased her from the physical world, she would
have gone in an instant. She took no pleasure from the very things I loved, from
her size, her amplitude, her luscious, zaftig heft.
As many times as I told her she was beautiful, I know that she never believed
me. As many times as I said it didn't matter, I knew that to her it did. I was
just one voice, and the world's voice was louder. I could feel her shame like a
palpable thing, walking beside us on the street, crouched down between us in a
movie theater, coiled up and waiting for someone to say what to her was the
dirtiest word in the world: fat.
And I knew it wasn't paranoia. You hear, over and over, how fat is the last
acceptable prejudice, that fat people are the only safe targets in our
politically correct world. Date a queen-sized woman and you'll find out how true
it is. You'll see the way people look at her, and look at you for being with
her. You'll try to buy her lingerie for Valentine's Day and realize the sizes
stop before she starts. Every time you go out to eat you'll watch her agonize,
balancing what she wants against what she'll let herself have, what she'll let
herself have against what she'll be seen eating in public.
Copyright © 2001 by Jennifer Weiner
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