Sunday 18 November 2012

Distortion - The Extent To Which Anorexia Lies

I sit in the shabby hotel conference room, anxious for the guy whose innocent gesture has landed him a bidding price that is far, far higher than anything he can afford. 
Nobody else is bidding and my fingers are twisting themselves into tight, three dimensional infinity symbols. 
"Any advances on..." 
A grey suited, old man, wearing a felt Trilby, half rose and then collapsed in the middle of the room.

"Time... Time..." 
Time for what? 
A melodic voice in the distance
"... that time again..."

I lurch and my breath is caught and it's sudden: The realisation that I'm here, not there. I'm awake. 

Six am, in the half light of Weigh Day, and the Support Worker stands cooing at my door. 
I know I must leave the bathroom door ajar so she can hear me as I pee.
It's a long time since this felt like an indignity. 

I stumble down the corridor into the glare of the clinic room. Somehow I manage to keep shading my eyes as I peel off my nightwear.
The scales confirm weight gain.
I fight my way through a cloud of sleep - laden mist to calculate just how much.
I do, and I am not devastated. 

Perhaps I'm getting better. 
Perhaps I'm just too tired.

I pretend I'm still asleep as I crawl back into bed.
Miraculously it works. Until 7.45 when the alarm pips me back into reality.

Even as I write the word 'reality' here, I debate whether to use inverted commas, because actually, within minutes, the distortions conjured by this illness can transform your mind from a Ferris wheel, to a drop spindle for your thoughts. 

At six o'clock in the morning, I knew exactly how much weight I'd put on in the three days since my last weigh in. Approximately one and a half hours later, during which time I had done nothing but sleep, I awoke convinced that at least three days worth of weight had suddenly piled on and, were I to stand on the scales again, they would read quite differently. 

Just to make it clear: in this moment, I was utterly convinced that my body had withheld weight until one minute AFTER I stood on the scales, at which point, it suddenly and spontaneously added the pounds / kilograms that it had been hiding. 

Yes. 
These are the lengths that Anorexia will go to in order to keep its victim ensnared.  
And this is only one of the many distortions its capable of.

The fact that the mind can do this in a period of time when there has been no food intake, perhaps you can imagine the outstanding strength of some of the convictions that an Anorexic has after eating, the sheer havoc wrecked by having food in the body.

Although everyone has a different experience, I am often overwhelmed by the physical sensation of fat layering itself onto the backs of my legs and my thighs. At any given point in the day, I will suddenly be aware of this thickening of my body. I swear, I can FEEL it. I've been told this isn't possible, and yet, it's always someone who hasn't HAD the experience that tells me. Perhaps you have to have experienced feeding your skeleton, putting flesh onto bone, to feel it. 
Or perhaps it really is another of the distortion of reality... which is a frightening thought because, how will I ever know what's real and what is, in essence, a figment of the imagination. Like a phantom limb, the fat clumps on my body. I feel it and, I SEE it. 

And yet, as I do my calculations, I briefly think of the previous nights' anxiety; the conviction that I must have put on a least a kilogram (that's two point two pounds). 
I hadn't.

Can I really feel POINT three of a kilogram? 
Really?

The ugly truth is that part of my reality is almost certainly distorted.
My truth is not THE truth. 

3 comments:

  1. HELLO LOVE -I am speechless as I read of the way anorexia deceives and conjures and demands of its captives. I am so sorry for you in all this. I believe you. And although I am not anorexic, diseases have similar holds - so I promise to find and celebrate my freedoms while being held by MS and you do the same against the forces of your disease, ok?
    Love to you
    Gail
    peace.....

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  2. I am so sorry all the pain this disease holds. You are so strong to fight.

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  3. As a reader, and not an anorexic, it is often difficult for me to identify with or experience a fact filled explanation of your daily life. Perhaps it is similar to reading a narrative where an abused person tells of their misery - it is tempting to wonder, "...well, why don't you just leave?." Certainly I feel sympathy, but that is a much shallower feeling than empathy or understanding.
    What you have done in this post is to help me enter into your world, to experience what altered reality does, and how it creates its own world. It has nothing at all to do with changing behavior and making "better" decisions, and everything to do with understanding how perception, illness, and need create their own reality and alter "what is real."
    Much as Plato's "Analogy of the Cave", distorts our ability to recognize "reality", and act positively, your post helps to give me an inkling as to how your world conspires to keep you in thrall to its malignant falsehoods.
    Thank you so much. Bob

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