same every time I remember. I am filled with spitting rage.
âBut itâs like, sheâs my mother ,â Jenna says. âMothers are supposed to take care of their kids, no matter what.â
Some other voice at the table snorts. â Supposed to.â
I sweep a plastic fork from the counter and stab the first piece of chicken in the bag. I fling it on the plate, already feeling the hot grease soaking through and staining my palms. If she wants to hurt me like this, fine. I donât care enough to stop her.
âGood, Stevie,â Shrink approves quietly. âYouâre really challenging yourself.â
I turn away from her. Thereâs an empty seat between Jenna and Ashley, and I squeeze between them. I dump my plate on the table and wipe my palms on my jeans, leaving dark swipes on my thighs. The fat burrows between the denim fibers.
âSo letâs try a second bite.â Ms. Dalton circles the table. Slowly, like a shark. âAgain, lift a bite from your plate. Noticethe smell. Does it smell salty, or sweet? What spices have been used to season the food?â
I drive the fork into the chicken flesh and rip a piece from the bone. I wonât breathe it in. If I breathe it in, Iâll break down and consume it all.
âNow place the bite on your tongue and hold it there for just a moment,â Ms. Dalton instructs. âWhat tastes arise for you?â
I stare at the speared meat. Purse my lips together to contain the scream.
âGive it a try, Stevie,â Shrink prods quietly behind me. âYouâre doing great.â There is a scream inside of me, building. Rattling my insides. I stuff it down with the chicken. When I cram the bite into my mouth, my stomach heaves, and I am back on the porch at the house on Broad. My mother has left me.
That night, it just happened naturally. I was sitting on the porch swing full of chicken and tea, and my belly kept twisting into itself and I couldnât sit still. I made it to the edge of the porch just in time. I folded over the railing and emptied myself into the earth.
Shrink pipes up behind me. âGirls, notice that you can take a biteâthat you can experience this foodâwithout overdoing it, and without dissociating; meaning that you can stay fully present in this moment.â
The air on the porch was heavy enough to crush me.
âWeâre so very proud of you guys for trying this,â Ms. Dalton adds. âThe strength in this room is palpable.â
There is still fried animal on my tongue. I swallow it and the scream. The meat lodges in my throat and for a second I think it will stay there. Maybe it will stop my breath. Maybe the foodwill actually kill me. But my body takes over and swallows again. I can feel the weighty flesh worming its way down to my gut. My stomach coils, desperate to reject it.
I whisper, âExcuse me. I need some air,â and I shove back my chair and run outside. Shrink thinks I can do this, but sheâs wrong. My body wonât allow it. I stumble around the side of the house. Next to the stucco wall, I bow my head and my body gives it up; I donât even have to ask. I feel the familiar click, the moment when my body knows everything is going to be okay. When Iâm done I kick fiery dirt over pale meat and I think, Itâs like riding a bike . Which is weird because I never learned to ride a bike. Josh crashed his and broke his arm when he was seven and I was six, and that was that.
I come around the corner, rubbing the damp from my eyes and wiping my mouth with the back of my hand. Finally, my insides are quiet.
âOh.â Suddenly Ashley is standing there, wobbly and gray in the too-bright sun. âI . . . um . . . wanted to check on you. I told Anna Iâd come so she could stay with the group.â Her lower lip twitches.
âOkay.â
âStevie.â She whispers it.
I should feel something. A real girl would feel something.
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