My Mother and I
A Mother is a child’s first glimpse of beauty
The princess a child yearns to look like, to be
But my mother claims she is
No princess
How is she not beautiful?
Is my perception of beauty wrong? Confused, angry, naive, I stand beside her
She looks in the mirror, her image alters
But mine doesn’t
Why does the girl in the mirror look the same as me?
Why doesn’t hers?
She sees herself with
Creases deepening,
And her hair knotting,
But all I see is her radiance
What didn’t I understand?
I would stand and stare,
perplexed
obsessed
Anonymous
edited: Catherine Kazmer
(cw: disordered eating, body image, problematic family relationships)
Where was this body my mother described?
As I grew, she began to alter my image in the mirror, too
Too much skin, not toned enough, pale, imperfect
Face not clear enough, too much hair, unruly
I, too, now have this other body in the mirror
Never sure how it contrasts
reality
Scrutinizing glances, brutal words casually said, habits of skipping meals, morph the body in the mirror But why?
After her observations of my body, does she not say
I am beautiful?
Aren’t her words supposed to help me?
Then why does a tear now fall when
I glance at the mirror too long?
Now we both stand in front of the mirror
The four of us:
Our two mirrored bodies
And my mother and I