The Obsession: Reflections on the Tyranny of Slenderness
By Kim Chernin
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About this ebook
The Obsession is a deeply committed and beautifully written analysis of our society's increasing demand that women be thin. It offers a careful, thought provoking discussion of the reasons men have encouraged this obsession and women have embraced it. It is a book about women's efforts to become thin rather than to accept the natural dimensions of their bodies--a book about the meaning of food and its rejection.
Kim Chernin
Kim Chernin has won acclaim for her numerous works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, including The Obsession, In My Mother’s House (nominated for the Chronicle Critics Award and chosen as Alice Walker’s Favorite Book of the Year in the New York Times, 1983), The Flame Bearers (1986 New York Times Notable Book), and the national best seller The Hungry Self. She is the recipient of an NEA Grant for Fiction. She has appeared on Phil Donahue, Good Morning America, Charlie Rose, the Today show, and others. She has been featured on radio stations across the U.S., including NPR, KQED Forum, and Larry King Radio. She appeared in the documentaries If Women Ruled the World: A Washington Dinner Party and Remembering the Goddess. Her articles have appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Focus magazine, and Tikkun. Her work has been featured in New York Times Book Review, LA Times, Newsday, and other publications.
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The Obsession - Kim Chernin
PROLOGUE
Food is so fundamental, more so than sexuality, aggression, or learning, that it is astounding to realize the neglect of food and eating in depth psychology.
—James Hillman
This is a book about woman’s obsession; in particular the suffering we experience in our obsession with weight, the size of our body, and our longing for food. I approach this subject with a sense of personal urgency. I have shared the obsession I am writing about and bring to it only that degree of detachment I have achieved after years of study and thought, my experience interviewing women with a similar problem, and the hours and hours of conversation I have engaged on this topic. Ultimately, the success of this work must depend upon my success as a listener to those almost silent murmurings of my own inner life and to those utterances, frequently whispered, of the women I interviewed and of those to whom I spoke more casually. For our obsession is veiled in shame, profound feelings of guilt, a sense of uneasiness about the behavior of our body and our appetite. When we scratch the surface of this obsession with weight and food we enter the hidden emotional life of woman.
During the nineteenth century woman’s experience entered the realm of written and spoken debate. Marriage, domestic labor, child raising, and prostitution, which had not seemed worthy of intellectual consideration, now became serious topics as women began to philosophize about their own condition. In our own time, the female experience of rape, the sexual abuse of female children, the existence of pornography and domestic violence, come increasingly to be examined for the larger meaning in our culture’s treatment of women. Thus our sense of what is important and worthy of understanding is enlarged and seriously transformed.
We are, however, only beginning to undertake this examination of deeper meaning where our obsession with food and weight is concerned. Just as we considered rape unmentionable, and abortion shameful, and the subject of domestic labor boring, we have always thought of problems with food consumption as insignificant. Most books written about this subject tell us how to lose or gain weight, how to firm
the body, how to look beautiful. They do not ask us to become philosophical about the reasons we wish to gain or lose weight. Similarly, psychological thought has slighted the subject of eating and weight (which tend to be women’s concerns), just as it has failed to develop a significant understanding of female psychology.
The time has come to break this taboo.
The body holds meaning. A woman obsessed with the size of her body, wishing to make her breasts and thighs and hips and belly smaller and less apparent, may be expressing the fact that she feels uncomfortable being female in this culture.
A woman obsessed with the size of her appetite, wishing to control her hungers and urges, may be expressing the fact that she has been taught to regard her emotional life, her passions and appetites
as dangerous, requiring control and careful monitoring.
A woman obsessed with the reduction of her flesh may be revealing the fact that she is alienated from a natural source of female power and has not been allowed to develop a reverential feeling for her body.
The body holds meaning. The fact that this thought takes us by surprise itself reflects significantly upon a culture that is seriously divided within itself, splitting itself off from nature, dividing the mind from the body, dividing thought from feeling, dividing one race against another, dividing the supposed nature of woman from the supposed nature of man. As part of this self-division we have come to believe that only those things that concern the soul and the spirit, the mind and its creations, are worthy of serious regard. And yet, when we probe beneath the surface of our obsession with weight, we will find that a woman obsessed with her body is also obsessed with the limitations of her emotional life. Through her concern with her body she is expressing a serious concern about the state of her soul.
This is a book about our veiled and often disguised obsession—with our right to be women in this culture, with our right to grow and develop ourselves and to be accepted by our culture in a way that ceases to do damage to what we are, in our own most fundamental nature, as women.
1. CONFESSIONS OF AN EATER
What a surprising effect food has on our organisms. Before I ate, I saw the sky, the trees, and the birds all yellow, but after I ate, everything was normal to my eyes…. I was able to work better. My body stopped weighing me down…. I started to smile as if I was witnessing a beautiful play. And will there ever be a drama more beautiful than that of eating? I felt that I was eating for the first time in my life.
—Carolina Maria de Jesus
She got up at once, went to get a magnificent apple, cut a piece and gave it to me, saying: Now Mama is going to feed her little Renée. It is time to drink the good milk from Mama’s apples.
She put the piece in my mouth, and with my eyes closed, my head against her breast, I ate, or rather drank, my milk. A nameless felicity flowed into my heart. It was as though, suddenly, by magic, all my agony, the tempest which had shaken me a moment ago, had given place to a blissful calm….
—Renée, Autobiography of a Schizophrenic Girl
I REMEMBER THE FIRST time I ate compulsively. I was seventeen years old, not yet an introspective person. I had no language or vocabulary for what was happening to me. The issue of compulsive eating had not yet become a matter of public confession. Looking back I can say: That was the day my neurosis began.
But at the time, if I knew the word at all, I would not have known to apply it to myself.
I was in Berlin, sitting at the breakfast table with my American roommate and our German landlords. I remember the day vividly: the wind blows, the curtain lifts on the window, a beam of sunlight crosses the room and stops just at the spout of the teapot. A single, amber drop becomes luminous at the tip of the spout. I feel that I am about to remember something and then, unaccountably, I am moved to tears. But I do not cry. I say nothing, I look furtively around me, hoping this wave of strong feeling has not been observed. And then, I am eating. My hand is reaching out. And the movement, even in the first moments, seems driven and compulsive. I am not hungry. I had pushed away my plate moments before. But my hand is reaching and I know that I am reaching for something that has been lost. I hope for much from the food that is on the table before me but suddenly it seems to me that nothing will ever still this hunger—an immense implacable craving that I do not remember having felt before.
Suddenly, I realize that I am putting too much butter on my breakfast roll. I am convinced that everyone is looking at me. I put down the butter knife. I break off a piece of the roll and put it in my mouth. But it seems to me that I am wolfing it down. That I am devouring it.
I notice, with alarm, that Olga is beginning to clear the table. Unable to control myself, I lurch forward, reach out for another roll and pull the butter plate closer to myself. Everyone laughs and I am mortified. I am blushing the way I have not blushed since I was twelve or thirteen years old. I feel trapped and I want to go on eating. I must go on eating. And yet I feel an acute and terrible self-consciousness.
While Olga looks away and Rudi bends over to take something from the mouth of his child, I stuff the two rolls in my pocket, stand up from the table, and leave the room.
Once out of the house I begin running. And as I run I eat. I break the pieces of the roll without taking them from my pocket; I keep the broken portion covered with my hand. Making an apparently casual gesture I raise my hand to my mouth. Smoothly, as if I have practiced this many times, I drop the portion of bread into my mouth. And I continue to run.
Suddenly, as I fly by, I catch a glimpse of myself in the reflecting surface of a store window, looking for all the world as if a tempestuous spirit had been unleashed upon this quiet, bourgeois town. My hair is floating up in wisps, there is something frantic in my face. Perhaps it is a look of astonishment that the body I see there is so very slender when I imagine that it is terribly fat. And then I am violently parted from my own reflection as I race around the corner and stand still for a moment, staring down the street.
I see one of those stations where you can get a sausage, a paper plate, mustard, a white roll. You don’t have to enter the restaurant, you can take the thing from an open window, carry it over to a table, stand outside, and dip the sausage in mustard, using your hands. No utensils, no formalities, no civilized behaviors. I slow down and walk up to the window, making every effort to appear at ease. But there is someone in line before me. Suddenly, a wave of tremendous anger and frustration comes over me. I think, if I do not control myself, I shall take this man by the shoulders and shove him aside.
I don’t want to wait, I can’t wait, I can’t bear waiting. I must eat now, at this moment, without delay. I fumble in my pocket for another bit of roll. The pocket is empty. I am kicking at the ground, nudging a small stone about on the pavement. It seems to me, as I become aware of this gesture, that I am pawing the earth. I am terrified now that I will lose control completely—start swearing or muttering or even yelling at the man. I have seen such things before: people who sit speaking to themselves on subways, who burst out yelling for no apparent reason, while everyone laughs. I look down at my coat—it is covered with crumbs. My shoes look shabby. All at once I feel that I am filthy—a gross and alien creature at the edge of unbearable rage. I don’t know what to do with myself, the man in front of me still talking to the woman behind the window, his sausage steaming on the counter before him and he does not reach out to take it in his hands….
It is a cold day. I become aware of this as I stand, pawing the ground, watching the steam rise from the sausage. And I know exactly what I am doing when I suddenly dart forward, grab the plate and begin to run. I do not look back over my shoulder, I run with a sudden sense of release, as if I have finally cut the restraint that has been binding me. I hear the man’s voice call out. Verdammtes Mädel,
it says. You damn girl.
And then he begins to laugh. I too am laughing as I dart around a corner and stand with my back pressed to a cement building, urgently dipping the sausage into the mustard, stuffing large chunks of it into my mouth. And then I am crying….
And so I ran from bakery to bakery, from street stall to street stall, buying cones of roasted chestnuts, which made me frantic because I had to peel away the skins. I bought a pound of chocolate and ate it as I ran. I never went to the same place twice. I acquired a mesh bag and carried supplies with me, wrapped in torn pieces of newspaper. When I felt tired, I sat down on benches, spread out my food next to me, tried to move slowly, as if I were enjoying a picnic, felt constrained by this pretense, darted the food into my mouth, ran on….
In a few weeks I was planning to return to America. The summer vacation, which had lasted for more than seven months, had finally come to an end. I was out of money; I was tired of traveling, I should have returned home to start college months before. But I knew that I could not go home fat. I looked down at parts of my body—at my wrists, at my ankles, at my calves. There was always something wrong with them, something that could be improved or perfected. How could I know then that the time would never come when I would regard myself as sufficiently slender? How indeed could I possibly imagine that one day I would weigh less than ninety pounds and still be ashamed to go out in a bathing suit? The future was completely dark. I had no idea that this episode of compulsive eating would become a typical event in my life over the next twenty years. It never occurred to me that a whole generation of women would become familiar with this unfortunate experience of their appetites and their bodies, or that I myself would one day weave their experience and my own into a book. At the time my thoughts were riveted upon the shame I felt. I considered going to the movies but I felt so self-conscious that I walked on down the street, feeling that I was a woman of perverse, almost criminal tendencies. I thought that in this obsession with food I was completely alone.
Twenty years later there is laughter. The event has become a story; I tell it to friends and we all smile knowingly. I write it down on the page and I marvel at that young woman running about the streets so frantically, that tempestuous gobbler with her wild eyes. But what has happened during the twenty years? What cycle, beginning that day in Berlin, has now almost accomplished itself, so that today I can sit at my typewriter and dare to look back? Or stand and look at myself in the mirror without considering how I might change this body I see? For it has happened during the last years (and from this I come by degree to believe in miracles) that I have been able to sit down at a meal without computing the calories involved, without warning my appetite about its excess, without fearing what might happen if I took pleasure from my plate. My body, my hunger and the food I give to myself, which have seemed like enemies to me, now have begun to look like friends. And this, it strikes me, is the way it should be; a natural relationship to oneself and the food that nourishes one. Yet, this natural way of being does not come easily to many women in our culture. Certainly it has not come easily to me.
Indeed, if I think back ten years or eight or nine, or to any period of my life, I find that I know exactly how much I weighed, whether I had recently gained or lost weight, exactly what clothes I was able to wear. These facts remain where so many other details have been forgotten. And of course, even in the act of recollection, I hasten to assure anyone who is listening that I was never really fat. Sometimes too slender, I would stand in front of a mirror, practically knocking against my own bones. At other times, when I had gained weight, I would grow attached to a particular pair of blue jeans and Chinese shirt. If an occasion required me to change out of these I felt extremely uncomfortable. These clothes, which I had grown accustomed to, seemed to hide me; anything else I might have changed into would be, I felt, a revelation of how fat I had become. Finally, I acquired a bright colored Mexican poncho; draped in this covering garment, I felt protected from judgments about my immense weight. But that was when I weighed 120 pounds. Surely even the weight charts consider that normal for a woman five feet four-and-a-half inches tall?
During those years my body and my appetite usually inspired me with a sense of profound uneasiness. True, for a week or two after losing weight I would feel that my body had become a celebration. I would rush out and buy new clothes for it, eager to have it testify to this triumph of my will. Inevitably, however, the weight would return. Mysteriously, the willpower would give way to desire. An extra grape,
I’d say, and I’ve gained it all back again.
My hunger filled me with despair. It would always return, no matter how often I resolved to control it. Although I fasted for days, or went on a juice diet, or ate only vegetables, always, at the end of this fast, my hunger was back. The shock I would feel made me aware that my secret goal in dieting must have been the intention to kill off my appetite entirely.
When I write about this now it reminds me of the way people in the nineteenth century used to feel about sexuality and particularly about masturbation. I had these same feelings about masturbating when I was a little girl. Then, too, it seemed to me that a powerful force would rise up from my body and overcome my moral scruples and all my resistance. I would give in to it with a sense of voluptuous release, followed by terrible shame. Today, I begin to see that there is a parallel here. A woman obsessed with losing weight is also caught up in a terrible struggle against her sensual nature. She is trying to change and transform her body, she is attempting to govern, control, limit and sometimes even destroy her appetite. But her body and her hunger are, like sexual appetite, the expression of what is natural in herself; it is a futile, heartbreaking and dismal struggle to be so violently pitted against them. Indeed, this struggle against the natural self is one of the essential and hidden dramas of obsession.
Such an understanding did not come to me at all, however, when I was rushing about eating food, or going on diets, or swallowing diuretics, or staring at myself in the mirror, or pinching my waist, or using tape measures to measure the size of my wrists or ankles. For ten or eleven years after that episode in Berlin I felt that my obsession with food and weight was steadily growing more extreme. Finally, I was passing through a period when I found it very difficult to control my eating. Every day, when I woke up, my first thought was about food. Frequently, I could not make it even as far as lunch without eating a pound of candy. When I weighed myself I was filled with alarm by the needle creeping up the scale. The scale is broken,
I would say to myself. It just wants to pay me back for kicking it,
I would explain, not knowing whether or not I actually believed this nonsense. When I went past a mirror I would put my hands over my eyes, frightened of what I might behold there. I even hid from the toaster and the curved surface of a large spoon or the fender of a polished car. In that mood the world seemed filled with reminders that I was not as slender as the woman on the magazine cover, that I, in spite of all my will and effort, was not now able to make myself lean and