I was sitting on a toilet, feeling surprised and kind of insulted, when I realized I had an opportunity before me like no other.
It began with the need to pee: first my five-year-old daughter, then me.
As I was sitting on the toilet and she was washing her hands, still without pants, she declared, “Mama you have fat legs! Not like mine – look at mine.” She then ran her hand along her twiggy little leg, like Vanna White on some cruel version of Wheel of Fortune.
I looked down at my lumpy pale thighs in comparison, squashed against the porcelain throne’s seat like bread dough that refused to rise.
In a flash I was back in the kitchen of the house I grew up in, talking to my own mom.
My mother said some disgusted comment or another about what I was eating, and how one day I’d know what it was like to have hips like hers.
I was befuddled. Already well into my teen years, my hip bones simply protruded from my body at sharp angles, then smoothly dipped towards a flat stomach. I poked at my hips, feeling nothing but skin and bone.
“I don’t get it – how can bones get fat on them?” I was genuinely curious. I looked to her for an answer.
My mom got all flustered and her voice shook. “You wait and see.” Then she ran from the kitchen, locking herself in her bedroom.
That scene was twenty years ago, before I truly understood how much my mom hated how her hips looked.
If I had been a more sensitive girl back then, her reaction to my thinness and her desire to be thinner could have made me fear weight gain. Made me think it was normal to be disgusted by my own changing body. Made me believe in one ideal physique, which was not genetically in the cards for me.
I refused to let this conversation end as badly as that one could have.
I took my eyes off my blubbery thigh and looked at my daughter.
“Good job, you’re right! There is more fat on my legs than yours. When you become a grown up, you get all sorts of beautiful curves like this. Isn’t that exciting?”
She looked at her little legs, then mine, then back to hers. Then she smiled. “I’m gonna look like you when I’m a growned-up?”
“Yep. And I looked like you when I was five. It’s kind of fun getting to look different when you get older, dontcha think?”
She started hopping excitedly, and replied “Yeah! And I get bigger and older every day, Mama!”
With a smile on her face, she dashed out of the bathroom feeling confident in her current skinny legs, and looking forward to what the meat of Motherhood will do to her hips twenty years from now, leaving her pants and a hopeful mom in her wake.
Like what you see? Subscribe today!
Follow on Facebook and Twitter, too!
First published on the original InThePowderRoom.
Kim Bongiorno is an author, full time freelance writer, and the blogger behind Let Me Start By Saying. You can find her on Facebook and Twitter, hire her to write for you or speak at your event, or buy her a banana pancakes because they are delicious and her curves are perfectly healthy, thankyouverymuch.
Hollow Tree Ventures says
Loved this post – a beautiful message beautifully written. Plus, the thigh/bread metaphor was *priceless*! 🙂 Sharing!
Synnove @ Don't Chew On The Dinner Table! says
You have inspired me for when my baby girl gets around to noticing that Mommy has more in common with her teddy bear than she does. 🙂 Hubbs and I are a snuggly bunch! 😉
Synnove @ Don't Chew On The Dinner Table! says
You have inspired me for when my baby girl gets around to noticing that Mommy has more in common with her teddy bear than she does. 🙂 Hubbs and I are a snugly bunch! 😉
Kathy at kissing the frog says
Loved it – made me tear up. Commented and shared!!
Elaine a. says
Perfectly handled.
My daughter made a comment about my breasts recently and I said someday she would have them too and she got all excited and said, “With nipples as big as yours Mommy?” Probably so dear, sorry. LOL.