I was a particularly tiny baby; my mother didn’t know that she was pregnant for six months (being unable to get her antique garnet ring off was a clue; she went to the doctor at her teenage niece’s suggestion) and the diagnosis sent her into a tailspin. In a shaky picture of my parents taken by my grandmother in Carl Schurz Park, the evidence is barely noticeable: there is my mother, the East River over her shoulder and Queens behind her in the distance, her wrists so slender and lithe even in her ninth month that her charm bracelet, heavy as Marley’s chain, would slide off her hand until she had a few links removed. There I am, the incontrovertible affirmation of her pregnancy, and nothing more than a minuscule bump under her pink and white cotton blouse. My mother carried me to term, almost to the day; I weighed four pounds at birth which, for scale, is more or less the size of an average supermarket chicken.
The words my mother uses to describe me as an infant: spindly, delicate, tiny, petite, exquisite, dainty, fine-boned, wispy. Not being one to nurse — I would have wound up with a chest like your grandmother’s, she says — she fed me tiny amounts of formula, botching the instructions given to her by my first pediatrician at New York Hospital. I screamed all day and all night for my first three months, until our next door neighbor in Yorkville, a gorgeous German woman with a face like Marlene Dietrich, told my mother that I was probably hungry; she instructed her to fill my bottle with thinned-out oatmeal, cut an X in the nipple, and let me eat. She did, and at last, I stopped crying. I also ballooned up like a scaled-down version of The Michelin Man.
Eventually, the oatmeal weight fell off me: like most middle class American children of the Sixties and Seventies, I was fed a regular diet of meat, chicken, fish, lamb, and, because I was almost always anemic, beef liver, which looks surprisingly like beef liver. I shuddered at its jiggling, squidgy presence; my grandmother, who cooked most of our meals, broiled it until it took on the consistency of a stiff brown sponge, and my mother served it to me on our heavy burnt umber earthenware next to two flaccid spears of canned asparagus; there was no bread at our kitchen table, no rice, no pasta, and infrequent potatoes. My mother and I drank Tab by the bucketful, going through a six pack every two days. By the time I was four, I had become an unwitting adherent to something resembling The Atkins Diet; I was so skinny that my mother shook me into my school leotards like a pillow into a pillowcase. When I went into first grade, I carried damp tuna sandwiches made on Diet White bread, which disintegrated into a dense brick of bleached mush that curled itself around my red plaid thermos like the letter C by the time I arrived at school.
As I wrote in Poor Man’s Feast, when my mother went off to have her hair done every Saturday, my father — not someone I would call corpulent, but certainly not thin — secreted me away for fancy lunches that were as enlightening as they were forbidden: I learned what happens when you apply a coating of egg and flour to trout, saute it in hot butter and bathe it in wine and lemon juice. I learned what happens when you slice potatoes to a thin film, layer them in a shallow copper dish, and blanket them in cream. I learned what happens when you roll a crepe around warm apricot preserves and dust it with confectioner’s sugar and chopped hazelnuts. And I learned to keep my mouth shut once I got home, because food was the enemy of the body.
My mother went back to work when I was eleven; my grandmother stepped in after school and fed me regular grilled cheese and bacon sandwiches, potato latkes, pizza, and, because she loved him, Arthur Treacher’s fish and chips. All that food fueled my raging tennis addiction; I played it every day, for hours. My mother never noticed what I was eating because my grandmother chose not to tell her, but also because all that tennis turned my skin and bones into solid muscle. I became a swimmer and my shoulders broadened; I hit puberty and the chest that kept my mother from nursing me as an infant was suddenly mine. My mother’s desperate, hysterical need for thinness, achieved by starving her teenage self in order to be the model and television singer she eventually became, was a blip on my genetic screen. My body rebelled in the most profound of ways: I was no longer skinny. As a teenager, I began to resemble almost every woman on my father’s side of the family: thick-boned, solid, muscular, and zaftig enough to acquaint me with the bitter flavor of self-consciousness.
“You’ll lose that chest if you drop some weight,” my mother said when I started college, as though That Chest was a disembodied entity unto itself, with a mind and government all its own, like Texas. At school, the freshman fifteen worked the other way for me: with everyone gorging themselves on pizza and East West lasagna at the cafeteria, I ate nothing but taco-flavored Doritos and Diet Coke in my dorm room, but only when my roommate wasn’t around. I came home that October, fifteen pounds lighter.
My mother was confused and irate a few years later, when I went to work for Dean & Deluca, and attended cooking school at night: I wanted food in my life. I wanted to understand sustenance, and to find that almost spiritual connection that comes from feeding your self, and others, thoughtfully and well. I wanted to recreate a family table of goodness and peace, where food was not the devil, and it didn’t have to be hidden.
My body responded to the stress of her furious consternation with uncanny irony: surrounded as I was by masses of food every day and night, the pounds cascaded off me without my even trying to lose them. My nails went brittle and my hair thinned, and then fell out. My thyroid was off kilter and my heart rhythm wonky and I passed out twice — once in the walk-in, once on the loading dock while signing for a Sid Wainer delivery — but man, did my body look great: my fat jeans were a size two, my everyday pair, a zero.
“Okay,” she said, as though I was competitively orchestrating my weight loss, “you win. You can stop now.”
Over the years, my body has settled like a house; the Title Nine catalog invariably arrives when I’m feeling sluggish and thick. My knees and hips creak, and I have a bottle of Aleve in every bag. No matter what — no matter how many steps I take, no matter how dedicated to my FitBit I am, no matter how much yoga I do, no matter how often I go to the gym, no matter how much I cut out wine or sugar or infrequent potatoes — my weight travels along a five pound continuum: sometimes I’m up, sometimes I’m down. Like my mother when she was pregnant, I gauge change by how tight my rings are. On the days when I can’t get them off, I don’t go to see her; I don’t tell her why.
Recently, she came to stay for Passover and Easter; I saved my beloved matzo brei — the crack cocaine of my people, which I make once a year — for the breakfast after our seder. That morning, we sat at my dining room table while she drank a cup of hot water and watched me lift my fork to my mouth; she glared violently at it, and me, like we were the devil incarnate. I pushed myself away from the table and took my plate into the kitchen; I stood at the sink and ate with my back to her, hidden from view.
Elissa, you undo me with every word you write.
The journey we take with food and our loved ones travels a treacherous path. My mother is Danish, my father good Australian stock, and I was never going to be lithe and lean, I come from farming people and though I ride a desk, I could comfortably work a plough if needed (or so my thighs tell me). My mother never shamed me, even when I was 20/30 pounds overweight as a child. She fed me butter, and bread, and full fat everything.
I didn’t know shame about my body and food until I hit 18 and went to university to study, ironically, nutrition and dietetics. Here I learned the science behind food and our bodies, and also how to shame and twist myself with every item I ate. Food and I had a dark time for a while.
Now, we dance a tenuous path. But I”m learning to take a little from my mother’s care and love and no shame, and a little from my science background and embrace food and my body. Bite by bite. Plate by plate. Potatoes, not infrequently 🙂
Thank you Amy- x
Oh, wow. What a story. No wonder you want that gadget to put over your head
(ostensibly for napping but we know better).
In the end, but preferably sooner, it’s all about accepting ourselves, isn’t it?
Wonderful piece!
Thanks D. x
Food is so complicated.
It can be used to nourish and sustain; punish, comfort or reward ourselves; celebrate with or hide behind. During many years in food service I have witnessed bizarre and sometimes twisted responses from people to the foods they are served. The kitchen crews and I would usually chalk it up to how they were raised (or not as the case might be). Later, as a food stylist, I was paid to make food look so good you’d want to eat it right off the page. You couldn’t smell it or taste it or touch it, but my job was to make you drool by just looking at it. I sometimes joked that it was food porn.
Because no mater how you slice or dice it food is complicated. You have to eat to live, but you can’t live if you don’t eat. Add your family into the mix, along with a healthy sprinkling of your culture, and suddenly food is no longer simply a way to nourish your self. Then there is the question of how some of our food is produced and when I start thinking about all of these things together I want to run screaming from the kitchen and figure out how to live on air.
Some days I wonder if there such a thing as food neutral?
The thing about your writing Elissa is that you make me feel hopeful. Like there might be a middle road to travel on. Or if there isn’t a middle road at least there’s a good story.
There’s always the middle way; that’s all we have. x
Your writing almost always stops me in my tracks. This piece has me stumbling down memory lane. In my childhood home, the contrast of the “Clean Plate Club” and being shamed for eating too much trapped my sister and I. Even now, our parents comment about how much we eat. I, too, still hide it sometimes, but on occasion, typically after too long of a visit with them, I proclaim some version of “I am hungry! I’m not in my 70s, I exercise a lot, I’m strong and I love to eat.” I need to cut out the justifications, though. It shouldn’t matter.
I really needed to read this tonight! Thank you — it’s a wonderful piece!
Thanks Sara-
This piece is the opposite of being hidden from view. Thank you.
The same exact thing happened to me as a baby – screamed for my first 3 months until an elderly neighbor told my mom he thought I was hungry and needed baby cereal in my bottle. She gave it to me and I was finally quiet. I attribute those first 3 months of hunger–and the warm, satisfied feeling I know I got after I ate my first good meal–to my current love of food. Thanks for a great read!
I just couldn’t read this without telling you how compelling your writing is for me. Whenever you write about you mother it just cuts so deep inside me. I want to write like you when I grow up. Xoxo happy passover
Elissa, your writing in this post has me feeling full of unshed tears. Your experience is centered around food. Maybe food is the easiest way to shame, to withhold love, to express anger, to punish, and more than anything, to humiliate. With me, it wasn’t food itself. I was too big (at 5’4″and 118 lbs.). I was clumsy. I would never find a man to marry me. Perhaps the root problem was that I was becoming to American, too ambitious, too independent. Not easily controlled. Because even at age 10, I had a deep, deep conviction that all this was unjust, not fair, not true. By living, beginning at age 10, as an outcast in my immigrant family, I endured, went to Wellesley on a full scholarship, have never given up, despite huge challenges, yearning to live my life free. I am happy for you that you have the love of your father and now Susan. Be happy and be well.
Thank you Margit-
Thank you so much Wendy- x
I felt the anger coming up my throat as I read this powerful piece.
Thank you. I have some purging to do….more work.
What a great piece. Your evocative writing brought up so much about food from my childhood. I think we all have/had issues around food with our mothers – one way or another.
I have to say I don’t think I’ve ever seen a cuter baby than the one in the photo above. 🙂
Your words resonate so deeply – and if I didn’t know you, I’d still connect to your story because of its authenticity and heart. The duality – so stark – between your parents, and your efforts to find the nuance between two polarities. So remarkably written – by an incredible and remarkable woman. Enjoy that matzo brei my friend..xx
One of my favorite things you’ve ever written. And I’m glad somebody fed you as a very hungry baby, more than anything else.
Thank you Mims. x
Thanks Jill.
Oof, so much to be said about matrilineal relationships, women/gender, and food that hasn’t yet been said. Been thinking about it a lot. Love this one, E. Killer closing lines. Thanks for writing it.
What a write! What a read! The view of a sink never looked so good. Thank you.
God damn, this is a shattering piece of writing. Brava.
Gosh–my mom looked like that pulling me along in a grocery cart at her weekly shopping excursion to the Big E on Central Avenue in Yonkers! Somehow I’ll never be one of those women that applies lipstick every time I appear in public. But, hey, “That Chest” comment still follows me around. Hey, we take the good, the bad, and swallow it down with a very good bite or two of cake!
Indeed, Chris K. Great to hear from you! x
Oof, a kick in the gut. Reading this post resulted in two things: a sudden urge for a bite of something to eat (sustenance), and impatience to read your new book!
Thanks Sonya-
Well. I’d be happy to stand at the sink with you. I love matzoh brei! On the other hand I know what it is like to have parents that never think you are perfect. And though it took a long while, I now know that I am. Oh, the baggage we carry!
Elissa, again I am reminded why yours is one of my most favorite blogs; why I am so glad to see a new posting announced in my inbox, why I read every word when I am fairly certain I won’t be interrupted so I can just enjoy the deliciousness of language, and language about food.
I so appreciate your words, your stories. I laugh “…the crack cocaine of my people.” and if not tear up at times, at least sigh and feel a real ache for the tender agony of being human that you are able to impart.
Wonderful writing. Inspiring storytelling. Okay, end of fan-note.
Wow — this is a most affecting piece — superb. I’m new to reading your blog. Is your mother alive? Will she know you published this? Perhaps those aren’t the right questions — but wow these wounds (all of them) are so deep and so exquisitely tender.
I love this line and the comparison to Texas. Marvelous. Thanks for a good read.
“You’ll lose that chest if you drop some weight,” my mother said when I started college, as though That Chest was a disembodied entity unto itself, with a mind and government all its own, like Texas.
Such lovely writing. My mom was the opposite. She equated food with love and I guess I do also.
What was *with* that generation? Mine didn’t starve me as a little kid, but starting at about 10, lots of comments about my (perfectly normal) shape. All through high school — my thighs were too big, my hair was too curly to grow long, I was all wrong. Mom was busy starving herself on Tab and cigarettes. Dad had remarried a 21 year old. Thank god for my badass, athletic, physically brave grandmother who gave me something positive to aspire to. Even now, when I hardly see them, first thing I get is comments about my (again, pretty normal, little on the plump side) weight.
My grandmother was also badass, athletic, physically brave, and essentially raised me. Are we related….?
food is so complicated, thank you for sharing
I loved this post. Brought back my own family memories. Cool to see Yorkville too. Carl Schurz park was back yard growing up.
Such an evocative piece Elissa.
It made me think about my childhood and bought back a tumult of memories about the food we ate and the relationship between all those who shopped and prepared it (grandmother and mother) and those who ate it.
Thank you!