Living with obesity |
I live in torment, my world closing in, The grave that has claimed me once posed as my friend. With all of my might, I try to escape, Though with shovel in hand, my mouth held agape. Momentarily this abyss, like heaven, is surreal. My distress is quieted by the utopia I feel. I am weightless, floating, enveloped in bliss, Each bite I devour, like a lingering kiss. And linger it does, in conspicuous places, An epitaph marring the tomb it disgraces. It may come as a surprise; I do not dwell here by force, For my hand from my mouth I’ve refused to divorce. I struggle to breathe for my lungs are encased, In a cavity once spacious, by fat now displaced. My heart beats in anguish, gripped by the fear That the end of its life in this tomb has drawn near. The person I used to be has retreated, Banished, abused, her soul near depleted. She calls to be rescued as her life slips away, In the mausoleum she built with a fork and a plate. Until that day dawns, I shall not rest in peace, I do not wish to be remembered obese. What a tale I shall tell, if I do survive, Because I have lived – BURIED ALIVE. 01/2003 |