Weighty Problems, Part 1 | |
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Weighty Problems Part 1 "Mom, do we have anything to eat?", Lanie called out while peering into the refrigerator. Downstairs in the family room, Emily Worthington absorbed her daughter's question and sighed. She had just spent over $100 yesterday at the supermarket. Of course they had plenty to eat. But that wasn't what Lanie had in mind. She wanted junk food. She always wanted junk food. That was why she was about 30 pounds too heavy and never had much of a social life other than with a few of her school friends. Emily had been getting more and more concerned about her daughter of late. She was 15, the age when she should have been going to dances and parties, meeting new people, having the time of her life. But most nights she sat on the floor in front of the TV with a bag of Fritos or some such thing. No wonder Emily was always having to mend split seams on her clothes and alter waistlines. Right now Lanie was trying to fill the after-school gap before dinner. "Those apples are really good, honey," she called up the stairs. "Why not have one of those? Or maybe have some yogurt." "Do we have any M&Ms?", Lanie called as she trudged down the stairs into the family room. "I feel like something sweet." "I bought a big bag yesterday. They were in the cupboard next to the fridge," Emily replied. "They're all gone. Don't we have any more?" "How can they be all gone?" "I dunno... I had some yesterday. But I thought there were some left. Maybe dad had some too?" "Your father hates M&Ms. Especially the peanut ones. Did you eat the whole bag?" "I dunno. There were only a few there after school when I finished the bag. Do we have any more?" "No, we don't. Dammit, Lanie, that was a big bag. How could you finish it so soon?," Emily said with an edge to her voice. She instinctively reached for her pack of B&H Menthol 100s and lit up another of the 30 cigarettes she would smoke today, just as she had every day for the last 20 years. Whenever she felt confrontational she would use her cigarette to accentuate her point. Whether or not it worked she wasn't sure, but in her mind it seemed to help. She took a hard puff and inhaled audibly, her eyes flashing at her daughter. "It wasn't that big," Lanie said in defence. "It was at least a half-pound. No wonder you never get invited out. That's probably worth another 5 pounds on your hips," Emily spat, and she saw her daughter's face respond to the hurt. She knew she had gone too far. "Oh, honey, I'm sorry. That was mean of me. I just wish you'd take a little more pride in your appearance..." Lanie cut her off, tears beginning to fill her eyes. "You meant every word of it. I hate you!!" she cried, before spinning around and running up the stairs. Emily heard her break into a sob before she ran down the hall and into her room, slamming the door behind her. Emily leaned back on the sofa and looked at the ceiling. She closed her eyes and cursed herself for her sharp tongue. She loved her daughter but she drove her crazy some times. Emily took a long, pensive puff on her cigarette and inhaled automatically. She sighed as she eventually exhaled a long stream from her mouth and nose, frustrated by her inability to get Elaine -- she only referred to her by her full name when she was upset with her -- to take pride in her looks. She had a lot going for her, she knew. Her features were quite attractive -- at least when she wasn't wearing those damn glasses she picked out last year, which Emily didn't think did anything for her daughter's looks, but which Lanie had insisted on -- and she had striking jet-black hair, full and thick. The hardest part was getting her to keep it looking like anything other than a chimney-sweep broom. Grooming had never been one of Lanie's strong points. Despite her daughter's extra pounds, Emily thought Lanie could be a very popular girl if only she'd give herself a chance. She was cute, well-spoken and smart. She just seemed to love eating more than she loved herself. Thinking about what to do next, Emily knew there was no escaping the fact that she needed to apologize for her remark. But rather than just say she was sorry, she knew she needed to get to the heart of things with Lanie this time. She took one puff on her B&H, snapped the smoke deep into her lungs, and crushed it out in the ashtray, and headed upstairs while trailing a stream of exhaled smoke. Arriving at the door of her daughter's room, she found it closed. She knocked softly and called, "Lanie, honey? May I come in?" "What do you want?!?" came a muffled but nonetheless sharp response. "Please, honey, I want to talk to you," Emily replied in an apologetic tone. "Please?" "OK," Lanie finally answered sullenly. Emily walked in and saw her daughter sprawled on the bed, eyes red. The look on Lanie's face told her that the visit wasn't welcomed right now. Emily ignored it and sat down next to her daughter. She knew there was no point in beating around the bush. "Honey, I'm sorry for what I said," she offered. "It was mean of me and I should never have done it. I don't know what gets into me sometimes. I just get a little frustrated, that's all." "Frustrated... yeah, sure," Lanie said, still stung. "You think you get frustrated... try being me sometimes," she said, in a slightly less icy tone. "I can't change the way I am," she said. "I'm always gonna be a loser." "You cannot be serious," Emily said. "Honey, I can't believe you really think that. Why don't you give yourself half a chance?" "Because I'm always going to be fat and ugly," Lanie shot back, almost too quickly. "Number one, you're not ugly," Emily responded. "Number two, if you're serious, there's no reason why you can't change your weight, if you really want to. But you'll have to make some changes if you want to look different." "I know, mom... no more M&Ms," Lanie replied with a "I've heard it all before" tone in her voice. "It's not just that. It's everything," Emily answered. "You need to stop using food as a pastime, honey." "I can't help it if I'm hungry all the time," Lanie countered. "There must be something wrong with me." "No, honey, it's not that," Emily said. "You eat because you're bored, because you're watching TV, because... well, because it's just become a habit. What we need to do is change your habits so that you don't always turn to food every time you want something to occupy yourself. Trust me, I know about this. It's just a matter of finding other things to substitute." "Like what?" "There could be any number of things, I suppose. Anything that keeps you occupied, and your mind off eating. Or things that you could do which you couldn't do while eating too. I don't know off hand, let me think... I suppose anything that means you need to be active, for one, so maybe some sports, or exercise. That would be of double benefit, since you really do need to be more active. I can change our menu around here too, and I should do that anyway, now that I think about it. I don't care what your father says, we need to eat better, and I think I'm going to learn how to cook nonfat things, cut down on the fried foods and red meat, all that stuff everyone is doing these days. We should try to think of something you could do with your hands too... maybe painting, or some of those craft things we were talking about a while back. As for the rest of the time, it'll just take a little self-control on your part. There are a few things that might help... I suppose you could chew gum instead of having candy, have some fruit instead of junk food when you're hungry, heck, you could even start smoking," Emily chuckled, trying to lighten up the tone of their conversation, "anything that would be a substitute for actually eating something. All of those things would help," Emily rambled in a stream-of-consciousness sort of way. "You make it sound so simple," Lanie said in a non-believing tone. "Did you realize what you just said? That's not all going to happen overnight. And, I can't see myself actually doing a lot of those things." "Well, if you're going to give up before you even start, then I won't waste my time," Emily responded. "C'mon, honey, if you're serious, I'm willing to help," she said with a smile. Lanie realized her mom was being sincere, and changed her attitude finally. She accepted her mom's offer and more importantly, her apology. With that, the women started discussing a plan. Lanie vowed she would make an honest attempt, and Emily began to list several action items she would handle. Starting the next day, the whole family would eat very differently. The exercycle and the old belt massage machine that was buried under a pile of debris in the garage would be dug out and installed in the rec room downstairs. The artist's palette, paints and canvases that were a Christmas gift a year ago when Lanie was on an art kick were hauled out of storage and set up downstairs as well. A supply of Trident gum was secured at the market, along with carrots, celery, and all sorts of fat-free products. They even made a schedule for Lanie and Emily to take regular walks together every second evening. But after a few weeks, the novelty had started to wear off for Lanie. Actually she found the change in meals not to be much of a problem, though she still craved the burgers and fries that were a staple of her diet previously. Her jaw hurt from chewing so much gum, and the sugar-free candies her mom had bought were a poor substitute for her M&Ms. She tried her hand at painting, and appropriately enough, her first portrait was a picture of a McDonald's burger platter. She had dreaded the exercise routine when she first started based upon Emily's previous experience and her warning that the exercycle was a torture machine. Lanie remembered back to when they first bought it and Emily's attempts to use the thing. She used to watch TV in the family room while her mom huffed and puffed and sweated next to her on the cycle. After about 15 or 20 minutes Emily would surrender and collapse next to her on the sofa, gasping for breath. After a short time the machine got less and less use until it was finally banished to the garage. Lanie didn't find it hard at all, surprisingly, but the exercise program was a bore, and she found using the belt massager almost embarrassing, even though her mom seemed to always like that better. While her clothes seemed a little looser, and the scale indicated that she was indeed a few pounds lighter, her progress was frustratingly slow. One weekend day the two of them were at home alone. Lanie's dad, Joey, was a bricklayer by trade and often worked extra time on weekends on residential projects to earn extra money, and today was one of those days. It was a cool, dampish day and all either one of them wanted to do was stay indoors. Lanie was bored, despite all of the things that Emily had devised to keep her occupied, and she felt like munching on something other than apples or carrot sticks. She asked, "Mom, don't we have *anything* I can have to eat other than this stuff?," peering into the refrigerator. "I'm going crazy and I'm starving!" "I'm afraid not, honey," Emily replied. "We don't even have any bad stuff in the house anymore. Your dad took the last of those cookies you've been sneaking with him when he left this morning," she said as Lanie blushed slightly at being caught. They were really bought for her father's lunch box but she had been stealing a couple now and then when she had a junk-food crisis. "Can't you wait until dinner?," she asked as she lit one of her B&H Menthols. "God, mom, I can't wait that long," Lanie said. "There must be something other than this," she said, pouring herself another glass of Diet Pepsi. She looked at Emily pulling a deep drag off her B&H and inhaling. She remembered their conversation some time back and suddenly it just came out. "Can I smoke?," she blurted. "Let me have a cigarette." "What? Don't be ridiculous," Emily responded quickly. "Since when do you smoke?" "I don't," Lanie replied. "But you said I could. And I want you to teach me." "I never said you could. Where did you get that idea?" "You said I could smoke when we had that talk when all of this weight stuff started. You said it would keep me from eating. And if I don't do something I'm going to run out to McDonald's and have a hot fudge sundae and a Big Mac before dinner," Lanie threatened. C'mon, mom, at least it'll give me something to do. Show me?" Emily thought back and vaguely remembered her foolishly mentioning the subject. "I wasn't serious when I said that," she countered. "I don't want you smoking. It's bad for you." "Well, it doesn't seem to have stopped you or daddy," Lanie shot back, gesturing at the cigarette in her mother's left hand. "So you aren't going to let me?" "No." "Fine. I'll be back about 4:00 then," she said, heading for the hall closet. "Where are you going?" "Like I said, I'm going to get something to eat", Lanie said defiantly, lacing up a shoe. "Want anything?" "Lanie, c'mon. Don't be foolish," Emily countered. "It's either that or I go nuts," her daughter shot back determinedly as she wrapped a scarf around her neck. Emily was annoyed by Lanie's stubbornness at giving her a take-it-or-leave-it choice. She thought briefly about her options as she watched her lace her other shoe and selected a jacket from the closet. Lanie was pulling on a wool hat when Emily made her decision. "Take off the hat," Emily said. "Does that mean...?" "Yes, dammit. Come in here and sit down." Lanie discarded the hat and jacket and followed Emily into the living room. She was satisfied at having won her point, and only now did she realize her mom was serious about this. She started to feel a little nervous at the prospect of actually smoking. Little did she realize that she was far calmer than Emily was at this point. |
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