Living FULL. Danielle Sherman-Lazar

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Living FULL - Danielle Sherman-Lazar

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I fat, but I was a failure, and the whole world was in on that secret way before me. Like the time at the blood drive at school, when the nurse saw right through me:

      Nurse in the blood truck: “How much do you weigh?”

      Me: “I haven’t weighed myself in a while, but I think I’m around a hundred fifteen pounds.”

      Nurse (scanning me from head to toe): “Oh honey, you are way more than that.”

      As my blood filled the bag, the nurse’s words echoed in my head. I must look like a monster! Why would she say that otherwise? “You are way more than that.” I am so fat and ugly. “You are way more than that.” I hate myself. Maybe this blood will drain out of my body, and I’ll disappear. She is telling you the truth, and she is unbiased! “You are way more than that.” Listen to her.

      I did it, voice, I listened good and hard.

      Why had I let myself get to this point? I had to pull myself together. I slowly got up off the bathroom floor and put my clothes back on. I wiped away my tears and turned the shower off. This was my fault, my doing, and I would be the one to fix it. I put my fake smile on and went downstairs to do my homework, passing my mom on the way to the computer room. She was reading a book at the kitchen table.

      “How’s it going?” she asked, eyes following me as I came toward her.

      I gave her a kiss on the forehead and shot her a smile. “I have a lot of homework to do, but I’m good.”

      “Don’t study too hard. Good luck.”

      “Thanks,” I answered, shutting the door to the computer room and, at the same time, on the pathetic fat girl whose reflection stared back at me in the mirror. So long, Jabba’s cousin, sister, whoever that hideous creature was looking back at me. The one I didn’t recognize, and didn’t ever want to get to know. The truth was, if I had a choice about which Star Wars character to resemble, I would much rather be an adorable Ewok—a skinny as fuck one.

      Chapter 4

      Denial

      In my senior year, I did something really hard—I quit soccer. I know, dramatic lead-up for what it was, but it was really hard for my teenage self. The sport I once loved had grown to feel more like a job I resented. Plus, I didn’t need to play in order to get into college, because I had worked hard to attain and maintain a 4.1 GPA. Side note: I bombed my SAT’s due to my testing anxiety/refusal to take extra time for my processing problem. My Ivy League dreams were dead with my mediocre test score, flushed down the toilet with all my other failures (and food purges), but I still had my high GPA to lean on.

      Soccer had been a constant in my life, an enormous part of who I was. I had begun kicking the ball around even before I started school. My elementary, middle-school, and high-school years had been dedicated to soccer summer camps, school teams, and club teams. All my life, my parents dropped everything to drive me to away games and tournaments as far as Miami. But by senior year, it seemed I didn’t have the emotional and physical strength to keep up.

      My high school team had nine girls in my grade, all of whom were best friends, popular girls who liked to party, and who saw me as a little study-hard goody-two-shoes and let me know it. The coach favored me, which only fueled their disdain. They made me feel like even more of an outsider than I did walking the high school halls.

      I opened my mesh Nike gym bag only to discover I had forgotten my soccer cleats at home.

      “Dammit!” I whispered loudly as I placed both my hands behind my head in frustration.

      I decided my best bet was to speed home and grab my cleats before practice started and anyone noticed my absence. All was going according to plan until, on the way back to the field, an old man made a left turn into my car, skidding it into the side of the road. When I got back to the field I was visibly shaken, and practice had already begun.

      “I am so sorry I am late,” I breathed in to fight back the tears. “I got into a really scary car accident. Everyone is okay, but I am a little shaken up.” I had some tears in my eyes and my voice quivered.

      Behind me I saw one of the girls, Melanie, clearly mocking me as the other girls laughed. “I was in a terrible car accident. I am such a loser, poor baby me…” She went on and on, but I couldn’t hear the rest of what she was saying through my coach’s response.

      “You shouldn’t have come back. That’s very dedicated, but go home and…” I couldn’t focus on either conversation because I was trying to listen to both, Melanie and the coach.

      My heart sank to the pit of my stomach. Now I knew it for certain—my senior teammates thought I was “such a loser.”

      So, even though I finished my senior-year season on the school team as captain, it was nothing like being the captain of the football team and ruling the school. In fact, being captain felt more like a curse than a blessing, and it definitely had something to do with how I came to the position.

      The way my coach determined who was captain was by anonymous vote. Three girls were named captain. Unsurprisingly, I was not one of them. But having been on varsity since freshman year and being the first freshman girl in my town’s history to be named “First Team All-League,” I thought I deserved the title. Here is another disappointment to add to your growing list of failures.

      I was upset but got over it, after the initial shock. My mom did not. She was pissed, to put it mildly. She, along with other moms on the team, called the coach and embarked on the “Dani not being captain is an injustice” crusade. After enough complaints, I was named captain number four. This most definitely added even more fuel to those nine hate fires, keeping them nice and toasty with contempt.

      I had an interesting role on my high-school team. I was the center midfielder and assisting machine. I had the most assists at the end of the season every year. I was also the one to take shots during penalty kicks because of my accuracy with placement. I could trick the goalkeeper and go to the other side of the net. The problem was, on the field, I would never shoot. I preferred to give the other girls the glory, afraid I would upset them more if I drew more attention to myself. So I would make the team look good. But there was more: something inside of me didn’t give me the confidence to score a goal. “Dani, shoot the ball!” screamed my coach, Mom, Dad, and the crowd. No! Instead, I’d find the perfect assist and we would score, but I didn’t want any of the praise. I wasn’t worthy of it. I didn’t deserve it.

      As the season progressed, my speed had gotten slower from a cocktail of shin splints mixed with constant purging and dieting. Not a great combination for a soccer player.

      I surrender, I surrender, I wanted to scream when my high-school season came to a close—but it wouldn’t be that easy. Without soccer, your dad will not be proud of you anymore, screamed my inner voice. My dad was so proud of my soccer playing—it gave him “dad bragging” rights. He’d never been a student, so grades didn’t impress him, but my soccer accolades did. It was our bonding time, a big part of our relationship. Without it, would he even love me anymore? No, No, NOOO. He will not.

      I remember driving with him to a tournament

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