What can you possibly say when your child asks this question?
My daughter is a collection of lines and points. Her bones are growing so fast that that her flesh can barely keep up. Her calves and thighs are smaller than her band-aid covered knees. Like a puppy, she often becomes tangled in her own feet. I have watched her trip and fall while standing still. She is almost nine.
My daughter is all energy and confidence. She is one big “yes” that refuses to hear “no.” She struts into a room and assumes her body has a right to be there. She takes up much more space than her small frame requires. She demands praise and then soaks it up like a greedy sponge and then asks for more. She is voraciously in love with life.
In the mornings before school my daughter often gets so lost in her own reflection that she forgets to run a brush through her knotty hair. “What happened up there?” I’ll ask after she returns downstairs, her hair no neater than before. She’ll just shrug and head off to school, hair unbrushed, perhaps a smudge of toothpaste still in the corner of her mouth. She doesn’t care.
Sometimes, I close my eyes and I try to imagine myself at that age. Did I, too, love myself so wholly and deeply? And if so, when did I stop? When did I start to pick apart my reflection, quadrant by quadrant, until there was nothing left to please?
Last night, as she was undressing for the bath, my daughter approached me, tentatively. “Mummy? If I ask you something, will you answer me honestly?” Then she lowered her eyes, frowning at her tummy, and asked nervously, “Do you think I look fat?”