A Good Little Girls Zine

Don’t Pity Me

I am eight years old, sitting on the toilet, eyes squeezed just, pee dripping out–afraid. Afraid that if I pee too fast, my vagina will burn from your fingers scrapping it raw. I am eight years old and I am a body to you already, no mind, no soul, no nothing, just a body to use whenever you feel like it. Even after a decade of processing this, you, us, my part, was it me? I always came when you called, some part of me wanted it, surely, even after a decade, I am
still
just body
to You.

I am sixteen years old, feeling out of control, rebellious, fighting for my place–afraid. Afraid that I am a bitch, always angry, unsure, yet fighting to be more, so you can see me, be proud of me, validate me for me. I am sixteen years old and all I am to you is a selfish bitch. With each argument we have, easily you call me bitch and I sink on the inside, fighting, yet shriveling. Even after a decade of processing this, you, us, my part, was it me? Even after a decade, I am
still
just bitch
to You.

I am thirty-five years old, back on a toilet silently crying because I am not pregnant again. My husband sleeps a few feet outside the door and I don’t want to wake him, so I cry silently, blaming my body. Still just body.

I am thirty-seven years old, a thin tire like line of fat has formed on my lower abdomen, I see it every day, hating how it hangs over my underwear line creating a sharp crease when I lift the fat. I stare at it regularly, blaming this body of mine for being too this or too that. When my grandfather and cousin say, you got fat or you got big, I retort back a strong-willed response or a joke and shrivel on the inside. Am I fat, I did get big. I
am
just body
to you and even me at times

because

how am I supposed to shield myself from the constant penetration of images and bodies that don’t look like mine, that are not mine?

I am thirty-eight, almost thirty-nine, will be forty in one year and my grandmother, who called me fat at fifteen when I weighed ninety pounds, says “she got big” in Marathi to my grandfather. I shrivel, still, I am just body to you and you and you and you and you.

It’s no wonder you and you and you can sit around tables, ones I am not invited to and pass laws about me. I am just body after all. Not mind. Not soul.

Picture of Sonia Chintha

Sonia Chintha

Sonia Chintha is an Indian American writer who lives in the Washington DC area. She blogs, writes poetry, and fiction. She is also an English teacher who believes that our experiences teach us more than any test. She is the founder and co-editor of Good Little Girls.

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