Passing for Normal by Amy S. Wilensky
Author:Amy S. Wilensky [Wilensky, Amy S.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 978-0-307-76554-3
Publisher: Crown
Published: 2010-09-22T00:00:00+00:00
six
SEISMIC SHIFTS
âWhat are you doing?â I didnât hear the question at firstâit was asked of me so frequently I often tuned it out unconsciouslyâand kept arranging my French fries.
âEarth to Amy. Is anybody in there?â Nicole rapped me on the head with characteristic zeal. I was engaged in my customary predinner ritual: If I sorted the fries into pairs before digging in, eliminating an odd man out (if there happened to be one) by placing it on the tray beneath my plate, I could proceed with abandon. Otherwise, I had to count as I ate, which required a steady flow of concentration and made it difficult to participate even superficially in conversation for much of the meal. Over the previous few years, many of my rituals had converged around food; thanks to my father I associated meals with being watched and therefore tense, and I always tried to keep especially still while sitting at a table over food. As always, when I was holding back from twitching, the impulse found an alternate outlet, in this case emerging as an obsession over what and how I ate.
Vassarâs dining hall was vast and outdated in 1988, when I arrived as a freshman, with the institutional-style decor favored in the 1970s; only the presence of hundreds of students kept it from resembling a hospital cafeteria. Sometimes, when getting through a meal entailed outlasting three waves of fellow dinersâas I both pretended and convinced myself I was having such a pleasant time I simply couldnât leaveâit became a prison, from which I was granted only occasional parole. During my first two years of college, when I lived in the dormitories, I ate two meals a day in the dining hall, often with the same group of people, almost always including Nicole, and became quickly and intimately acquainted with the nuances of the rotating menu. Foods with too many components to count, such as cereal and noodles, could be selected only when I was feeling reckless or testing myself. Single-unit foods, such as hamburgers and hot dogs, were the safest bet, as they could be eaten in pairs of bites, totally inconspicuously. The salad bar was safest of all, a reliable fallback in spite of my dislike of most vegetables; it was entirely self-serve, affording total control over numbers and placement, although counting out chickpeas is equally tiresome and time-consuming. It didnât take too long before my new friends began to comment on my odd eating styleâhow I always chose similar foods, took forever to finish them, and chewed so methodicallyâbut many college students have odd eating styles, and unlike some of the women we knew, at least I ate. I didnât mind so much having my eating habits scrutinized, anywayâit detracted from my other, less explicable bizarre behaviors, made manifest in daily dormitory life, and allowed me to assume my protective mantle of harmless, even engaging eccentricity.
Besides my extensive collections of books, clothes, records, photographs, and junk, I hoarded food in my one-room triple, well beyond the soda and beer we stored under our beds like college students everywhere.
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