The Pretty Girls Club
Second-grade was my year. It was the year before I became fat, before I even developed a self-consciousness of fat. My mom was the cool room mother all the other kids wished they had. I had a crush on Robby Campbell with his flame-red hair, and I think he liked me, too. I was part of the second-grade in crowd – the club of pretty girls who played Kiss and Catch with the club of pretty boys on the playground at recess and braided each other’s hair during class movie time. I sat next to Jenny, the club’s unofficial head pretty girl, on the bus.
I was accepted; I was one of the pretty girls.
Then I became friends with Shannon Carpenter. Shannon was homely and had a bad complexion. Her naturally curly hair cut by her mom in odd angles refused to braid. I was not consciously aware at the time that Shannon was also fat, but others were and they let her know it. Shannon came from a single-parent family who was poor and she often wore ill-fitting and old clothes. She did not care about hair and boys and those other things the pretty girls cared about. She was different.
Shannon was not one of us; she was not one of the pretty girls.
Shannon’s mom and my mom ran squad together so it was only natural we would be thrust together. But I also liked Shannon. We both liked to draw and we both collected My Little Pony and Cabbage Patch dolls. We both devoured books and even in second-grade, Shannon had a wicked sense of humor. I started reading with Shannon underneath the log fortress on the playground. We soon sat next to each other at lunch and played together after school. My friendship with Shannon had its price.
I was unofficially kicked out of the pretty girls club.
Our family’s move mid-year to a neighboring community meant a change in schools. Sometime after the move, I began gaining weight and no longer qualified as a pretty girl. I first became aware I was noticeably larger than the other kids in the third-grade. The taunts and ridicule soon followed and would continue to follow until graduation nine years later. The pretty girls club soon became a dim memory of what if, a fantasy of a life that could have been. Today, it seems as if, both before and after, I have been moving away from and back towards this fantasy.
There is safety in being a pretty girl; you are not alone.
I maintained my friendship with Shannon even after rejoining the club and even the move. We remained friends through the sixth-grade, until Shannon’s mom was killed in a car accident and she and her brother were sent to live with their grandma. In the prehistoric era before email and the internet and even computers, geography marked the death knell of our friendship. The road on which Shannon’s mother was killed is now a main thoroughfare in one of the communities I cover. Sometimes I drive over the spot in which Sandy died and I wonder about Shannon and how her life turned out. Is she the same old Shannon who liked to read and draw and was smart and funny?
Or did she become just another pretty girl?
Even now, 20 years later, I distinctly remember asking Jenny if I could be accepted back into the club my last week at the school before the move. They agreed. I was a pretty girl again. But strangely, being a pretty girl wasn’t as much fun as it was before. None of the other pretty girls liked to read. None of them liked to draw or paint. If you didn’t like to play Kiss and Catch at recess, tough. This is the game the pretty girls played and so, you too played it if you wanted to be a member of the pretty girls club.
I couldn’t be myself; I had to be a pretty girl.
I’ve been the only one for most of my life – the only girl/woman, the only fat one, the only liberal, the only feminist, the only one with an eating disorder, the only, the only, the only… It is an unsettling and scary place to be at times, this precarious and strange state of onliness. You stand alone at the precipice, with no one to cling to should you lose your footing, and yet everyone to watch to see if you will fall. There is security in being a pretty girl; there is safety and solace in a group of people with many bodies but one head. But it is also a false comfort, one which exacts a superfluous ounce of identity.
I am not a pretty girl; I will never be a pretty girl. I am different; I am myself. It is all there is and it is enough.
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