Logic Doesn’t Fix Everything
A World Designed for a Body I Don't Have
I don’t talk about
the way I fold my arms in photos
not from the cold,
but from the shame of absence.
I don’t say
I know every trick in the book
push-up, padding, posture,
jackets that taper,
bras that lie more convincingly than I ever could.
I don’t say
I notice.
When eyes slide past me to her.
When compliments come wrapped in qualifiers
“Cute, not sexy.”
“Petite,” like a consolation prize.
I don’t say
I’m tired.
Of pretending it doesn’t sting
when every song, every ad, every joke
writes my body out of the script.
I don’t say:
I feel like I got a girl costume
That was on clearance marked down,
missing parts,
tags still attached.
I don’t say
There are days I wear double layers
not for modesty
but to fake volume,
like maybe if I fill the space
they’ll stop looking for what isn’t there.
I don’t say
I envy the gravity they complain about.
The weight they carry.
I wish for a heaviness
I could hold in my hands
and call mine.
I don’t say
I once stuffed tissues in my bra
at twelve,
and cried in a Target dressing room
at twenty-three
because nothing fit right
not the dress,
not the body,
not the world built for curves
I never got issued.
I don’t say
I know it’s not everything.
I know there are worse things.
But try living in a body
that feels like a footnote
and tell me that logic fixes it.
About the Creator
E. C. Mira
I’m a poet at heart, always chasing the quiet moments and turning them into words. Most of what I write is poetry, but every now and then inspiration pulls me in new directions.
www.poetrybyecmira.com



Comments (2)
E.C. - I have been wearing the skin you've longed for, and as it ages, it carries the stories in lumps and bumps we too, wish away in favour of your willowy sway. These lines especially, "I envy the gravity they complain about. The weight they carry. I wish for a heaviness I could hold in my hands and call mine." They made me see my own pieces in a new light. Thank you for rewriting gravity as less of an enemy I've always believed it to be so.
This is some powerful stuff. It makes you think about all the unspoken experiences women have. I've seen how society's views can really mess with people's self-perception. It's sad that so many women feel this way. How can we as a society start to change these harmful ideas and make everyone feel more accepted, no matter their body type?