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The first time I fell in love across the colour line

We might have shared a number of classes in our high school career, but it wasn’t until we clashed in a debate in our Grade Ten History class that I first noticed ‘him’.  He certainly knew me  – everybody did.  A far cry from the ninety-pound shrinking violet that I have been since my mid-twenties, I was an outspoken and voluptuous fifteen-year old pretty girl with body image issues.  As a Black girl and top academic achiever in a historically White school in a conservative town on the East Rand ofGauteng, I was in the contradictory position of being both a celebrity and an outcast amongst Black and White students alike.

The topic of the debate was whether Black and White people could live together.  The vast majority of our class (including ‘him’) was for segregation, leaving a handful of us political “romantics” to argue for a multicultural co-existence.  Unfortunately my introduction of my religious beliefs into the debate weakened my argument and ‘he’ thrashed me.  Boys very rarely challenged me.  Furthermore, there were no boys at school who expressed any genuine romantic interest in me.   While I was proud of my achievements, I had until then felt untouched and untouchable.  That encounter shocked and upset me; but it also gave me a rush.  On the one hand, the guy seemed to be a racist pig.  On the other hand, ‘he’ spoke so eloquently that I felt that this was somebody I should get to know; somebody who could teach me a thing or two.

He was tall and big-boned, very much like the heavy-set guys he kept company with.  His hair appeared to be a sandy brown colour, worn in spikes that contravened school regulations.  Much later we would attend a school camp where a swim in a lake would wash out the copious amount of gel in his hair.  I would discover that his hair was the colour of sun-bleached wheat, with the subtlest hint of curls.  It had been easy not to look at him in the face because I am extremely short and rarely lift my gaze unless I have to.  That debate literally forced us to confront each other face to face.  It was on that day that I first took in the topaz blue hue of his eyes, which in that moment glittered with arrogance and contempt.  Some days later, I pulled one of the girls I knew aside and asked, “Who is that guy?”  It is astonishing that I had still failed to pay attention when the teacher registered class attendance.

“Oh, that is So-and-So.”

“He’s cute!”  I hadn’t meant to say that aloud. My face feigned a nonchalance that was absent from my voice.

“Yes.  Yes, he is.”

It took a couple more days before I actually went to talk to him.  The occasion called for a friendly, laid-back approach.  But it was beyond me to muster such a casual flair and I was decidedly overly diplomatic and formal.  We shook hands as I congratulated him on the debate.  My cool, papery palm pressed into his warm, fleshy one.  I must have said something contrived, like, “Hey, that was a really good debate.  You argue well.”  I don’t really remember.  I do remember what he replied.

“That means a lot, coming from you.”

We became friends in the very loose sense of the word, taking time to talk to each other apart from our respective friends from time to time.  I also paid attention to what he said in some of our other shared classes and discovered that when he wasn’t being offensive, he actually made me laugh.  We made each other laugh.  I remember a handful of moments when he would say something and I would be the only one cracking up or when I would say something and the two of us would be giggling, our classmates eyeing us with suspicion or as if we were just two loons. I was always the last one to leave class and he would wait for me to pack my books or to finish consulting with the relevant educator so that we could walk to the next class together.  We made for a funny pair: me with my oversized bag on my back, him with his long legs that gracefully constrained themselves to walk at my pace.  By the time that I registered the frequency of this routine, I was already smitten.  Noticing that ‘he’ always made a point of saying goodbye to me after school, my best friend innocently commented, “Hey, that boy likes you.” Once again reaching for my mask of nonchalance, I responded, “Ja, we get along.”  It wasn’t like we were seeing each other outside of school activities or anything, even though we lived in the same neighbourhood.

Things came to a head in our matric year, when he formed a friendship with another girl.  He and I were still close, although the number of awkward moments had increased: like the time he swooped down so close to my face I feared that he would kiss me right there on school property in full view of at least one observer; or the time he hugged me in front of a class of Grade Eights that I was supervising; or his tendency of lightly touching my forehead when he passed my desk or of touching my formidable bottom when we were just kidding around; or how his eyes lingered on my curves when he told me I looked good before looking away.  And perhaps more significantly, there’d been a number of times when I’d seen him waiting for me and – too embarrassed to join him – had taken refuge in the company of girlfriends instead.  Many people believe that teenagers are at the mercy of their hormones.  It’s amazing the restraint you can muster when you think you have to; even as desire to touch the object of your lust seems to be lacerating your very sinews.

While he was certainly not the first boy I’d ever had feelings for, he was the first one I wanted to f…er…to know carnally.  I felt threatened by this other girl and with good reason: she had already told some of us girls that she liked him and hoped that they would end up together.  Believing that they were in the process of “hooking up”, I became involved with somebody else in our grade.  I thought it was a move that would enable ‘us’ to maintain the platonic aspect of friendship, but it destroyed the friendship altogether. ‘He’ seemed to be angry with me and made inappropriate comments about what I did with my new boyfriend.  For the remainder of the year, I was baffled by how we had drifted apart.  I suspected that it was because of my new relationship (I dared not hope that ‘he’ was jealous), but I didn’t have the guts to broach the subject of ‘us’ with ‘him’.   At the same time, I treated my boyfriend unfairly and eventually broke up with him as I admitted to the both of us that my heart wasn’t in it.  Towards the end of that final year, I found out through a mutual acquaintance that he had never been romantically or sexually involved with the other girl.

We briefly rekindled our friendship after that revelation and even as it became clear that we had feelings for each other, it was also clear that race and the incumbent cultural differences were obstacles that we were not really prepared to overcome.  Ten years, three degrees and three adult relationships later, I still feel conflicted about that relationship.  I wonder whether my attraction to him was natural, or whether it was the result of my “colonised mind” responding to “Western concepts of beauty”.  I sometimes feel a little saddened that he didn’t try harder to fight for me.  Most of all, I am sometimes saddened by the fact that I wasn’t brave enough to speak my truth when it really counted, regardless of the potential consequences.  I try not to lose sight of the fact that we were only children, after all; but the fact that we can’t even bring ourselves to talk when we bump into each other back in our hometown reminds me that the hurt and embarrassment of the past is still with us.


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My First Sanitary Pads

My mom started her period when she was nine. Yes, nine (which may not seem so young these days, but do you remember when you were nine?)! So, when I was about eight or nine she decided that it would be a good idea to buy me sanitary towels, just in case. I referred to these as pads. Gross.

This was a while ago and, for some reason, my mother wasn’t using the slim, little ones you see today. So, what lurked in the bottom of my cupboard for the next three years? Big, fat, uncomfortable and embarrassing-looking pads. When my friend discovered them, I had to shamefully explain that my mom started her period early – it seemed like an alien object for a nine-year-old to have and even more alien because my friend knew that they were so old school; things that her granny would use.

I was an ironically late bloomer and, months after my friends, I found the tell-tail red stains on my underwear. But did I use those pads, no. I bought new ones because I thought that the others were horribly old-fashioned and looked uncomfortable.

In the beginning, I found my period embarrassing enough, but pads just made the whole experience much more difficult. I was absolutely paranoid about staining my school skirt – it had happened to more than one girl. We used to “casually” flick our skirts up when we sat down, just in case we leaked. I was also disgusted by the squishy and smelly object that sat between my legs. I felt like I was waddling like a duck and that the pad could be seen by everyone. Gym shorts – urgh! Horrible.

The solution, tampons; except for me, that is. I suffered from really bad cramps and tampons made it worse. I dreaded using them, but maybe less than wearing that first packet of pads.

Recently in the news, I have been hearing of research done in developing countries which is looking into the reasons why young girls skip so many school days (up to a week each month). One of the reasons is that they do not have access to sanitary towels, and because of poor sanitation and toilet facilities in schools, cannot attend school while they are menstruating. Furthermore, stains on the backs of dresses can lead to sexual harassment by fellow learners and teachers. This made me really ashamed.

I was embarrassed by a packet of perfectly good sanitary towels. I was ashamed because my friends had the cuter, smaller, slimmer ones, and I had the monstrously old-fashioned ones. I found pads a trial, a hindrance and acutely annoying.

But at least I had some and that meant that I could attend school, even while menstruating (except on bad cramp days, of course). Who would have thought that sanitary towels would be a luxury item? I am continually amazed at how lucky I am. Thanks, mum, for those initial sanitary towels and for the sex education, the support and the celebratory smile on your face the day I started my period.

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The First Time I Discovered Comfort Food

The first time I discovered comfort food was when I moved into hostel. Until that point I was irresistible in high school. Girls hated me, boys and men couldn’t keep their eyes off me. I had the shortest skirt at school and lean long legs. I had long relaxed hair and fair skin without the blemishes or acne my peers were facing. I had a size 6 waist, B cup breasts and thin firm shoulders. I was the ideal and envied and I knew it. I wore miniskirts without any shame despite the comments and goading from men in the street, I was hot. But I wanted to be beautiful, captivating, wonderful and irresistible all at once.

Beneath all the beauty was a voice trying to come out asking the world to see me and love me for who I am and not what I looked like. I knew that beauty according to the magazines was fatal and short-lived and I wanted to know that when this beauty faded I would still be loved. While everyone was lavishing their attention on my legs and long hair, my inner world was in shambles trying to make sense of the world and the journey of finding my space in the world began.

My discovery of comfort food was in the form of brown bread with strawberry jam and any kind of MSG infused snack especially cheap chips called Shwamas. When I moved into hostel in grade 10 I rediscovered regular meals. At home we had suffered a meltdown and poverty had set in (in Grade 2 we had our first eviction). At some stage we could only afford 1 kg of mealie meal that we knew would last us a week in the form of umphokoqo, so in essence it was easy for me to stay thin, but nobody knew this.

Poverty was unacceptable in my school and my sister and I made sure we weren’t discovered as being one of “those people”. Our school was one of the most expensive government schools in town and people often wondered if it wasn’t a private school. We had managed to stay at the school because once upon a time my parents could afford the luxuary of expensive schools and when they could no longer pay fees we weren’t asked to leave because it was a government school and children could not be expelled because of fees.

We weren’t very successful in our attempts at hiding our poverty because we were the kids who didn’t get new shoes at the beginning of the year, we didn’t go on outdoor education excursions that required too much money,  we didn’t have Billabong school bags (we bought our school bags from hawkers in the street and when they tore Mama would sew them. Later she took up to making our school bags herself from material people gave her), we didn’t get new stationary and after a while we stopped taking lunch boxes to school, we stopped taking the bus and walked to school and we couldn’t afford the textbook levy at the beginning of the year.

Our precarious position was finally discovered the day my sister and I came to school after a weekend of hunger, we had eaten nothing since Friday lunch our friends had shared with us. The weekend of hunger was spent in doors, sleeping from fatigue and no energy. My dad had disappeared (which had become commonplace at this stage)l and when he did eventually materialise he disappeared again saying he would make a plan. And he didn’t because I didn’t see him until after the weekend. Walking to school on Monday was the longest morning I’ve ever had. My sister and I walked slowly, taking longer than the 45 minutes it took us getting from Quigney (a suburb near the beach) to Selborne where the school was. We had to walk through the CBD area (though we discovered a short cut through the industrial area in Arcadia so that our friends on the bus wouldn’t see us walking to school), through Southernwood before we could get to school (this was usually a 40 minute drive on the bus). My stomach had stopped grumbling and felt as though it was feeding on itself. The pain of hunger was however exceeded by the pain of the lump that settled in my throat when I realised my world had changed. I knew neglect first hand and I knew the pain of being in need with hope of very little.

I hadn’t noticed that anything had changed in my body until someone at school laughed at me asking if I had been locked in the cupboard while my family ate meals on the weekend. I went to the bathroom mirror only to discover that my eyes had sunken in and I had black rings around my eyes. My skin had lost its colour, I looked ugly. My world was shattered because my father could no longer provide and our secret had been exposed, we were poor.

Obviously the teachers noticed but they never asked my sister and I for any details. When they did, we would answer that everything was fine, we did our homework when we could or we arrived early at school to use a friend’s textbook. The school intervened by giving us textbooks without the levy that everyone else paid, this was after a meeting with the principal who first asked why we didn’t have textbooks, my sister and I both responded with tears because somehow we couldn’t explain that there was no hope of a salary at the end of the month to pay for the textbooks. A staff member was designated to bring us lunch everyday anonymously leaving  it in a discreet place only my sister and I knew about. The biggest intervention was when I was awarded a scholarship that would pay 90% of my school fees and full hostel fees for the remainder of high school (sadly my sister didn’t qualify for this as she was almost in matric but her fees were exempted in her final year at school) so this is how I escaped the food insecurity in my family.

Moving into hostel was another mountain because I had to have my own clothes and bedding. My sister and I were sharing blankets and clothes (we didn’t have a bed, we slept on a mattress together) and I couldn’t take everything with me to hostel. Mama informed the scholarship staff about this and they organised everything for me and I moved into hostel a week later than everyone else. For the first time in almost 10 years I had my own bed( in matric I had my own bedroom as this was one of the privileges we had as seniors). I had electricity to do my homework properly (the flat we lived in had no electricity as it was switched off after we had stopped paying rent and finally we were evicted and moved to a place where we didn’t have to pay rent), I had some privacy as I shared a dorm with four other people. I had structure, 3 meals a day with snacks at breaktime But I was plagued by guilt. I had comforts my sister and Mama hadn’t had in years.

Brown bread with strawberry jam was made available during every meal in case someone wasn’t satisfied by the meal provided. I was one of those people that was at the bread table after every meal, but the insatiable hunger I had was not because of the hostel food that everyone complained about. I began to use food for the emptiness and the loss of being away from Mama and my sister for the first time.

Even though I saw my sister at school everyday, hostel was a new world where I discovered that my peers didn’t come from a place of need as I had. There were children who had more than enough of everything school and hostel required-toiletries, tuck food, cd players, cellphones, clothes  and any other luxury to make life easier. I stuck out like a sore thumb because all I had were the basic essentials and when my toiletries were finished my friends would buy things for me. What manifested from my changed eating habits was fatness. My clothes stopped fitting me. I was given a new school uniform from lost property at hostel because I couldn’t afford a new one. The only clothes I could wear were tracksuit pants and long skirts and t-shirts that made me look pregnant. I stopped playing sport so I had no exercise.

Friends who knew me in Grade 8 comment on my weight to this day. Things have thankfully changed at home (my sister has a job and I have a scholarship that supports me as well as a salary for being a teaching assistant). I haven’t been able to shake off the results of the comfort eating. Instead I buy clothes that make my size 14/16 body look good. I keep healthy through regular exercise. I’ve never been able to go on a diet. Underlying this process of looking after my body is trying to still my inner world that was disrupted by the instability in my family. I still have bouts where I binge, but somehow it’s easier now because I feel have control over my life.

I don’t know if it’s something I’ll ever break free from.



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Filed under Family, Freedom, Weight