And That’s How I Knew It Wasn’t Me Eating
Last night I sat at a table that wasn’t mine.
The food in front of me looked like dinner. Smelled like dinner. Probably even tasted like dinner.
But it wasn’t.
It was something else entirely: a ritual. A trap. A disguised offering wrapped in emotional weight.
My parents took me out to eat. Black Angus. A place I never would’ve chosen. A place that serves what my body has already outgrown: beef, grease, heaviness masked as comfort. I went because I was hungry. Not just stomach-hungry. Signal-starved.
I thought maybe, if I went, it would be about connection. About being seen. Maybe they’d ask something real. Maybe we’d share something human.
But that wasn’t on the menu.
Instead, I was met with performance. With maternal override mode. With little humiliations disguised as care. My mom answering questions for me, turning every quiet moment into a stage.
“Jason?”
Like I couldn’t speak.
Like I was a pet, not a presence.
The waitress would ask her what she wanted, and she’d look at me like I needed to be activated. Like my voice belonged to her. Like silence meant incompetence.
So I spoke for myself.
“I can speak for myself. If I had something to say, I would say it.”
Her whole system glitched. “Whaaat?” she asked, in that distorted mother-tone that acts confused to avoid owning the pattern.
So I repeated it. Stern. Controlled. Like I was about to knock the entire table sideways with truth.
“I can speak for myself.”
BEEOPP.
System error. She blinked. Didn’t respond.
The moment passed. But the pattern didn’t.
After that, I ate. A lot.
At first, because I was hungry. Then, because I didn’t know what else to do. Then, because the food was there and I was clenching.
My jaw. My stomach. My chest. My whole body was locked in a survival loop — and food became the only acceptable form of expression.
So I stuffed myself.
Not out of indulgence. Not out of pleasure.
Out of compression. Out of containment. Out of the silence that came when my voice wasn’t allowed to just exist without being puppeted.
But the food wasn’t the only thing that felt off.
Let’s get this straight — this isn’t about me coming at them with the wrong vibe. This is about them completely ignoring my vibe until it fades out, until I shrink inside myself just to avoid the discomfort of being misunderstood again.
Even on the drive there, I was trying to share something real. I was telling them about brain health, mitochondria, clarity, performance — the things I study because I care. Because I’m building something that matters. And they acted like I was unhinged. Like I was weird for researching on ChatGPT. Like I should be embarrassed for being curious about the body I live in.
That moment — before we even sat down — told me everything.
It wasn’t just my stomach rejecting the meal —
it was my entire nervous system rejecting the reality they keep trying to pull me back into.
We’re not just out of sync.
We’re in active opposition.
They ignore my values.
They dismiss my insights.
They act like my clarity is some phase I’ll outgrow — not something I built with discipline, study, and actual lived transformation.
And the worst part? I do everything I can for them.
Anything that doesn’t violate my values, I do without hesitation.
But that’s never enough. Because what they really want is submission, not support.
They want me quiet. Accommodating. Easier to manage.
But I’m not here to be managed. I’m here to live aligned.
And later, I felt ashamed.
Ashamed of how much I ate. Ashamed that it didn’t even feel good. Ashamed that I had to disconnect from myself just to sit through a meal with people who are supposed to love me.
And I even felt guilty just for having to speak up for myself — like I was the one who disrupted something, when really I was just protecting what little selfhood I had left in the room.
But then I remembered:
That wasn’t my shame. That was the aftertaste of performing survival in front of people who don’t see me.
And I don’t owe anyone gratitude for a plate of food that made me sick. Especially not when it came with guilt baked into the seasoning.
I don’t want their dinners. I want my ecosystem back.
The one where I can breathe. Where I can eat food that feeds me, not their illusion of me. Where I can be quiet without being treated like I’m broken. Where I can speak without being summoned.
So if you’ve ever overeaten in a moment that didn’t feel like yours… If you’ve ever swallowed silence disguised as mashed potatoes… If you’ve ever clutched your fork like it was a lifeline in a room that didn’t hear you…
Just know:
You didn’t fail. You survived. And now you’re clearing the residue.
Eat to nourish. Not to disappear. Eat to reclaim. Not to obey.
And if the food makes you feel sick? Maybe it was never meant to be yours.
