EXCERPT
I don't remember exactly when he—my husband, Tom—
started eating ice. At first I really didn't notice because it was infrequent, but gradually it became constant and the crunching grated on my nerves. Ice was a substitute for food, and frozen water gave Tom the illusion both that he was eating and that he wasn't drinking the liquid he feared would make him bloat. At the office we shared, I turned around at my desk while he was sitting across the room from me, at his desk. I tried to avert my eyes, but I
always saw him slip the melting ice, wrapped in a ragged dish
towel, into his top drawer. While I was working, while I was on
the phone, all day long he would pull ice cubes out and suck and
crunch. I heard the crunching constantly, like an ice cutter cutting
through the frozen Arctic, a thousand cicadas underfoot, squeezing
Styrofoam—a sound like suicide as he substituted frozen water for
food.
To rid himself of fluid, he spat. He spat into towels, new colorful
tea towels, our bath towels, old or new, it didn't matter—baptizing
them as his own. He left them in soggy heaps in his desk, thrown
against the wall near the hamper, stashed in unexpected places, so
that often when I was cleaning, my hand unwittingly wrapped
around a grimy wet mass tucked in a drawer or thrown on a closet
floor, even worse when it held chewed food.
He spat on the floor, in the office, too, but mostly at home, so
that sometimes, if I forgot and walked around barefoot, my toes
squished in the cool slime on the Mexican tile in the front hall or
on the oak stairs. Sometimes I looked down in time and saw the
silvery stain, like a slug's trail, across the blue-and-orange Oriental
rug we bought in Jerusalem or the flowers of the Kashan in the
front hall. The slate-blue carpet on the floor next to his side of the
bed and the bed ruffle above it were stained reddish brown from
spit, a stain I could not remove. Eating ice—spitting out the fluids
that tried to nourish his body—he attempted to fool the cycle of
living into a slow process of extended dying. Alcoholism, anorexia:
an obsession is exactly that. An addiction warps not only the life
of the one who is addicted but of everyone around him. He saw
life through a monocle, his vision one-dimensional, focused on
food, his body, purging, and his fear of bloating.
Tom never raised his hand against me, but he had beaten me
down with relentless complaining and his desperate need for ritual,
which made deviation from his patterns intolerable. Always the
same schedule, never able to accommodate anyone else, not for
business or friendship, not for his family. Always very early, a run
followed by a plunge into a bathtub filled with ice and water, a
sauna, another plunge, work from eight or so until two or three,
then another run, a plunge, a sauna, another plunge, supper of a
small bowl of food so covered in ketchup, mayonnaise, and mustard it was impossible to know, or even want to know, what it
was, then another sauna and plunge. In bed by eight-thirty.
He wanted the bath to be very cold and would fill the tub with
buckets of ice so it would feel like the brooks running from the
mountains in the Adirondacks. "It feels so clean, so pure," he'd
say. When we built the house we determined that each of us would
have our own bathroom, which was less a luxury than a necessity.
At first Tom just used his own bathroom, but then, when Stephen
was away at school, he commandeered his as well. I asked Tom
to stop because it was just one more room to clean, and he made
things very dirty. But he replied that the water was colder in the
downstairs bathroom and insisted that he use both. Then he started
filling the kitchen sink with cold water and ice to sit while he was
running so it would be ready when he returned. Sometimes when
I came home, all the sinks and baths were full of ice and water
except my own bathroom—which he never used.
The ice maker couldn't keep up with his demands, so he
filled the Calphalon pots with water and put them in the freezer.
The bottoms distended from the pressure, so the pots would roll
over and were useless. Again, I begged him to stop, to buy
cheap plastic containers in which to freeze water or just buy ice,
but he couldn't stop, and he ruined most of the good pots I had
bought for cooking.
Tom could no longer really run because he had injured his foot.
He dressed in layers of sweatclothes to force his body to eliminate
water as he stumbled down the road. Sometimes he became overheated and his nose erupted in blood. The blood mixed with the
sweat and dirt, spreading over his chin and neck and down his
clothes. His turtleneck was stained pink, the blood dripped crimson over his maroon Groton sweatshirt, one he requested from
our children for Christmas each year and wore until it was discolored from Clorox, threadbare and frayed at the edges. His once
gray ski jacket was held by safety pins and duct tape—blotched
with dirt and sweat. He had sliced his running shoes to accommodate his deformed foot, and then bound the flaps together with
more duct tape. He wore a green wool ski cap over layers of other
caps—an orange, a yellow—each stained and dirty. In winter, the
frost collected on his beard and eyebrows, a frost created by exhaling. Young men in trucks used to throw cans and apples at him
as they drove past, and when he collapsed against our fence along
the driveway or tried to do push-ups by the road, people stopped
because they thought he was ill and needed help.
"Some people stopped to ask if I was all right," he would report
to me. "I told them I was fine, just running." He could not see
himself as he was seen.
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