She
was big. No question about it. Size 12
feet. Broad hips. Big belly.
Generous breasts. Wide shoulders. Big
smile too. Even her voice was big, her laughter full
and rich, capable of filling an auditorium. Some
things fit, most didn't. She searched for
chairs without arms, hard to find in most places
where the chairs cut into her back and sides.
She eyed every couch before she sat down, gauging its
worthiness and her ability to rise gracefully from it.
She asked for seat belt extensions and the window
seat when she flew so her bulk wouldn't intrude too
much on her neighbor. Once, when she traveled
to Europe, she was stuck in the middle of five seats
in the middle section of the plane. The whole long
trip, she sat with her arms folded across her stomach
and tried not to take up too much room. She
woke up, every now and then, and from the looks of
the people around her, she knew her snore was big
enough to drown out the sound of the movie. She took
up space. Lots of it. She was too big for
most rooms, she thought, and so she found ways to be
on the edges, not in the center, as if people wouldn't
notice.
She was big. Too big for most clothes, especially the
pretty ones with sparkles and beads and ribbons.
She hadn't worn regular shoes for years, and the
thought of her feet in dancing shoes left her
laughing.
She was big. Bigger than almost anyone she knew.
Her hug was huge, two strong arms that could wrap
around and hold a person close and be warm, safe,
whole. She was a great big pillow to cry into,
one that held all the tears until you were done
crying. Her friends would tell you she had a
heart as big as the prairies.
She told big stories. Outrageous stories about old
ladies who ran away from home and went to summer camp
or sent postcards from their travels around the
country. She told jokes, funny ones and stupid
ones and ones that made you think for a whole day
before you laughed.
There was a secret the big woman knew, something she
didn't tell anyone. She didn't even tell
herself very often because it hurt to hear the words.
"I'm too big," she'd whisper, "too big
for God. Even God doesn't have arms big enough
to hold me." And then that great and big
and gentle woman would cry. And her tears were
just like her- big and gentle and they washed over
her face and splashed down into her lap.
A giant hole in her heart opened one day.
Nothing filled it. Nothing healed it. It
just ached. And there wasn't much she could do
about it. She thought for a long time that it didn't
matter. It was really okay that God was too
small. But lately it wasn't okay. Lately
she was no longer satisfied to let God off the hook.
Either God was God, and capable of being big enough
for her, or they could just call it quits right here
and now.
"You're not too much for me," God said.
"Where did you ever get that idea?"
"I don't fit," the woman said. "It's
not just my body size. I just don't seem to fit
into the picture."
"Tell me more," God coaxed.
"Haven't you ever noticed," she asked,
"that in all the pictures I'm the one just out
of camera reach. My body doesn't all make it into the
picture."
God nodded.
"But my life doesn't fit either. It's not
like the lives of my friends. I don't fit
inside a marriage. I don't fit into my work.
I'm too big for people who want to follow all the
rules."
"And what's wrong with that?" God asked.
"Who told you that you had to fit those pictures?"
"But you said---" she started to say.
"I did no such thing. Never. Now,
granted, some significant people in your life may
have claimed I demanded that, but I'm here to tell
you that I never did."
"So why don't I fit?" the woman asked.
"Oh but you do!" laughed God. "Oh,
my dear, you do!"
The woman folded her arms across her chest and
frowned. "You're not taking this very
seriously," she complained. "You have
no idea how it feels."
"Oh, don't I?" God chided. "You,
my love, are as grand and glorious as all the Rocky
Mountains, as huge and wide as the oceans. You
are as big as a house-rattling storm that shakes the
teeth of the people inside. You are like a
giant earthquake and as dazzling as fields swamped by
flowers. You are the embodiment of outrageous,
silly, lavish grace. You, of all people, you
are not puny."
She studied God, puzzled. "So, what you're
saying is..."
"What I'm saying, dear heart, is that with you I
do things in a big way." And God chuckled.
The woman chewed her lip. "It's not enough,"
she said finally.
"Only because you've been hiding outside the
frame of the picture," said God. "Look,
people pack up their cars and travel for miles to see
real mountains, not those puny little hills on the
East Coast that they pretend are mountains. No,
I'm talking about the big ones! The Rockies.
The Sierras. Big mountains like Rainier and
Shasta. These people drag along their cameras
and their video recorders and they spend all their
time taking pictures. And you know what?"
"What?"
"They go home. They drop off the pictures
to be developed and they do the laundry. A week
or two later, they remember to pick up the pictures.
They shuffle through them, try to remember where they
were the day that picture was taken, and who took
this strange shot? They complain about the
color. And the flatness of the picture is
nothing like what they saw those few weeks ago.
Then they toss the envelope of pictures into a drawer
and forget about them."
"So?" she prompted.
"So, they never saw the mountains, all those
vast giant beauties I created. They settle for puny
reproductions and wonder why everything else in their
lives is so flat and stale. You are like those
mountains, huge and grand and glorious. People
who see you only through the camera's lens will not
know your beauty. How could they? They
have forgotten how to see."
God raised an eyebrow and looked at her. "Now
you, you in your body, can you forget how big you are?"
God asked.
She looked impatient. "No, you know that!
How could I forget? It's always there, always a
part of how I move around in the world."
"Do you ever feel small? Flat? Puny?"
God was grinning at her.
She stuck out her tongue. "Hell, no!"
"Then you're seeing the real beauty, not some
camera's reproduction. And there are no edges
to the picture. You always fit."
"Yeah, but, . . ." her voice trailed off.
"I'll tell you a secret. I like doing
things in a big way, so people will notice, pay
attention, wake up. You're one of my best
surprises." God reached for her and spun
her around and danced a wicked tango with her.
"You know," the woman said when the dance
was over and a huge moon hung over the horizon,
"you're a lot taller than I thought you were."
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You can
email the author of this lovely story by clicking her name: Shannon O'Donnell
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