Cosmopolitan UK – September 2019

(Romina) #1
COSMOPOLITAN · 89

also blocked. Three long operations
tried to restart the circulation but,
four days after that sunny, canal-side
run in May 2016, I was told that
amputation was the only option.
I remember watching as the
surgeon drew a thick, black arrow
on my skin. I was wheeled into the
anaesthetic room, staring at my
right foot for the final time. The
skin was white and mottled; the
toenails painted red.
That’s who I was before the
amputation: someone who painted
her toenails red. Who, on Wednesdays,
sang loud, jubilant pop and gospel at
my local choir. Who overspent at least
twice a week on dinners and drinks
with friends. I wore bright, patterned
clothes to important meetings as
I climbed the slippery career ladder
of magazine journalism. Among
all of that, when I could, I fitted in
dating. I’d recently turned 25 and
had made a decision to invest more
time in finding someone
I really cared about.
I’d had a first date
planned the evening of that
run. I’d told my sister about
him while we jogged; how
we’d met at a house party
a few weeks earlier and
how he’d made me laugh
with his dry, quiet sense
of humour. Just two hours
after she had been excitedly
asking me what I was planning
to wear, she was unlocking my
phone to text him and let him know
that I wouldn’t be able to make it.
“I hope she’s OK,” came the reply.
“I’ve got a cold so it’s probably for
the best.” I didn’t hear from him
again. As far as I’m aware, he doesn’t
know I’m now an amputee.
Plenty more fish in the sea, they say.
But after the accident, it took a long
time for me to feel brave enough to dip
my toes (just on the one foot, mind)
back into the murky, shark-infested
waters of online dating. I watched
from the sidelines as my clever,


attractive, funny, two-legged friends
went on dates. I heard their stories,
smiling on the outside while nerves
concerning my own situation fizzed
in my stomach. I sat in my bedroom


  • nine months after the accident – and
    idly swiped through profiles. Men with
    topless gym selfies; men at weddings;
    men who hiked up mountains and
    probably wore socks with sandals.
    There were even men who posted
    their Uber ratings like Nobel Prizes.
    “One of a kind” or “simply the best”
    some jokers had written under their
    bios. “Source: my mum.”
    I wondered what sort of women
    they wanted. Then, I’d look at my
    stump, ugly and swollen; at the
    angry red scars, the result of eight
    operations, inside both of my thighs.
    How, I wondered, could anyone ever
    find this attractive? I’d catch sight
    of myself in the mirror and then let
    my eyes travel down my body... as
    soon as I reached my thighs I’d
    quickly look away.


PROFILE UPDATE
My online profile –
carefully curated like most


  • was a nostalgic tribute
    to the person I used to
    be: pictures of me cycling
    through rice fields in
    Vietnam or dancing in a
    dingy university nightclub
    with black glittery walls.
    My phone vibrated each time I had
    a match and I’d pick it up to message
    people – only to put it back down
    again. It felt like I was faking my entire
    identity, so eventually I decided to
    be honest and tell the men I was an
    amputee. There was no easy way to
    do this. I rephrased the sentence again
    and again, eventually settling on
    “Hey, just so you know...” The aim
    was chatty; no big deal. I didn’t want
    anyone to treat me differently. But
    the response? Complete and utter
    silence. I felt like the tiny shred of
    confidence I’d so carefully cultivated
    had been ripped away. ›


“I didn’t want
anyone to
treat me
differently”

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