Corpsing is a refreshingly honest book of essays that has just further ingrained in me that my number one fear – above dying alone, above losing my memories – is, and always will be, motherhood. The first essay in which White contrasts the slow death of her father with the very visceral and stomach-churning descriptions of the birth of her son (I am not yet at the point in my life wherein I am able to see and appreciate the “beauty of childbirth” and honestly, reading through this book made me really wonder if I ever would be) almost sent me running for the hills, but I’m glad I stuck it out because this is a book about what it means to be a woman, a mentally-ill woman, an alcoholic woman, a grieving woman, a fat woman, and all other facets of womanhood in between.
The wonderful thing about Corpsing is how utterly relatable White can be, or at least, so raw and vulnerable that as a reader you feel as though you’re wandering through someone else’s brain, their soul, and you are more than welcome to be there. Even though there wasn’t much I could personally relate to, on a surface level, in White’s memoirs, I still found them engaging and oddly, they forced me to consider aspects of myself I took for granted on a fundamental level. I do not have children. I do not want children. And why is that? Here in White’s essays I felt vindicated for the first time being a young woman who did not see the ultimate fulfillment of my human potential in popping out helpless, squalling little beings into a great unknown world, no, White’s depiction of motherhood (particularly in the essay “Milk (and Madness)”) exposes motherhood for what it really is. It’s hard. It’s unforgiving. It’s creating a life that will forever be tied to you, smothering you, feeding from you. And worst of all, is the way in which our society markets motherhood, as beatific bliss, as radiance and peace. White explores the concept of the “monstrous mother”, lamenting the taboo nature of openly discussing mothers “worn down by the demands placed on her or suffering from mental illness” that we as a society have only ever really breached the subject through monstrous representations of motherhood in horror films. It was an interesting point, one I had never really had cause to think of, but now that it’s been said I can’t help but notice it so clearly: “When a villain or ghostly entity is revealed to be a mother there is no more potent, unthinkable animal fear. We, the audience are forced to re-encounter the helplessness and confusion of childhood when our mothers were the universe. A mother gone wrong is the purest terror because her power over the child is infinite. Against such a woman, such a thing, there can be no defence” (263) – it’s caused great amounts of self-introspection. Perhaps it isn’t simply the body horror of growing another living being inside of your body, feeling it move and kick from within, that’s kept me away from the pleasingly-packaged socially approved depictions of motherhood in most films and media – it’s the fear of failure. Of being a bad mom. Of being incapable of keeping up with the burdens of child-rearing, having a career, staying fit and active and mentally sound, and everything else lauded on women who can, and really, “do it all”.
And that’s okay.
Sophie says it’s okay.
And granted, I didn’t know Sophie from Adam before picking up this book, but her honesty and vulnerability throughout makes Corpsing oddly comforting in a way. Basically we’re all a little messed up and we, as people, as a society, should talk about it more.
And speaking of messed up, the essay “Craving”, about White’s vampiristic pregnancy-fueled obsession with blood? Seeking out and ingesting great quantities of blood? Sitting in a bath tub and dousing herself with two litres of pig’s blood? Absolutely delightful! There’s a certain kind of humour White uses to approach her trauma, and maybe that’s why I found the book to be so palatable despite its rather heavy topics. It would be all too easy to simply succumb to grief and pain in recollecting some of the experiences shared in the book, but who would want to read a simple rehashing of misery when instead there’s the story of White and her mother smuggling her father’s ashes across borders in a Saxa salt container? It’s a humour that’s sorely needed as you progress through the collection and into the more disturbing recollections, memories of sexual assault and being a child too young to comprehend the wrong thing that has happened to you, growing into womanhood and still having to come to terms with all of the wrong things in life that come with being a woman, the self-doubt and self-blame when your boundaries are invaded and discarded, knowing for yourself that you’ve done nothing wrong or to be deserving of such treatment and yet…simply put, and as cliché as it may be, if I didn’t laugh while reading some parts of this, I simply would have cried.
Again, it’s an odd sort of collection of essays at times, sometimes a bit repetitive in their themes, but overall the collection reads like a trauma sandwich. It begins with essays largely to do with the death of White’s father, grief, and childbirth before flowing into the meat of the collection, in my humble opinion, the juiciest bits about self-harm, addiction, and some topics seemingly out of left field (such as the essay about vampiristic pregnancy cravings); and is all tied off with brutally raw and honest depictions of what it means to be an alcoholic, and a mother, and the two being irrevocably intertwined.
Hats off to Sophie White, as it takes an extraordinary amount of courage and hutzpah to lay yourself bare like that for all the world to see.