The poem 'Eat Me' is written in 10 Isometric Tercets, in mythology, the number three often represents completion or inevitability, such as the Fates in Greek mythology who spin, measure, and cut the thread of life - The tercets mirror this triadic structure, reflecting the inevitability of the partner’s control and the narrator’s eventual rebellion - Each stanza becomes a step toward the climactic act of liberation, much like the Fates' progression toward an unchangeable destiny.