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Once, I bathed in anxiety, soaking it all into my follicles and letting it slide between my bones and through my muscles like ice water. And I reeked. Others couldn’t stand to be around me. I became an inhuman symbol, something robotic and unfeeling. Then, I reached the peak of hypocrisy-- rejected sparkling convention yet was simultaneously enamored with it. I binged on harsh words aimed at diminishing my sense of self. I was a frail, 98-pound girl looking into the mirror and seeing only excess. Throughout, I was weighted with bruised limbs-- from being grabbed too hard and pounded too rough against the floor, and broken down doors and cracked cellphones-- which my father threw violently against the wall. I watched the glass shatter and end tables topple down at my mother’s feet, her eyes wide and glassy, her face fallen. Once, I stood naked in a sputtering shower and slammed my fist —twice— into the face of the person I loved the most, leaving him with a haunted eye. Then, I picked a flower from the sky. Throughout, I cried because my father left me, while pretending I was only crying about a sad song. These days no longer belong to me, but the voices are still there. And the ache. And the fear.
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Mar 25, 2015
Mar 25, 2015 at 9:17 PM UTC
Crazy
Once, I bathed in anxiety, soaking it all into my follicles and letting it slide between my bones and through my muscles like ice water. And I reeked. Others couldn’t stand to be around me. I became an inhuman symbol, something robotic and unfeeling. Then, I reached the peak of hypocrisy-- rejected sparkling convention yet was simultaneously enamored with it. I binged on harsh words aimed at diminishing my sense of self. I was a frail, 98-pound girl looking into the mirror and seeing only excess. Throughout, I was weighted with bruised limbs-- from being grabbed too hard and pounded too rough against the floor, and broken down doors and cracked cellphones-- which my father threw violently against the wall. I watched the glass shatter and end tables topple down at my mother’s feet, her eyes wide and glassy, her face fallen. Once, I stood naked in a sputtering shower and slammed my fist —twice— into the face of the person I loved the most, leaving him with a haunted eye. Then, I picked a flower from the sky. Throughout, I cried because my father left me, while pretending I was only crying about a sad song. These days no longer belong to me, but the voices are still there. And the ache. And the fear.
aseh
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Mar 25, 2015
Mar 25, 2015 at 9:17 PM UTC
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