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she is a narcissist you can find her at 9 o’clock on tuesday nights, taking photos in front of a full length mirror, trying to find a spark of beauty in a life that is more bland than bread without butter, people without mouths, mouths without words (words outside mouths) words fall out of her mouth before she can stop them they are not always hers she stole them from the magazine she reads on sundays, the one that keeps her distracted because monday is back to the real world (school means enemies) she doesn’t make enemies, she chooses them she speaks to a boy once and has a bad impression and for the next three years he somehow manages to make her angry she hates how he looks, how he talks, how he walks how he beats her in an election of popularity he doesn’t know he’s her enemy, but she doesn’t care (if sharing is caring, she will not even breathe the same air as him) air isn’t hard to come by, everyone she doesn’t like has a head full of it everyone she likes also has a head full of it the difference is that half think she’s crazy, and the other half are crazy she has pride in herself (that’s what everyone else thinks) she has daytime insomnia, except instead of not falling asleep, she can’t stay awake in a world of people who think shallow water is safer and shallow minds are better it drives her crazy to think of romantic love (she wants it but i guess she can’t have it) her life is divided by the color of lockers the yellow lockers of her first middle school, the good years, when she was admired by everyone she was smart and charismatic and she was happy in only a way that a bee that has never lost it’s stinger can be (innocent children always change) the red lockers of a second middle school, full of memories she hopes to forget the building where she first learned hatred and hopelessness and how you can never take happiness for granted because there will always be someone to take it away (she was angry at her parents for their uninspired decision to move) the blue lockers of high school, the idea of which kept her going all through the red year where she almost let go of the thin, little, fraying string of a balloon, keeping her barely out of the reach of the sharp nails of the devil’s paradise she ran into blue as she ran away from red’s angry arms, crying for help, crying to be saved, and she was. she saved herself. in blue she found herself away from the miserable creatures red produced, and she could never put a pin quite on how it changed but she fell in love with feeling clean, and she started to look pretty she pulled herself together and woke up each day grateful for the blue lockers that lined the halls of her high school (she worked hard to be narcissistic) she believed she found euphoria she trusts in herself now, but only because she trusted everyone at the beginning (and no one in the middle) her life is divided by the color of lockers when she sees photos of the blue of her new school, she is reminded of the yellow where she was so happy and the red where the walls of the school mirrored what she saw everytime she closed her eyes her mind is a board game, divided by emotional reasoning (i read an article that said that’s dangerous)
0
Jul 19, 2025
Jul 19, 2025 at 5:30 PM UTC
narcissist (hard work)
she is a narcissist you can find her at 9 o’clock on tuesday nights, taking photos in front of a full length mirror, trying to find a spark of beauty in a life that is more bland than bread without butter, people without mouths, mouths without words (words outside mouths) words fall out of her mouth before she can stop them they are not always hers she stole them from the magazine she reads on sundays, the one that keeps her distracted because monday is back to the real world (school means enemies) she doesn’t make enemies, she chooses them she speaks to a boy once and has a bad impression and for the next three years he somehow manages to make her angry she hates how he looks, how he talks, how he walks how he beats her in an election of popularity he doesn’t know he’s her enemy, but she doesn’t care (if sharing is caring, she will not even breathe the same air as him) air isn’t hard to come by, everyone she doesn’t like has a head full of it everyone she likes also has a head full of it the difference is that half think she’s crazy, and the other half are crazy she has pride in herself (that’s what everyone else thinks) she has daytime insomnia, except instead of not falling asleep, she can’t stay awake in a world of people who think shallow water is safer and shallow minds are better it drives her crazy to think of romantic love (she wants it but i guess she can’t have it) her life is divided by the color of lockers the yellow lockers of her first middle school, the good years, when she was admired by everyone she was smart and charismatic and she was happy in only a way that a bee that has never lost it’s stinger can be (innocent children always change) the red lockers of a second middle school, full of memories she hopes to forget the building where she first learned hatred and hopelessness and how you can never take happiness for granted because there will always be someone to take it away (she was angry at her parents for their uninspired decision to move) the blue lockers of high school, the idea of which kept her going all through the red year where she almost let go of the thin, little, fraying string of a balloon, keeping her barely out of the reach of the sharp nails of the devil’s paradise she ran into blue as she ran away from red’s angry arms, crying for help, crying to be saved, and she was. she saved herself. in blue she found herself away from the miserable creatures red produced, and she could never put a pin quite on how it changed but she fell in love with feeling clean, and she started to look pretty she pulled herself together and woke up each day grateful for the blue lockers that lined the halls of her high school (she worked hard to be narcissistic) she believed she found euphoria she trusts in herself now, but only because she trusted everyone at the beginning (and no one in the middle) her life is divided by the color of lockers when she sees photos of the blue of her new school, she is reminded of the yellow where she was so happy and the red where the walls of the school mirrored what she saw everytime she closed her eyes her mind is a board game, divided by emotional reasoning (i read an article that said that’s dangerous)
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Jul 19, 2025
Jul 19, 2025 at 5:30 PM UTC
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