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When my daughter asks me to French braid her hair I will smile with my eyes and tell her to sit criss-cross applesauce on her bedroom carpet, letting silk tresses flow down her back, beckoning to be weaved into everything I still do not know how to tell her I will paint her the colors of the past upon the beaming canvases of her eyes, the colors of Matisse, and Monet, Rembrandt’s best, I will teach her to find devotion in the security of her own skin, music in the way she weeps quietly to herself when she gives away all her love to a world who cannot accept it And one day, long after the braids have been released, I will wipe away her tears and tell her that the masquerade is over, that sometimes, baby girl, the festivities will hush but the carnival always comes around again in the summer She nods with inherited apprehension, she does not believe me Darling, my darling, you do take after your mother after all
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Jan 11, 2016
Jan 11, 2016 at 9:03 PM UTC
Little Lessons
When my daughter asks me to French braid her hair I will smile with my eyes and tell her to sit criss-cross applesauce on her bedroom carpet, letting silk tresses flow down her back, beckoning to be weaved into everything I still do not know how to tell her I will paint her the colors of the past upon the beaming canvases of her eyes, the colors of Matisse, and Monet, Rembrandt’s best, I will teach her to find devotion in the security of her own skin, music in the way she weeps quietly to herself when she gives away all her love to a world who cannot accept it And one day, long after the braids have been released, I will wipe away her tears and tell her that the masquerade is over, that sometimes, baby girl, the festivities will hush but the carnival always comes around again in the summer She nods with inherited apprehension, she does not believe me Darling, my darling, you do take after your mother after all
mooopsy
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Jan 11, 2016
Jan 11, 2016 at 9:03 PM UTC
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