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She sits—left leg upon right, right hand resting in left, eyes closed, watching joy drift among sorrows; up one minute, down the next; a Ferris wheel of fear and loneliness, then moments of letting go; the brows furrowed and then a smile on her lips—the way a cellist emotes herself through Bach. Others have said to her that she is lucky to be so groundless, to be free of any misapprehension that life is perfect or that it will be easy. She knows better than that. And because she does, she can take the crests and the troughs as they come— a part of the ocean and not the wave.
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Jun 3, 2015
Jun 3, 2015 at 1:56 PM UTC
Groundlessness
She sits—left leg upon right, right hand resting in left, eyes closed, watching joy drift among sorrows; up one minute, down the next; a Ferris wheel of fear and loneliness, then moments of letting go; the brows furrowed and then a smile on her lips—the way a cellist emotes herself through Bach. Others have said to her that she is lucky to be so groundless, to be free of any misapprehension that life is perfect or that it will be easy. She knows better than that. And because she does, she can take the crests and the troughs as they come— a part of the ocean and not the wave.
alyson-lie
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Jun 3, 2015
Jun 3, 2015 at 1:56 PM UTC
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