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A young man with tattoos walked in to the café. He examined two chairs at the empty table in front of me. He cupped his chin with one hand. He silently compared the older chair with the torn, dilapidated seat cushion to the newer chair that still had a black metallic shine. He picked up the beaten chair and carried it to the table behind me to join his friends. That’s how we define ourselves, our class, our place in the world. Some people believe they deserve the best seat in the house. Others believe themselves second class, commoners whose insecurities run rampant. We do it to ourselves. No matter which seat we take, every one of us knows love and hate. We all fight and struggle. We are all unique. We are all the same.
0
May 30, 2015
May 30, 2015 at 3:46 PM UTC
Second Class
A young man with tattoos walked in to the café. He examined two chairs at the empty table in front of me. He cupped his chin with one hand. He silently compared the older chair with the torn, dilapidated seat cushion to the newer chair that still had a black metallic shine. He picked up the beaten chair and carried it to the table behind me to join his friends. That’s how we define ourselves, our class, our place in the world. Some people believe they deserve the best seat in the house. Others believe themselves second class, commoners whose insecurities run rampant. We do it to ourselves. No matter which seat we take, every one of us knows love and hate. We all fight and struggle. We are all unique. We are all the same.
ron-gavalik
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May 30, 2015
May 30, 2015 at 3:46 PM UTC
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