too often we see the battered bodies of childhood or teenagedom. sacrificed on the pyre, in order to light a burning blaze to a rosy future. set them alight, work them to the bone, hoping that you will be transfigured when you pass through the door to adulthood. and they never mention that it's all a lie: that tearing yourself to pieces does not mean you will blossom more beautifully that wearing down the colorful edges of shapes that do not fit into rigid holes leaves you with ripped out wings that you can never get back. you think that this time is only good for what comes after it? that golden days are only good as memories or funny stories? you think that growing up means getting better, evolving as it were reaching for better things. and if that's true, then it makes sense to throw the skinny body on the fire let the blood out for the gods of adulthood tell yourself that all the work, that all the pain, will be worth it it has to be worth it you breathe, when tears stain your cheeks and papers swirl like a drowning wave of expectations, that you can never be good enough for. But when you finally trudge up the mountain to lay down on the alter expecting someone different to rise out of the brokenness the gods will only laugh because: the person who you hope will benefit from all of this, the future you, is nothing but a fantasy. and you are broken, bruised, and battered, and must struggle down the hill, alone. we are not butterflies. we do not change our shape. we cannot run from what we put ourselves through we can only bear it.