Sins sit on my shoulders. At first, I think they are just dust; I try to sweep them off with a light brush. Then I realize they are freckles, blankly staring at me, dirtying my clear, alabaster skin. As I run my fingertips over them, I find them feeling rough like sandpaper or cement bricks. I try to dig my nails underneath, attempting to prop them up the same way I would with an easel and a picture or an ottoman and my feet. They are difficult to peel, though, and I find that it takes a great struggle. When I finally rip the sins off, I toss them up in the air, allowing them to float around as I breathe in heavily, sighing and relaxing, thanking God's speed. I forget, though, that those freckles float and sail like nomads, wishing to come down a couple inches and find themselves again on me. I flinch and sway, trying to keep most of them away. But I become careless after a time, and welcome one or two over to lay. Back again on my shoulders, back again come my fears, once again I must pick and pull, once again I look like a fool. I acknowledge the distrust that I lay in God's lap. I see how my promises highlight my acts of disobey. These sins on my shoulders restlessly play as my fingers are scratching, scratching away.