Coming home from a fair, cusped between your lap a globe of darting eyes, your hands rested atop the thin film of a world as you endlessly peer in. Are you scrying over your future career?
Here a tungsten bulbous body, a chunk of flame, swills itself in spins and mindless dances, as you think you could be so careless like them to live hazily in a framed bubble of treasured youth,
fed by some divine fate looking over you. Golden scales make your skin, binds you as if you were a chocolate in a wrapper for people to circus over– every flicker being edible. Or maybe you're like
those tinned peach slices, posing in a cage for all as a marvel to feast with until you end up rotting, there in your tomb-space, muttering an open mouth, “help me” before they serve you up on a silver-lined dish.
I assure you, you'll forget these childish thoughts of aspirations and dreams sooner than you think: no matter how much you think they want you, I'll bet they'll let yourself drown in coming weeks.
This one's a long one, and I apologise in advance for the kind of depressing topic. What went from the subject of children getting goldfish from a fair (that, as everyone knows, don't last very long) became a critique about the aspect of female sexualization that some girls may grow up to want to employ the use of.