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The stranger in the lavatory mirror puts on a public grin, repeats our name but scrupulously reflects the usual terror.         -“TALE OF A TUB”, SYLVIA PLATH But I, incompetent fool of mortality, have appeared in the mirror as nothing but stretched skin and pained bones with diluted features robbed from ancestors before me. Ah, the recognition of prior greats; it strikes me in the soul, knowing that I will never live to the expectations held before me, dangled above me like raw, dripping veal over the unfed lioness of my heart, plucked away one by one like grapes being fed to Caesar. Appropriate, perhaps; the phrase of “Et tu, Brute?” slips from my disarmed lips far too often. A world of nothing sacred leaves me lost in the swirling cyclone of cracked glass, where fighting only brings deep, jagged lacerations of mind and body with struggling glances of withered reflection, of girl battling demons upon demons on the brink of crippling surrender. Bonded to this body of paper and lead, but filled with notions of ink and poison, the sight has become an old friend, breaking through the fogged haze of glorified reality. Brace me against the past, dear strength, I ask of you, and allow me to plunge beyond this frosted pane, to shatter the veil of uncertainty in a manner to be immortalized for generations of dust to see, to believe, to trust more than the painted smile dancing upon my haunted lips in the belligerent light of the medicine cabinet’s bulbs.
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Oct 14, 2015
Oct 14, 2015 at 9:46 PM UTC
The Looking Glass's Tale
The stranger in the lavatory mirror puts on a public grin, repeats our name but scrupulously reflects the usual terror.         -“TALE OF A TUB”, SYLVIA PLATH But I, incompetent fool of mortality, have appeared in the mirror as nothing but stretched skin and pained bones with diluted features robbed from ancestors before me. Ah, the recognition of prior greats; it strikes me in the soul, knowing that I will never live to the expectations held before me, dangled above me like raw, dripping veal over the unfed lioness of my heart, plucked away one by one like grapes being fed to Caesar. Appropriate, perhaps; the phrase of “Et tu, Brute?” slips from my disarmed lips far too often. A world of nothing sacred leaves me lost in the swirling cyclone of cracked glass, where fighting only brings deep, jagged lacerations of mind and body with struggling glances of withered reflection, of girl battling demons upon demons on the brink of crippling surrender. Bonded to this body of paper and lead, but filled with notions of ink and poison, the sight has become an old friend, breaking through the fogged haze of glorified reality. Brace me against the past, dear strength, I ask of you, and allow me to plunge beyond this frosted pane, to shatter the veil of uncertainty in a manner to be immortalized for generations of dust to see, to believe, to trust more than the painted smile dancing upon my haunted lips in the belligerent light of the medicine cabinet’s bulbs.
the girl in the mirror is me, but I cannot be the girl in the mirror anymore.
emilybridg
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Oct 14, 2015
Oct 14, 2015 at 9:46 PM UTC
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