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Evidently it was meant to be. Long before I was born my DNA sat on a shelf in God's laboratory, a sticky note attached, name, date of birth, perhaps a tiny alarm to notify the lab of inception. God doesn't lose things and God doesn’t forget. It must be for a reason and it must be meant to be. A critical piece of who I am. I should show a little pride because as they say God don't make no ****** But I’m a little late to the party.. *The party that celebrates those who choose to be identified by a gender other than the one they were born with, but shames anyone who struggles with substance abuse.* I'm having trouble understanding the difference. If I were to gather my drug addled friends and march down the street with banners and signs demanding the right to openly inject mind altering substances into my veins I would be seen as a criminal and a derelict even though my constant struggle came right off the shelf of God’s laboratory where my sticky noted DNA sat right next to yours. I guess I shouldn't care what people think.. I know my rights, and I demand to be accepted, NO, praised for coming out so bravely, carrying a new flag, flaunting in the streets, paving the way for future generations of addicts. I will take my God given DNA out of the dark and go out into light, light so bright you'll be forced to accept it. accept my sickness! embrace it! this is in my DNA, God made me this way so it must be ok. I feel better now. I no longer feel guilty, or depressed, or weak, or wrong, or immoral, No longer do I need to contain it. no longer do I need to be shamed. I am an addict and I am beautiful. Just like you.
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Oct 19, 2018
Oct 19, 2018 at 12:34 PM UTC
Comparing DNA
Evidently it was meant to be. Long before I was born my DNA sat on a shelf in God's laboratory, a sticky note attached, name, date of birth, perhaps a tiny alarm to notify the lab of inception. God doesn't lose things and God doesn’t forget. It must be for a reason and it must be meant to be. A critical piece of who I am. I should show a little pride because as they say God don't make no ****** But I’m a little late to the party.. *The party that celebrates those who choose to be identified by a gender other than the one they were born with, but shames anyone who struggles with substance abuse.* I'm having trouble understanding the difference. If I were to gather my drug addled friends and march down the street with banners and signs demanding the right to openly inject mind altering substances into my veins I would be seen as a criminal and a derelict even though my constant struggle came right off the shelf of God’s laboratory where my sticky noted DNA sat right next to yours. I guess I shouldn't care what people think.. I know my rights, and I demand to be accepted, NO, praised for coming out so bravely, carrying a new flag, flaunting in the streets, paving the way for future generations of addicts. I will take my God given DNA out of the dark and go out into light, light so bright you'll be forced to accept it. accept my sickness! embrace it! this is in my DNA, God made me this way so it must be ok. I feel better now. I no longer feel guilty, or depressed, or weak, or wrong, or immoral, No longer do I need to contain it. no longer do I need to be shamed. I am an addict and I am beautiful. Just like you.
The stigma of addiction is as strong as ever. I apologize to my LGBTQ friends for any offense taken to this poem. No offense is intended rather food for thought. I have often wondered why society dictates what is politically correct and what is not... and where good old fashioned morals fit in, and how something that at one time was so right can now be so wrong, and vice versa.
v_V_v
Written by
62/M/American
Oct 19, 2018
Oct 19, 2018 at 12:34 PM UTC
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