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My birth was christened with a curse but every year those parties were flurries of bon fires and candle sparklers. My feet didn't touch the dance floor it seemed, not once, while the orchestra was playing a whirling dervish of a waltz bangs cropped carefree across the plains of my tanned face, swishing and twirling the knee length pink gown, kicking off pinching white flats to steal across the June-hot grounds only to drift back to father’s feet for another dance. The orchestra packs up, the courtly ladies yawn behind trailing sleeves as I am tucked in my bed of feathered down, only to wake up thirteen years later, with cricks nestled in the tendons of my neck and rickety cramps twitching like the seizure flickering of lightning bugs through my thighs, as dust billows and rises with my shifting in the strange light. Sleeping Beauty wakes up eighty-seven years ahead of schedule in the suburbs, the curse a dud with no prince to sweep her into syrupy swoons with no words to name this coiling, clammy heat, this suffocating musk. I drag my weight through the two-story house, teaching myself a new vocabulary so I can learn to breathe through the ugly fits of orange tinted panic at the spider webbed frailty of magic the kismet pinprick of a spinning wheel and the helpless sighs of my parents, a King and Queen dethroned, overthrown from their untouchable, eternal pedestal. I couldn't dance at my next birthday celebration, when the orchestra was playing a rollicking rondeau, mostly because my hair was too slicked and curled, framing my fickle new skin, sitting and twisting a silk napkin in my lap, ribs locked in the powder blue grip of a whale, resting poised to turn my toes into graceful creatures, ten crippled wood nymphs. To run I would have stumbled, and it was impossible not to notice that while we stood, my eyes grazed the top of father’s thinning, speckled head. I would break his feet with one more dance.
0
Dec 30, 2012
Dec 30, 2012 at 8:24 PM UTC
Sleeping Beauty Wakes Up Suburban
My birth was christened with a curse but every year those parties were flurries of bon fires and candle sparklers. My feet didn't touch the dance floor it seemed, not once, while the orchestra was playing a whirling dervish of a waltz bangs cropped carefree across the plains of my tanned face, swishing and twirling the knee length pink gown, kicking off pinching white flats to steal across the June-hot grounds only to drift back to father’s feet for another dance. The orchestra packs up, the courtly ladies yawn behind trailing sleeves as I am tucked in my bed of feathered down, only to wake up thirteen years later, with cricks nestled in the tendons of my neck and rickety cramps twitching like the seizure flickering of lightning bugs through my thighs, as dust billows and rises with my shifting in the strange light. Sleeping Beauty wakes up eighty-seven years ahead of schedule in the suburbs, the curse a dud with no prince to sweep her into syrupy swoons with no words to name this coiling, clammy heat, this suffocating musk. I drag my weight through the two-story house, teaching myself a new vocabulary so I can learn to breathe through the ugly fits of orange tinted panic at the spider webbed frailty of magic the kismet pinprick of a spinning wheel and the helpless sighs of my parents, a King and Queen dethroned, overthrown from their untouchable, eternal pedestal. I couldn't dance at my next birthday celebration, when the orchestra was playing a rollicking rondeau, mostly because my hair was too slicked and curled, framing my fickle new skin, sitting and twisting a silk napkin in my lap, ribs locked in the powder blue grip of a whale, resting poised to turn my toes into graceful creatures, ten crippled wood nymphs. To run I would have stumbled, and it was impossible not to notice that while we stood, my eyes grazed the top of father’s thinning, speckled head. I would break his feet with one more dance.
liz-2
Written by
American
Dec 30, 2012
Dec 30, 2012 at 8:24 PM UTC
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