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They say that offspring resembles the breeders both physically and mentally but when I  speak their faces darken and when they speak I get upset. I resemble them physically but you can not tell that I am their daughter if you look at us mentally. Every conversation is a battle. My father is the textbook conservative. Pro-life and pro-guns Anti-gay and microagressive. How am I his daughter? My mother is a follower. A doe to her deer. A foe in my fears. How am I her daughter? Standing 5 foot 8 in a pair of slacks instead of a dress there's me. The feminist. The human rights activist. My father calls me a communist. My mother thinks I'm crazy. I'm not a communist but a libertarian. Funny how that's confused. I march on in my combat boots. My mother disapproving. My father asking me if I just came back from a Pearl Jam concert. I march on with my feminist ways. Spreading the word of equality as often as I can. Telling the micro-aggressors to stop. Questioning the Christians and the anti-gays. I march on with my sense of style. I don't care if I don't look feminine today. I don't feel feminine today. My mother's shaming me in the distance. I march on with my tattoos and choppy hair. My mother crying and my father angry. They are anti-tattoo and anti-individualistic. I don't deserve their shame. I march on with who I am. Because although I am their offspring they can not change who I am. No matter how hard they try.
0
Jun 3, 2014
Jun 3, 2014 at 10:49 PM UTC
offspring
They say that offspring resembles the breeders both physically and mentally but when I  speak their faces darken and when they speak I get upset. I resemble them physically but you can not tell that I am their daughter if you look at us mentally. Every conversation is a battle. My father is the textbook conservative. Pro-life and pro-guns Anti-gay and microagressive. How am I his daughter? My mother is a follower. A doe to her deer. A foe in my fears. How am I her daughter? Standing 5 foot 8 in a pair of slacks instead of a dress there's me. The feminist. The human rights activist. My father calls me a communist. My mother thinks I'm crazy. I'm not a communist but a libertarian. Funny how that's confused. I march on in my combat boots. My mother disapproving. My father asking me if I just came back from a Pearl Jam concert. I march on with my feminist ways. Spreading the word of equality as often as I can. Telling the micro-aggressors to stop. Questioning the Christians and the anti-gays. I march on with my sense of style. I don't care if I don't look feminine today. I don't feel feminine today. My mother's shaming me in the distance. I march on with my tattoos and choppy hair. My mother crying and my father angry. They are anti-tattoo and anti-individualistic. I don't deserve their shame. I march on with who I am. Because although I am their offspring they can not change who I am. No matter how hard they try.
emotionallyunresponsivepoetry
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Jun 3, 2014
Jun 3, 2014 at 10:49 PM UTC
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