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#herstory
In a society, There’s a tree called misogyny, Where its deep roots Grow into all girls, Who develop in agony, Facing judgment that feels relentless, Much of it unspoken, a harsh irony. This judgment seeps into our daily strife, Trapping us within roles that limit our life. Narrow expectations stifle our dreams, While society’s pressure bursts at the seams. We’re told how to act, what to say and wear, As if our true selves are too much to bear. Dreams of freedom fuel our inner symphony, A quest to end this cycle of regulatory authority. She bears the weight of expectations, A load shaped by herstory’s complications. With a heavy heart, she watched the tragedy, As blame is passed down through each family. Inheriting struggles, a cycle we see, Each woman’s journey marked by disparity. Disappointments linger, like shadows they stay, A legacy of women woven in silence and gray. The silence among women she cherished felt heavy, An unspoken vow that let men be merry Free from their own responsibility, Caught in a system that kept them confined, With “They didn’t know better” echoing in mind. Hiding complicity in voices suppressed, In a world where their wisdom was rarely expressed. Each story unspoken, a weight they all share, Navigating life with caution and care. Yet deep in their hearts lies a yearning to be, More than the shadows of what they could see. In the silence, a strength that quietly grows, A call for the change that each woman knows.
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Nov 10, 2024
Nov 10, 2024 at 8:58 PM UTC
Roots of Misogyny
In a society, There’s a tree called misogyny, Where its deep roots Grow into all girls, Who develop in agony, Facing judgment that feels relentless, Much of it unspoken, a harsh irony. This judgment seeps into our daily strife, Trapping us within roles that limit our life. Narrow expectations stifle our dreams, While society’s pressure bursts at the seams. We’re told how to act, what to say and wear, As if our true selves are too much to bear. Dreams of freedom fuel our inner symphony, A quest to end this cycle of regulatory authority. She bears the weight of expectations, A load shaped by herstory’s complications. With a heavy heart, she watched the tragedy, As blame is passed down through each family. Inheriting struggles, a cycle we see, Each woman’s journey marked by disparity. Disappointments linger, like shadows they stay, A legacy of women woven in silence and gray. The silence among women she cherished felt heavy, An unspoken vow that let men be merry Free from their own responsibility, Caught in a system that kept them confined, With “They didn’t know better” echoing in mind. Hiding complicity in voices suppressed, In a world where their wisdom was rarely expressed. Each story unspoken, a weight they all share, Navigating life with caution and care. Yet deep in their hearts lies a yearning to be, More than the shadows of what they could see. In the silence, a strength that quietly grows, A call for the change that each woman knows.
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36
She is sitting on the couch, and telling her story. I am listening. She tells a story of herself. Crying and smiling. My tears are falling down. But I am jotting down.   She makes me  cup of coffee. And sits down to finish her story. She tells about a girl, with long hair. She was ugly, but became pretty. Her mom was rude. But she was kind. She was ... At last she finished her story. My notebook was with full of tears, and with full of emotions she told me . She told me not to tell her story to anyone. And I kept her words.
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Aug 29, 2020
Aug 29, 2020 at 12:54 PM UTC
HER STORY
I look at the mirror to only find her staring back, she who's mastered the art of smiling and to hide those stray tear tracks. Silence is her weapon of choice, it's edgy tip enough to raise dread, in face of her frosty ire, one would prefer the bursts of temper instead. Like the duck that paddles in calm, she too rests surrounded by muck and underneath, her fury churns, ready to blast it all to dust, She's picked up every insult, stored it in a corner to recollect and designs her story of vindication ripping apart every shred of regret. Her hands are coated in blood of the desires that she choked to death she has emerged strong from battles and slayed monsters who rest under her bed. The dirt underneath her nails should tell you the moral of her story, she is not deterred by pain, she is not enamored by false glory. I see her staring back at me, and raise her chin in pride, her scars wave the sign of victory, I only need to follow in stride.
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Aug 13, 2020
Aug 13, 2020 at 9:52 AM UTC
She
For her art was all the colors, Present in the makeup pallete, Erasing her pain like cleansers, And making her life go all set, So ready to be brushed up with some makeup, To meet with her all time pain healer, By letting her face go through a little scrub, She covered all the dark secrets like a concealer, She had a past darker than her smokey eyes, With eyeshadow blended so perfectly, She looked so pretty and wise, Killing people with her charm and spectacularity, By using her lipstick dipped in blood red, And like a sharp weapon she carried her contoured face, With her lashes so widespread, She turned into a strong woman who got over all her depressing days. -Faeza Kazim
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Jul 8, 2016
Jul 8, 2016 at 4:05 PM UTC
Makeup lovers
they say in history, behind every great man there’s an even greater woman. so think of it like this: do you know who marcia lucas is? it’s okay if you don’t. there’s a reason for that, until a few months ago i didn’t know her name either. but you probably know who george lucas is. biographer dale ******* once said that marcia, george lucas's first wife who he was married to throughout the production of the original trilogy, was his “secret weapon." and the operative word in that sentence is secret. because i have been watching star wars for just about as long as i can remember; growing up, my brother and i owned not only half a dozen plastic lightsabers and a box set of both trilogies, but my dad even likes to mimic yoda’s voice and speech patterns when he gives me motivational life talks. but i never once learned marcia lucas's name. i know star wars super fans who can spout out more trivia about wedge antilles, an x-wing pilot with 2.5 total minutes of screen time in the entire saga, than marcia lucas, the women who edited the film together into the cultural phenomenon we know. marcia lucas is the woman who edited starwars from a mess into a masterpiece. the woman who has be described as the “warmth and heart of the films” who carved out her husband's characters into people and developed with much of emotional resolution of the series, coming up with the idea of killing off ben kenobi when george lucas couldn’t resolve the plot line himself. her fingerprints are all over these movies, she shaped these stories and us with them yet we never talk about her hands cutting the film. the woman who edited the scene where luke skywalker destroys the death star from a 45 minutes crawl into the fast-paced moment when the good guys win, the woman who sewed together the magic we watched on our screens is nothing more than a footnote in the credits. she has been erased from the narrative. and as i write this poem, i know that only some of you will never think of this name again. and if you do it will probably be as trivia, a fact to spout in a conversation about george lucas or while you pop in a new hope into the DVD. but sometimes you have to think about how many people’s lives end up on the cutting room floor. they say in history, behind every great man there’s an even greater woman. margaret hamilton is the lead software engineer whose work took apollo 11 to the moon. do you know her name? you know the man on the moon but not the woman who put him there. sybil ludington road twice as far as paul revere to warn the local militia of the oncoming british attack, fending off a band of highway robbers as she did. do you know her name? long before little richard and chuck berry were ever even strumming at their guitars, sister rosetta tharpe was pioneering a genre with the first album ever labeled as rock’n’roll. do you know her name?   rose mccoy wrote the words to the song “i beg of you” that elvis presley crooned, along with countless more that other people sang. do you know her name? do you know any of their names? maybe spotlights cast more shadows than they give off light. we are a culture of people who forget everything out of sight. they say in history, behind every great man there’s an even greater woman. we just... don't know her name, no one ever bothered to teach us her name. no one was supposed to. history is not always about who you remember, sometimes it is about who you forget.
0
Apr 9, 2016
Apr 9, 2016 at 11:57 PM UTC
do you know her name?
they say in history, behind every great man there’s an even greater woman. so think of it like this: do you know who marcia lucas is? it’s okay if you don’t. there’s a reason for that, until a few months ago i didn’t know her name either. but you probably know who george lucas is. biographer dale ******* once said that marcia, george lucas's first wife who he was married to throughout the production of the original trilogy, was his “secret weapon." and the operative word in that sentence is secret. because i have been watching star wars for just about as long as i can remember; growing up, my brother and i owned not only half a dozen plastic lightsabers and a box set of both trilogies, but my dad even likes to mimic yoda’s voice and speech patterns when he gives me motivational life talks. but i never once learned marcia lucas's name. i know star wars super fans who can spout out more trivia about wedge antilles, an x-wing pilot with 2.5 total minutes of screen time in the entire saga, than marcia lucas, the women who edited the film together into the cultural phenomenon we know. marcia lucas is the woman who edited starwars from a mess into a masterpiece. the woman who has be described as the “warmth and heart of the films” who carved out her husband's characters into people and developed with much of emotional resolution of the series, coming up with the idea of killing off ben kenobi when george lucas couldn’t resolve the plot line himself. her fingerprints are all over these movies, she shaped these stories and us with them yet we never talk about her hands cutting the film. the woman who edited the scene where luke skywalker destroys the death star from a 45 minutes crawl into the fast-paced moment when the good guys win, the woman who sewed together the magic we watched on our screens is nothing more than a footnote in the credits. she has been erased from the narrative. and as i write this poem, i know that only some of you will never think of this name again. and if you do it will probably be as trivia, a fact to spout in a conversation about george lucas or while you pop in a new hope into the DVD. but sometimes you have to think about how many people’s lives end up on the cutting room floor. they say in history, behind every great man there’s an even greater woman. margaret hamilton is the lead software engineer whose work took apollo 11 to the moon. do you know her name? you know the man on the moon but not the woman who put him there. sybil ludington road twice as far as paul revere to warn the local militia of the oncoming british attack, fending off a band of highway robbers as she did. do you know her name? long before little richard and chuck berry were ever even strumming at their guitars, sister rosetta tharpe was pioneering a genre with the first album ever labeled as rock’n’roll. do you know her name?   rose mccoy wrote the words to the song “i beg of you” that elvis presley crooned, along with countless more that other people sang. do you know her name? do you know any of their names? maybe spotlights cast more shadows than they give off light. we are a culture of people who forget everything out of sight. they say in history, behind every great man there’s an even greater woman. we just... don't know her name, no one ever bothered to teach us her name. no one was supposed to. history is not always about who you remember, sometimes it is about who you forget.
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81
do you know island, that you are and have always been thriving on the life that you give yourself? unmoored you are not. you are about as adrift as the coral reefs that ring your most sun drenched shorelines your history shouldered with love - you are rife with a certain heaviness that weighs in a fastening balance, a brilliant strategy in cahoots with all the others it is true, of course that we commune with the same sun the waters drift between us and our neighbors many of the same clouds are found sauntering amongst our respective mountains but you - you are filled with your own stories they are still echoing, incantations deeply canonized from within those temples you call forests your very own cosmology that you yourself are only beginning to discover
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Aug 17, 2014
Aug 17, 2014 at 9:29 PM UTC
III
H I S , T O R Y. From the Greek word histōr; Learned, wise man. Need I say more?
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Aug 8, 2014
Aug 8, 2014 at 2:54 AM UTC
The Mentality