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#intergenerationalpain
They birthed us into metal, not light or even air, but heat lamps and screaming steel, the floor already coated in yesterday’s version of ourselves. We were slick and blinking, wet with newness, and still they stamped us: Product of tradition. Best before death. Hands in latex gloves cooed lullabies while scraping placenta from the drain. They taught us to crawl between cleavers, to smile when we were handled, to hold still when the slicing came because it’s not personal, because they love us, because their hands hurt too. They shoved their trauma down our throats before we grew teeth. Force-fed us their coping mechanisms like communion bite-sized bitterness they called resilience. Swallow it. Say thank you. We didn’t know any better. Meat doesn’t ask why. Meat just learns to stay warm and pretend the hook isn’t coming. They called the bleeding becoming. Called the bruises bad days. and the conveyor destiny. We rotted in place, but they sprayed us down, made us presentable; vacuum-sealed smiles, shrink-wrapped hope. The air always smelled like bleach and denial. Some of us tried to scream but by then our mouths were already full stuffed with apologies, with other people’s f*cking expectations, with the same dull knives they said they “survived” with. And when we flinched, they told us we were lucky. Lucky we weren’t born into fire. Lucky they only carved out what they couldn’t understand in themselves. Love, they said, was just the sound of the band saw getting closer. No more, no less. And still - We line up. We inherit the gloves. We raise our children beneath the same heat lamps, and pretend it’s destiny.
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Aug 8, 2025
Aug 8, 2025 at 12:27 AM UTC
The Tenderizing
They birthed us into metal, not light or even air, but heat lamps and screaming steel, the floor already coated in yesterday’s version of ourselves. We were slick and blinking, wet with newness, and still they stamped us: Product of tradition. Best before death. Hands in latex gloves cooed lullabies while scraping placenta from the drain. They taught us to crawl between cleavers, to smile when we were handled, to hold still when the slicing came because it’s not personal, because they love us, because their hands hurt too. They shoved their trauma down our throats before we grew teeth. Force-fed us their coping mechanisms like communion bite-sized bitterness they called resilience. Swallow it. Say thank you. We didn’t know any better. Meat doesn’t ask why. Meat just learns to stay warm and pretend the hook isn’t coming. They called the bleeding becoming. Called the bruises bad days. and the conveyor destiny. We rotted in place, but they sprayed us down, made us presentable; vacuum-sealed smiles, shrink-wrapped hope. The air always smelled like bleach and denial. Some of us tried to scream but by then our mouths were already full stuffed with apologies, with other people’s f*cking expectations, with the same dull knives they said they “survived” with. And when we flinched, they told us we were lucky. Lucky we weren’t born into fire. Lucky they only carved out what they couldn’t understand in themselves. Love, they said, was just the sound of the band saw getting closer. No more, no less. And still - We line up. We inherit the gloves. We raise our children beneath the same heat lamps, and pretend it’s destiny.
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