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Far, Far Away
There once was a girl
who looked around her
and saw people laughing
and smiling together, but
she was not one of them.
The world was grey from where she stood;
she couldn't figure out where
everyone else was buying
their rose-colored glasses.
She tried smiling, it faded.
She tried joining in, they
turned their backs.
She tried not letting it bother her,
but the loneliness broke her heart,
and the pain leaked out on the inside.
So from her grey mountain
she stared down at the golden city
of happy people.
The more she looked,
the darker the hilltop grew,
the harder it was to feel
okay.
So in a blind silent heartache,
she turned her head away from the people
and looked up to the sky.
There, everything was a
bright, nice, sky, blue.
It was a blank space;
there was no one who could
exclude her or
make her feel small.
So she began to imagine new people
with nice, smiling eyes;
kind people who accepted,
lovers who wouldn't leave.
She sang songs with her new friends,
played games and planned futures.
She spent all of her time
up in that sky,
and looked down only
when she had to.
Her mountain was no longer grey;
it was bleached, lifeless,
with no spirit left.
She kept her head up high,
and for once she felt okay.
Down in the city, the happy citizens
forgot about her friendship,
took it for granted that she
didn't want them.
One day, the girl's neck snapped
from looking up for so long.
It fell from her shoulders,
tumbled from the hill,
rolled into the street;
her real people
never blinked an eye.
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