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The Mirror
I look in the mirror, tears rolling down my face, looking at the girl staring back at me.
I can feel her sadness and confusion on why I can’t love her, why I can’t even accept her.
When I look at her all I see is her appearance: horrid and disgusting.
When I look at her all I see is her failures: grades, fights, and sins.
She cries out for me to see more in her than that, that she’s a daughter, a sister, a partner, and a person.
She cries as I drown out her voice with my own telling me to change everything about her.
The mirror might as well crack and disfigure, it has no purpose because I can’t see what’s there, I can only see my own disfigured version.
The mirror might as well not exist, it’s not like I trust it when I occasionally see the beauty in her.
I can’t see all the faces that had loved each other for me to get here, or the love from others for me.
I wait impatiently for the day I can look at her and say she’s beautiful just the way she is.
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This poem was written to show the inner battle of myself and others of living with body image issues and the relationship you have with yourself.