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To Fly
They say,
I’m an angel,
with broken wings.
Green-eyed,
Limpy,
So verminous.
As if my different wings,
Are the justification for their wrongdoing.
They gaze,
At my fragmentary wings
From the sky high above.
As if my different wings,
Are the reminder of their beauty.
They repair,
My dreadful wings
With feathers that don’t belong to me.
Intolerable weight pressured my breaking bones.
They embellish,
My unbearable wings,
With roses fully blooming.
Thorns pierced through my bleeding heart.
They ignore,
With smile,
My vociferous cry of pain.
“But I don’t want feathers.”
“I don’t need roses to ruin my natural wings.”
They tell their children joyously,
This poor thing,
Finally got her complete wings.
They refuse,
To hear,
My subdued whisper of pain.
“But I can always fly.”
“I like my different wings.”
Their children are singing cheerfully,
That poor thing,
Finally got her beautiful wings.
I finally got my beautiful wings.
But why I did lose the ability to fly?
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This poem was initially written fro the prompt "People often have the assumption that disabled people need to be ‘fixed’ in one form or the other. What is your opinion of this?" However, I hope the angel with broken wings can represent everyone with traits, passions, or any characteristics not accepted by the society: we are all able to soar in the sky with our perfectly broken wings.
Will people still take on the role of the unnamed commons in the poem when they see the most ironic side of their actions?