Sunday, February 11, 2024

Purple Clouds

 

                                                                 

 

 

Purple Clouds

 

            Time tempted my demons, but they wouldn’t leave.  I’m used to them carving meaning and twisting the soul around the heart.  My skin turned red from heat and anger—and there were always purple clouds on my skinny thighs.  I rubbed them, pain.

             The clouds came in different places. Some of them from sadness, some of them from failure, but I told myself that I was a poor girl and that’s all I needed to know.  My mother brushed my long golden hair until it conformed to being straight, not wanting to be tangled in any other mess.  I caused all sorts of problems.  In fact, many in the town called me a demon because my real mother left me in the yard by the sprinkler, and I went to the drunk’s house first.  Of course, I do not recall such an event at two-years-old, but they gave my mom a bottle. 

            When people contain only small favors of fortune, they try to flaunt what little they have.  For me, that meant that I didn’t get to play with the normal, Christian kids.  One of the teachers kept her diamond strict eyes on me, the sinner.  She never told me exactly why God thought I was from Hell when babies are innocent, and Jesus loves children.  I’ve read the Bible many times.  Tons of words meant nothing to the situation.

            School felt like a torture ground, even early on. The kids ran around me in a blur, and at first, I joined in and danced.  They threw me down and laughed. How stupid I was to join them, to think I could belong to more than a lifetime of suffering?

            I got up from the bench and walked up to the tree, “Just giving you my respect.” I climbed up to the top, until I shook from fear, the small branches, and twigs.  The wind wove in and out of this world, gracing my eyes.  I glanced up and saw the sun, too bright. The branch cracked, and I fell straight to the ground next to the sprinkler. 

            The fall had knocked the wind out of me.  I gasped for air, begging it to come to its place.

            My senses blurred, still not adjusted to the sky.  They came into focus slowly. 

            A long time ago, with my grandma, I remembered happier times.  She put me on her lap, and she’d throw me into the air and catch me.  She called me her Sun Bee because of how much I liked to be in the garden with life.  Life came in all kinds of hues, she said.  Some of them believe they needed to be bold, they needed to be strong, but some wanted to simply be beautiful.

            “Now don’t be fooled by all colors and promises, in this world.  You shouldn’t chase after a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.  Only fools do that, suffering fools, honey.”

            I smiled and opened my eyes again.  I swear I saw her in heaven, giving me a lesson from so far above the mortals’ world. 

           

 So far and filled with white clouds.

           

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