Megan Rose
by Jackie Kramaric
Megan Rose pulls out the rubber band holding up her long gorgeous black hair. She sits in front of her mirror and hums the lullaby her mother would sing to her on rainy days. She pats on her make up, and she becomes the most stunning girl you’ve ever seen.
Except, she only sits there, unsatisfied with her work. She only sees flaws all over. She thinks to herself, “My eyes are dull. My lips are too full. My skin is too dry”. Everyone agrees that she is the most beautiful girl around. They all wish she would, at most, glance in their direction. Men love her. Women admire her. She only stares at her refection with distaste. Every morning she wakes up and takes that rubber band out, sits in front of her mirror, hums that lullaby, and puts her make up on. Every morning she sits and hates her beauty. She wishes she could have the perfect face. She wishes she could love her face. She wishes every morning that she could just be happy. She will never be, because even though she can make your heart beat harder with just one look, she will always wish she was better. And the saddest part of it is that the woman next door wishes the same thing. And the girl down the street and the girl at the store and the girl with the braids and her sister and their mother. Every girl is Megan Rose.
Thursday, July 09, 2009
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18 comments:
Interesting insight into a girl's mind, in her constant hatred of herself, no matter how everyone else perceives her.
jackie, a futile pursuit, that...
A sad way to live. So much pressure to be and look a certain way. I wonder what made her like this? I have a feeling there's a longer story...
Being loved by everyone except by the ones you care is the worst kind of torture anyone can go through.
You've struck a chord with this one.
Great work.
I really like this. I like the twist that comes with realizing that many, most, every girl is, at one point or another, Megan Rose.
This is like searching for that perfect wine, that perfect Megan Rose.
And that is the truth, and what a sad truth it is too. Nice one.
I agree with JR...nice work...
The eye of the beholder - it's all about how beauty is perceived, isn't it? Very well told, Megan.
...and I wonder who or what did this to these little girls? Sadly, too much truth in this one.
Have you seen the documentary America the Beautiful? Reminds me so much of that - the bad self-image no matter what people around her say. Great piece.
An unfortunate truth, well told.
Ah, the torture of vanity. I am so fortunate I ain't got none.
So true of so many young women today - and not so young!!
Men of course have no vanity....er...um...
Four Dinners
Probably someone should tell her she is ugly. Reverse psychology, you know :)
I think thats what I will tell them when I meet them next.
Good choice of subject - a reminder to find liberation from that cycle.
We live in such an image-conscious society and it seems to be the self-esteem of young girls that takes the battering. At what point though does dissatisfaction turn to self-loathing?
That's pretty powerful. Being frozen. Choosing to focus on what is not, rather than what is.
Welcome to The Forties Club!!
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