Monday, November 29, 2010

The Mannequin Nightmare




I fell asleep for a few years and when I had woken up it was to this strange land where happiness and perfection had consumed all. I began seeing the world through flawed eyes. My vision had been tampered with and my perception had deceived me. Everything I had seen wasn’t real. It was just a mirage of everything I wasn’t and could never be. Walking past the mobile mannequins made me afraid of my own reflection. To them, reflection was perfection.








I tried to hide my face, especially my eyes. The hood on my jacket could cover enough of my skin for it to go unnoticed. I was fair. I was ancient and I was cold. I certainly wasn’t this new brand. Petite noses, bright eyes, the perfect shine, and who could eat with a mouth like that? Not them. Their bodies were too perfect to be tampered with. Consumption would 

only result in damage. The beings that walked around me had no demons, no scars, and no marks of any kind. Were they ugly? Not even close. They smiled constantly. They were clearly in their prime. I was distinguished. I had demons. I had scars and certainly a kind of ugliness that was visible to all of them. They wouldn’t look at me. It was as if someone had trained them not to. Why did I have to wake up to this world? I was chosen to be the only different human among billions, but I couldn’t figure out why. I didn’t look, feel, or act like my neighbors yet they never seemed to notice. I never knew mannequins could walk, especially on my street. How long was I sleeping?

It was all in my head. 

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