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My Rag Doll
Her eyes linger on the emptiness of time,
 Scratched by age and
 Tormented by loneliness.
 Skin pale, dead, like that of a model’s
 After beauty’s touch rottens
 Like rust over steel.
 Hair wired,
 Forgotten and left
 To tend to itself.
 Stranded, in a time where
 She was once loved,
 My ragdoll grins
 With an air of desperation
 And solitude.
 
 No uglier creature than she,
 She resembles an aged rose
 With petals fallen 
 And left with nothing
 But her thorns.
 
 My rag doll does not compare to any 
 Of my other porcelain beauties
 With lush hair and frilly dresses.
 My rag doll is ugly,
 Her features broken by the shortage of love she hungered for.
 
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”
 
 I scream over and over
 Like a rhythmic chant,
 Engraving it into her brain,
 Her heart,
 Her bones,
 And every other worthless part of her.
 
 I repeat, over and over,
 Vainly hoping that grin with disappear
 And her dead eyes will flood like a 
 Broken dam.
 
 Over and over,
 I scream, shout, stomp.
 Yelling,
 Over and over.
 
 Her appearances pain me,
 Make my eyes cringe,
 My eyebrows faint,
 And my tongue electric with
 Venom ready to spit out.
 
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”
 
 My face turns lemon dipped
 As I force words at her,
 Each word slowly ripping at her rough skin,
 Opening wounds,
 Leaving scars and bruises.
 With every sentence
 I engulf more of her,
 Leaving nothing but self-loathing.
 
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”
 
 Left behind in my
 Long lost memory,
 I am buried behind 
 Desperation
 Insanity and
 Anger.
 Always anger.
 
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”
 
 I leave her behind,
 Her grin as strong as before,
 Not fading,
 No matter my efforts.
 
 She lives rent free in my mind
 Her grin slicing into every thought I have.
 I think of her,
 Alone in her corner,
 Different,
 Strange,
 Ugly.
 
 But once I leave my asylum
 My eyes fall dark as well
 As my face folds
 Into a grin almost too familiar to me
 As I take the place of my ragdoll
 And get asked the same question as she.
 
 “Why aren’t you beautiful?”

