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Seen

  Some days I swear

  I am the protagonist

  of a story no one bothered to read.

  I drag myself through the scenes,

  hit my marks, say my lines,

  and still the spotlight slides

  just left of me—

  as if even the light

  is embarrassed to look directly.

  I want to be seen.

  God, I want to be seen.

  Not in the way people glance

  to confirm I’m still functioning,

  still moving,

  still “fine.”

  I mean seen—

  like someone tilts their head

  and suddenly all my cracks

  start to make sense.

  Like my jagged edges

  aren’t proof of failure

  but evidence of survival.

  But every role I play

  feels rehearsed in someone else’s voice.

  Every attempt at greatness

  ends up lopsided,

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  unfinished,

  a little ugly around the edges—

  like a painting done in the dark

  with trembling hands

  and no one waiting to see it.

  I keep showing up,

  even when the script goes blank,

  even when the costume doesn’t fit,

  even when the mirror says:

  Not enough. Not this time. Try again.

  And maybe that’s the quiet tragedy—

  or the quiet power—

  of being the main character

  in a life that rarely looks cinematic.

  I don’t get glamorous breakdowns.

  I get the kind where you hold your breath

  in the bathroom stall

  and pretend it’s allergies.

  I don’t get triumphant comebacks.

  I get alarm clocks

  and bills

  and the slow crawl of trying again

  even when everything in me

  is begging to stay still.

  But I show up.

  Even unfinished.

  Even ugly.

  Even on the days I am a draft

  of a person I’m still revising.

  And maybe, one day,

  someone will see me—

  not the performance,

  not the composure,

  not the almost—but me.

  And they’ll say:

  There you are.

  I’ve been looking for you.

  Until then,

  I keep walking my scenes,

  keep holding my place,

  keep living this imperfect life

  like it’s worthy of witnesses—

  because gods,

  I want to be seen.

  And maybe that wanting

  is its own kind of bravery.

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