This is a poem about what I see when I look in the mirror, compared to what others see when they look at me.
When
I
look
in
the
mirror,
I
see
brown
hair
with
her
bangs
pulled
out
of
he
face.
I
see
chapped
lips,
and
braces
sitting
on
top
of
straight
teeth.
She’s
normally
wearing
a
T-shirt,
ripped
blue
jeans,
a
sweater,
Ughs,
and
she
doesn’t
wear
makeup.
When
I
look
in
the
mirror,
I
see
a
six
year
old
girl,
smiling.
Yet
she
is
sad.
She’s
sad
because
she
is
all
alone,
and
nobody
understands
her.
She
has
friends,
and
a
family
who
loves
her.
But
I
suppose
every
six
year
old
girl
is
never
satisfied.
When
someone
else
looks
at
this
girl,
they
see
a
teenager.
A
very
small,
and
happy
teenager,
who
wears
a
huge
sweater
for
comfort,
rather
than
to
hide
herself.
They
don’t
look
at
her
eyes
but
instead
they
see
a
bright
smile
full
of
happiness.
Maybe
they
don’t
even
see
her
at
all.
Maybe
the
six
year
old
girl’s
smile
is
her
invisibility
cloak.
Her
smile,
sweater,
ripped
jeans,
T-shirt
and
Ugh’s
are
meant
to
hide
her
from
the
world.
All
but
her
hair,
which
is
pulled
back
from
her
eyes
so
that
maybe
one
person
in
the
world
will
look
at
them
and
see
the
sad
little
girl.
Maybe
if
she
keeps
her
hair
back,
just
one
person
will
see
her
for
how
she
really
feels,
and
who
I
truly
am.
Amber, the feelings you describe in your poem, are universal. Myself, I'm 43 years old, and the image that is reflected in my mind is, nothing like that others see, of me. In my case, its very dark and destructive. Hopefully, in time, the two images will merged into one. Thank you, sharing this very personal side of you.