Don’t fold me into someone else’s story.
Don’t pin me to a backdrop
and call it belonging.
I am not a paper doll—
not cut from safe outlines,
not held together by glue and politeness.
I crease,
I bruise,
I breathe.
There are fingerprints in my clay,
heartbeat in my edges.
I have torn and taped myself
more times than I can count,
but each repair made me thicker,
less likely to blow away.
You can’t flatten me anymore.
I am three-dimensional—
messy, warm, real.
Once, I lived along the seams—
edges trimmed to fit
someone else’s idea of gentle.
Smiles drawn on,
arms that only bent one way,
kept upright by the kindness of scissors.
I learned to hold still,
to fold instead of speak.
To look whole, even when hollow.
But paper tears easily—
and one day I did.
Now I am not neat,
not smooth,
not safe for display.
Ink runs where the rain touched me,
and somehow
that’s where I started to feel alive.
No longer paper.
Still fragile,
but mine.

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