This week's Trifecta Challenge was the word freak:
1
a : a sudden and odd or seemingly pointless idea or turn of the mind
b : a seemingly capricious action or event
2
archaic : a whimsical quality or disposition
: one that is markedly unusual or abnormal: as
a : a person or animal having a physical oddity and appearing in a circus sideshow
b slang (1) : a sexual deviate (2) : a person who uses an illicit drug
c : hippie
d : an
atypical postage stamp usually caused by a unique defect in paper (as a
crease) or a unique event in the manufacturing process (as a speck of
dirt on the plate) that does not produce a constant or systematic effect
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I’m a freak, an anomaly, an accident that wasn’t intended. I’ve
accepted this as my place in the universe. Most everybody who has ever
encountered me has considered me damaged and not worth much at all. I’ve been sneered
at, a nose has been turned up at me a time or two. I’ve been passed around and
discarded more times than I care to admit. That can damage somebody’s psyche
just a bit.
It’s not my fault I was made this way. I had no say in the
matter. If I had I definitely wouldn’t have been this. I didn’t choose this.
And if I had? If I had made the conscious decision to be this way, would that
have really made a difference? You’ll think what you want to think about who I
am. I can’t ever change your mind.
And I’m okay with that because someone, just one person saw
past what everybody else saw as something that was wrong with me, and saw that
thing as special. Then I started to see it too. Then I believed it. That very
thing that people saw as ugly was the what made me unique, different, and in
its own special way, beautiful. I got put on display for the world to see and thrived through my defect, because of it.
Call me what you want to call me. I don’t care anymore. Because
I know the truth, I can see it plainly. Call me all the names they’ve ever
called, an error, a freak, an oddity. I may be an EFO, but that makes me
valuable. I know my worth now and so does he.
So I took this challenge a little literally. I decided that the narrator of the piece should be a stamp that is considered a freak (definition 3d). Stamp freaks are errors in the printing process, I just learned. Some of them can be quite rare and valuable, but only if they go through the actual mail first. I decided to use this as an allegory for any one who is devalued by our society. People with genetic conditions, disorders, cerebral palsy, shunts, or even gay people who have been told they are limited, or not worth anyone's time, need to have or should have someone in their lives who know they are special and loves them for who they are. If you don't have that in your life, call me and I'll tell you you're worth something, give you a hug or tell you that you're loved.I'm a mother. I've got an endless supply of motherly love that would needs to be shared.
19 comments:
Great message. I think everyone has felt like this for one reason or another.
that was brave: I had never even heard to the stamp definition and you used to well.
I was hoping someone would use this definition. You did a great job with the prompt.
Thanks for the great feedback.
Awesome job tackling a strange definition and giving it a unique spin (:
I like the POV of the stamp. I thought that definition was the most difficult...great job on the story!
I love the direction you took this piece, and the message you shared.
I was hoping someone would use the stamp definition. I think you did a good job making it real and relating it to a broader message.
I took the same definition as you. I like the way you spoke from the POV of the stamp. It is interesting that the oddity is what makes it interesting.
Important message here, and cleverly done. We all need to feel we are valued. This is my favorite response to the prompt-good job!
Thanks Valerie, I appreciate that.
1) I love that you used this definition. I had intended to, but something else wrote itself. :)
2) I love the message here, and how thoughtfully you wrote it (even if the POV was a little whimsical).
3) (Because, after all, this is Trifecta) The Gandhi stamp? Brilliant choice for this message.
Thanks Trudgingthroughfog (awesome name BTW) It was a bit whimsical but I always like telling stories from perspectives of inanimate objects, you know try to put a voice to the voiceless, so that's why I did it.
The Gandhi Stamp was the best image I found that fit the piece.
Ah, neat. I wanted to go this route but couldn't come up with anything.
As I read this, I thought, "how wonderful a message for youth that struggle with their identity!" Then when I realized it was about the stamp, I loved it equally. So creative! And such a beautiful message!
nice comparison
Love this story from the POV of the freak stamp. Great take on the prompt.
Oh man, you totally had me going with this. I thought the protagonist had a strange deformity, and then I find out it's a stamp. Freakin' hilarious. I love this. Great job!
Great message well written, Thanks.
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