The Masquerade
Lately, I only feel beautiful when the mask is on.
Tame the wildā smooth every strand of hair, sculpt it into silence. Put in the effort, even if itās just for the couch. Patch the missing pieces of myself into a flawless smile. No cracks allowed.
Creating the mask is its own kind of war.
Paint todayās face with steady handsā every emotion tucked neatly beneath. They say this face is the real me, the one they remember, the one they praise.
Liner wings the eyes into sharp perfectionā blades curving upward, as if I could fly out of here. Lashes, long and reaching, searching for stars I canāt touch. Cheekbones lit like beacons. And lipsā lined, shaped, filled with seduction. Irresistible.
A scent follows me like prophecyā it pulls them in, even from far away, Now, the mask is complete. Finally, Iām presentable.
But beneath it allā I'm still just the plain girl. An old shirt, no pants, just underwear and fatigue. Eyes sunken with sleepless nights, legs bare, scars etched like timelinesā past, present, and what feels like the future too. No longer perfect. No longer seen.
The hairās undone, wild or in a messy bun, just like I am.
I know I am beautiful. But itās hard to believe it when the compliments only come with the costume.
This skin, this undone versionā it isnāt desired. Not without the illusion: a flawless face, no lines, no grey, no age. Just the mask Iām supposed to wear.
Iāve learned to avoid the mirror unless sheās looking backā the one I made, not the one I am.















