Stepping through the door the ground shifts beneath me. On the foyer floor a filthy man is praying, dried vomit at his knees. Scattered in a circle is evidence of a life. I lift my foot and find a government ID. I grunt. The Prophet stares me down. I leave him to his rituals on the way to mine.
And I need all the reasons I can find not to hate myself. But it’s hard. Even the idea makes me shiver. Because I see loving myself like looking down on others. Riding around on a high horse. And I never want to think I’m better then the people I see on the street. The ones who have it rough. The ones who don’t fit in. The ones I see my own face in.
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