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"Suffer! Suffer! Greed!" The glasshouse trembles and echoes, sending tremors over the deprived land outside of it, people scatter like tumbling dominoes. The glasshouse does not crack, it is proud and tall. So powerful that not even it's own transgressions can bring it down. So rich that even the tiniest c***k' can be sealed with the utmost ease and security. So ugly and pitiful.
The baron wasteland beyond the glasshouse is not beautiful, it is spoiled, spoilt by the ravenous beasts that run havoc inside the thick walls of the glasshouse. The havoc of everyday life, the speed, the people running by, not even glancing up from their daily routines to look -through- their lives, past their own pathetic lives, through the glass at the horrendous occurrences in the baron land. You see, to the glasshouse people, life is for living, for taking not giving. They take from the deprived souls, engulf the water, give them mud. Steal their resources, spew out pollution from the glasshouse and accuse the outsiders. Their minds are confused, obsessed by greed and power. We cannot save this wretched community, they shall destroy us all, even themselves, even when they feel so indestructible. Their faces so shameful. The outsiders can say that they have dignity, they can be proud. And they can smile even with the burdens of their hopeless lives digging into their swollen backs. They can smile.
And there she sits safe inside her glasshouse, motionless, wishing she could bring together the divide. Wishing that suffering could stop. Stop. But the individual is stuck in this place, however much she wants to change the world. She is trapped. Helpless. Utterly useless and forced to live a life that is of greed and power. But there is one difference, she knows that she has looked through her life, through the glass. She can see clearly. She fears the world is beyond repair. The wound is cut, and is being hacked at too fast for it to heal. It is too easy to conform to the glasshouse way of life. Maybe she could escape, maybe she could help those poor souls on the other side. She wants to make them safe and warm, bring them in from the hurt and the pain, to shelter. She will shelter them with her heart, with her love. She can feel love even through all this misery. She -will- change a child's life for the better. And as she sits listening to the screaming, sorrowing Earth, she realises that her ideas are real and can be acted upon. It can be done.
"Suffer! Suffer! Greed!" The glasshouse trembles and echoes, sending tremors over the deprived land outside of it, people scatter like tumbling dominoes. The glasshouse does not crack, it is proud and tall. So powerful that not even it's own transgressions can bring it down. So rich that even the tiniest c***k' can be sealed with the utmost ease and security. So ugly and pitiful.
The baron wasteland beyond the glasshouse is not beautiful, it is spoiled, spoilt by the ravenous beasts that run havoc inside the thick walls of the glasshouse. The havoc of everyday life, the speed, the people running by, not even glancing up from their daily routines to look -through- their lives, past their own pathetic lives, through the glass at the horrendous occurrences in the baron land. You see, to the glasshouse people, life is for living, for taking not giving. They take from the deprived souls, engulf the water, give them mud. Steal their resources, spew out pollution from the glasshouse and accuse the outsiders. Their minds are confused, obsessed by greed and power. We cannot save this wretched community, they shall destroy us all, even themselves, even when they feel so indestructible. Their faces so shameful. The outsiders can say that they have dignity, they can be proud. And they can smile even with the burdens of their hopeless lives digging into their swollen backs. They can smile.
And there she sits safe inside her glasshouse, motionless, wishing she could bring together the divide. Wishing that suffering could stop. Stop. But the individual is stuck in this place, however much she wants to change the world. She is trapped. Helpless. Utterly useless and forced to live a life that is of greed and power. But there is one difference, she knows that she has looked through her life, through the glass. She can see clearly. She fears the world is beyond repair. The wound is cut, and is being hacked at too fast for it to heal. It is too easy to conform to the glasshouse way of life. Maybe she could escape, maybe she could help those poor souls on the other side. She wants to make them safe and warm, bring them in from the hurt and the pain, to shelter. She will shelter them with her heart, with her love. She can feel love even through all this misery. She -will- change a child's life for the better. And as she sits listening to the screaming, sorrowing Earth, she realises that her ideas are real and can be acted upon. It can be done.
By far the best thing I've read in a long, long time.
And no, I'm not just saying that.
That was incredible. Eyes near the waterworks.
This is an amazing piece of work, especially from someone still so young. I'd love to be able to write that well.
(PS: It's 'barren', not 'baron'.)