
Walk A Mile In Someone's Shoes
*For this Creative Tuesday entry, I’ve decided to write a short story. Please hang with me if it’s a little bit longer than my average post. THANK YOU SO MUCH!*
SHOES
Arabelis sighed as she slipped into her navy blue canvas shoes. She had been trying to nap off a migraine for well over an hour to no avail. It made no more sense to lay in bed. She had taken her medications at least 3 hours ago. It was as if she’d taken a candy instead. No change in pain. Migraines were miserable. She smirked at recalling her description to her co-worker the day before. “It feels like little construction workers trying to drill their way out of the right side of my skull.” Her co-worker had giggled. Arabelis had giggled back but she was serious. She might as well make light of it. Crying didn’t get her anything other than people calling her a crybaby. She knew she couldn’t keep taking days off of work for the migraines but she knew that being a waitress while her head felt like it had been drop-kicked by Bruce Lee made no sense either. She didn’t know what to do other than get up and get ready for work. Where did she leave her work shoes? The comfortable ones that looked like…
…the red stiletto heels. Her favorite heels in the world. The only things she had that made her feel truly special and pretty. He used them to beat her with. Kayla laid crumpled on the floor crying, sobbing, trembling. She knew it seemed incredibly shallow and stupid of her but it was less painful to think of her broken shoes than to think of the cuts and bruises on her face and body. He knew they were her favorite. I’m never going to get away from this man, she thought. It didn’t matter that they’d been apart for over a year, that he had moved on and so had she. When he went out binge-drinking, he became this monster that thought he still owned her. “You dirty whore, looking like that, like you’re working the streets.” He knocked her to the ground as she tried to run back into her apartment. She’d never in a million years expected him waiting there that night. He grabbed her one shoe as she scrambled away and when she tripped, she broke her other heel. Then he just attacked. She screamed shrieks of maddening silence for what seemed like eternal seconds before he ran away. And all she could ~ would ~ think of was her shoes…
…the perfect running sneakers that were guaranteed to get her toned and in shape that she had just bought. Now she could run for hours and really make some progress. Anything to be thin. She had always been the “gordita” (chubby girl) in the family and she needed to get away from that image. No matter how much Susana dieted, exercised & struggled, it seemed like Abuelita and her cousins and uncles were always going to call her la gordita. Here she was weighing 105 pounds at 5’8″. If she could only lose another 5 pounds. She shunned all sorts of food and even threw up after meals. Mama would say “Hija (Daughter), it’s just an affectionate nickname, we know you’re not fat, you’re perfect” but it didn’t matter. She had to be perfect. Look perfect. Do whatever it took to get there. She just wasn’t good enough yet and Susana would not quit until she got there. Maybe with these magical shoes…
…these freakin’ shoes. How did I get here? How? Dear Lord… Ally looked down at her toe peeking out through her torn, beaten loafers and watched a hot, dirty tear drip onto them. She could think of one thousand points where she could have turned her life around but instead she kept turning to drugs or alcohol. She had a lot of problems growing up, it was very true. But she couldn’t excuse herself because so did a lot of people. Her best friend growing up always said “Ally, come to the free counseling center with me. They really help me. Please come.” She wouldn’t go. I can take care of myself. I’m a big girl, she would think. And slowly but surely, she would spiral further and further out of control. She could feel when she had moments of being out of control. Completely out of her own head but had no idea what to do about it. She couldn’t hold a job for long. Couldn’t keep friends or family. Even her best friend eventually walked away, tears streaming down her face. And now here she was, dirtier than dirt, sitting on a bucket, with an empty cup and a makeshift sign reading “Please help me. I’m homeless.” She had been wearing the same clothes for longer than she could count and felt worse than the hole in her miserable shoes…
…her black boots were completely still and ominous on the side of her bed. Marisa stared at her ceiling with no emotion. Her big brown eyes almost black. Her parents were not due home for hours and they would expect her to be sleeping. The emptiness she felt in her heart at that moment was so heavy it was damned near impossible to breathe. Her boyfriend… her loving boyfriend… she couldn’t even form the words in her own head… but the evening kept playing out in her head. Them kissing, them touching, her saying stop, him saying you want this as much as I do, her saying stop, her crying stop, her screaming stop… no one home to help her, no one home to do anything… She was 16. He was 19. He wasn’t supposed to be over. She had lied to her parents. They were going to be so mad at her. They would never trust her again. They were going to say she deserved it. He said she deserved it. She wanted to die. She wanted to die more than anything. She didn’t know what those pills in the medicine cabinet were but they said PM on them and all she wanted to do was close her eyes and never open them again. As she rolled over into a fast and heavy sleep, the last things she saw were her boots…
…big, black combat boots. That was the first thing Patty saw as her Marine son came through the airport toward her. He had been in Afghanistan for 9 months and it had been the most stressful time she had ever experienced. He was her youngest son, and while just as loved as her other children, she was no more ready to lose him than any of them. She was proud of him, of course. But she couldn’t deny hearing people thank her or him for his sacrifice and all he did would frustrate her at times. It was painful to hear, as a mother, freaking out about her son. She just wanted him home, safe and sound. And here he was. Walking toward her. She had never ever felt so relieved to see those shoes…
…those little tiny shoes scattered all over the house. Ugh, these kids! she thought. Always leaving everything everywhere. Like I’m their maid. But then she stopped and sighed. She remembered the hysterectomy she had a few months ago for her adenomyosis and endometriosis. All the pain she had experienced for years, the medications, the disability, the inability to work, the years trying for babies… the joy when they were finally able to have the one baby and finally able to adopt another. She always had to remind herself of where she’d been before and where she was today. She always had to look around and compare her situation to those of others. She couldn’t complain nor could she judge… she knew only of her own shoes and not of anyone else’s. And until she’d walked miles in someone’s shoes, she had nothing else to say.
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XOXO
PS – Don’t forget to check out today’s photo at Antonia Blanca Photography!
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