
She is.
She is convinced that she is different.
She is convinced that she feels out of place.
She is convinced that her blood is blue, and no one has ever bothered to tell her otherwise. (Blood is red.)
She is convinced that if she cuts her skin, the blue blood would never stop flowing and she would flail about in a pool of blue blood, and no one has ever bothered to tell her otherwise. (Blood clots and bodies heal.)
She is convinced that she belongs somewhere in the sky, in a realm of blue, and not on the ground, in a sea of red.
Boxing bag, a pack of cards, cricket ball, love heart.
She has.
She has breathed three-million-one-hundred-and-fifty-three-thousand-six-hundred minutes in and out of her (red) lungs, and her (red) heart has pumped litres and litres of (red) blood around her little body.
She has convinced herself to believe and imagine and think many things. And so she is destined to walk a perpetual cycle of convincing and correcting. (Blood clots and bodies heal.)
Year six of life will teach her that (red) blood is not blue. (The sky is blue. But blood is red.)
Traffic light, glass of wine, falling leaves, stop sign.
She will.
She will walk to school today, convinced that her mother does not love her. Perhaps she is right. She walks alone, with a messily made cheese sandwich wrapped flimsily in cling-wrap. It sits at the bottom of her backpack, along with three coloured pens, a broken (red) pencil, a notebook and a thin novel.
She will gaze at the insides of her wrists, staring at the (blue) veins, tracing the (blue) lines, comparing them to the (blue) sky.
She will think quietly to herself that her mother does not love her, that her sandwich is being squashed, that she needs a new (red) pencil and that she doesn’t belong in this (red) world. She belongs up in the (blue) sky.
Lips and tongue, bubblegum, apple skin, the price of sin.
She looks.
She looks around, fascinated, mesmerised, addicted to the colour (red). It’s everywhere. It’s everywhere she looks. She looks everywhere and there it is.
She looks back at her wrists, shaking her head, baring her teeth, scolding her veins for being so blue.
She looks down at the ground, little feet kicking red dirt behind heels as she walks in time with her heart beat. (Blood is red.)
Pencil shavings, new-born babies, heavy lipstick, bursting blisters.
She goes.
She goes home after six hours at school. A perpetual cycle of convincing and correcting.
She goes home less hungry than yesterday, the hunger replaced by the guilt of having stolen from a friend’s lunch. She had wanted that (red) apple so much.
She goes to her mother, who is calling from the living room. She stares three feet into the air to meet eyes with the woman she is convinced does not love her. The woman sends instructions through (red) lips and leaves the house, winking carelessly and closing the door.
She goes to her room, opens her bag and removes the crumbed cling-wrap, the three coloured pens, the broken (red) pencil, the notepad and the thin novel.
She goes to the bathroom, clutching the thin novel between thin fingers, and leans closer to the glass, inspecting. She can feel the raised line of the (blue) veins on her temples. (Blood is red.)
Curtain call, Christmas hall, embarrassed face, a warm embrace.
She feels.
She feels so lost.
She feels so distant and so removed from the (red) earth. She does not like her red blanket anymore and she does not want to sleep in a bed where she feels she cannot belong.
She feels ashamed when the woman comes home, (red) lipstick smudged at the corners of her (red) lips.
She feels scared of waking up each morning, in a bed with a red blanket, to a glorious sun glittering the earth in a delicate coat of red. The autumnal leaves are painted red and she feels so out of place.
Tomato slice, a sacrifice, angry man, strawberry jam.
She learns.
She learns about the planets at school today. They are fascinating. It amazes her how a sky so blue can suddenly turn into a sea so black. She looks at her (blue) wrists. Perhaps she does not even belong in the sky.
She learns that Pluto is too blue, and was thrown out of the same solar system as Earth. She feels a bit like Pluto. Too blue to belong.
She learns that her blood is red, after asking her teacher.
She learns that adults sometimes don’t tell the truth, because she is convinced that her blood is blue. (Blood is red.)
Red rose, winter nose, fast car, beating heart.
She is.
She is walking home from school, fiddling with a new (red) pencil.
She is only six, yet the weight on her shoulders brings her closer and closer to the red ground.
She is looking at her (blue) wrists, fiddling with her (red) pen, kicking dirt behind heels.
She is starting to run, wanting to run away but unsure where.
She is running so fast, faster than she has ever run, moving more than she has ever moved, breathing air that she has never breathed.
She is falling, and she falls. Her knees hit the ground and she skids across dirty pavement and red leaves.
She is bleeding. Her heart is beating.
Red, red, red.
The flow is gentle. A gentle ooze of heat spreading over her knees.
It is red.
Her wrists are blue.
When the blood stops (blood clots), the skin tightens (bodies heal).
She is confused, but no longer convinced. Corrected.
(Blood is red.)

~
i wrote this piece as a creative for english.
in hindsight, i found it interesting to draw parallels between the girl’s experience and my own.
i know i do not belong to this world. i am in the world, not of the world. like the girl, i know that my home is not here, for i am not home yet.
everywhere i look, the world is there; it is attractive and i often find myself wanting what it has to offer. but then i look at Jesus’ wrists, and i can see the scars that bought my salvation, i can see the blood that gave me life. as my heart beats my own blood around my body – an intricate and beautiful design of cells and organs and bones and muscles – i know that i am fearfully and wonderfully made!
yes, the road is narrow, and i often feel the weight on my shoulders pulling me down, but his burden is light; i can run into my Father’s arms, run faster than i’ve ever run.
finally, i am convinced. not that my blood is blue. but, in the words of paul, ‘i am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.’