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Head Held High

  I was taught never to look down.

  Chin up.

  Back straight.

  Confidence is posture

  and posture is proof

  you matter.

  Only the unimportant look at their feet,

  they said.

  Only the small do that.

  And nothing burns like being told

  you are not worth a glance,

  like your presence itself

  is a mistake to be hidden.

  So I walk like I own the place—

  but it’s a conscious effort,

  a war waged in my neck and shoulders.

  My head held high

  not because I feel worthy,

  but because someone told me

  I would never be.

  This story is posted elsewhere by the author. Help them out by reading the authentic version.

  Even when it hurts,

  even when every step

  feels like dragging a body through fire,

  I keep my eyes forward,

  because looking down

  is surrender.

  Because if I look down,

  all the voices that said

  I’m not enough

  win.

  I force myself to rise.

  To stand tall.

  To look straight ahead

  even when I want to crumble.

  I walk like confidence is a language

  I haven’t mastered

  but am determined to speak.

  Every step

  is a refusal

  to let shame

  drag me to the ground.

  I walk with my head held high,

  not because I believe it fully—

  not yet—

  but because I am trying,

  trying

  so hard

  to become someone

  who doesn’t have to pretend.

  And one day,

  maybe I won’t have to try at all.

  One day,

  my posture will be proof

  of what I already know:

  I am here.

  I am visible.

  I am enough.

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