She Found
A
young girl celebrated her 11th birthday by opening her closet door to
peek outside. Her closet had grown considerably in her life, but she
desperately wanted to see what was outside. She had heard and seen
many things about the world outside. Her closet was a safe place and
had many pretty outfits. The young girl would dress up and put on her
make-up. It was fun, but it was time for something more. She put on
her prettiest dress, fixed her hair, and stepped outside. This is
what she found.
She
found that those in the world had a difficult time understanding her.
She looked and spoke differently than the other girls. Everyone would
tell her that she was a boy. "But I am a girl!" she
exclaimed. People looked at her in a funny way. Most people, that is.
Some were kind to her. One lady even said she looked pretty in her
dress.
On
her next adventure outside the closet, the young girl happened upon a
building with a loud wooden floor. People gathered around a lady with
an index card and several others with strange objects. When the lady
spoke, people walked in circles. Then the other people moved their
fingers against these strange objects, and funny sounds came through
many big black boxes all through the building. The people started
walking faster.
The
young girl asked what it is they were doing. "It's a dance,"
they all said. "May I join?" One older man said she could,
and she joined him in the dance. She became very dizzy walking around
in circles and had to be helped to a chair. She danced only a little
bit the rest of the night. She liked the music, the long pretty
skirts, and the nice people. Some gave her funny looks but not as
many as the people during her first trip.
The
young girl found many more dances, but she was only able to do a few
each time. For you see, she needed a partner to dance, and she was
only able to find some. Most of the nice people found other nice
people to be their partner. The girl thought she needed to find more
dance partners.
One
day at a dance, one of the young girl's friends came up to her and
told her she needed to be a gent. The young girl tried to explain she
wasn't a gent, but her friend persisted. "You'll have more dance
partners, " she explained.The funny thing was the young girl
kept wearing her pretty dresses and fixed her hair all the same. She
just went to a different spot on the dance floor. She danced more as
she found more dance partners. She found her friend was right after
all.
Shortly
after her 12th birthday, the young girl went to longer dances called
"Meltdown" and "Soiree." The sounds from the
strange objects didn't sound so funny anymore. They were in fact
quite beautiful. The other dancers called it music and said people
trained all their lives to play it right at the dances. What a
wonderful thing the girl thought. They work their whole lives to make
other people happy. The music was a wondrous sound that made the
dancers move even when they said they couldn't walk another step.
The
young girl found she felt more like a girl when she danced even when
she didn't always look like it. She loved the happy music, the flowy,
twirly skirts, and all the new friends. She felt moved both on her
feet and in her heart in a way she never knew before. It was like the
dance had been made just for her. The young girl also found a thing
called love. She had never known it before either, but she liked how
it made her feel. On the dance floor, her dance partner told her
without speaking that she enjoyed her company and sharing the dance
music. The young girl thought she needed more of this love thing. It
made leaving the closet ok.
On
her 13th birthday, the young girl found the secret of the index
cards. People who called themselves callers would read words and
symbols from the cards. The music would start, and the dancers would
begin dancing with the reading. The caller repeated these words and
symbols and then stopped. The dancers kept dancing. Then the caller
told them to stop dancing and the musicians to stop playing, and they
did. The young girl thought she needed to learn this strange magic of
the index cards. So she asked a couple of callers to teach her, and
they did.
By
her 14th birthday, the young girl had been practicing speaking the
words and symbols. She walked into an empty field to recite them, and
nothing happened. She tried a busy city street. Still nothing. She
spoke them to her four cats. Definitely nothing! Finally she went to
a dance hall with dancers and musicians. It worked! She found the
magic. She asked other callers to help her do one then two at a time.
Later two callers told her to try six in a row. The young girl
thought she needed more index cards.
On
her 15th birthday, the young girl was not feeling so good. Being
outside her closet was hard work. She didn't think she could manage
the rejection and the funny looks. She thought she didn't make a very
good girl. She thought of returning forever to her closet. Then
someone called and said, "Dance with us for a weekend. You'll
feel better." She did and she did.
By
her 16th birthday, the young girl was performing whole nights of
index card magic up to 12 cards in one night. She was also feeling
love more often during her dances. Others who had left their closets
were telling their stories to her. "So you have a closet too?"
"Oh yes," they said. The young girl found people like her
who had similar closets. So many of her dance friends told her she
was brave for leaving her closet. The young girl didn't feel very
brave. "I would have died in there," she explained to her
friends.
Outside
her closet, the young girl now quickly becoming a young woman found
many things. They were good, bad, and everything in between. Most of
all, she found a reason to be outside her closet: to be with others
who had left their closets. She found a shared purpose with dancing,
love, and the index cards. The closet remained in place as a reminder
of the old life and to hang pretty dresses. She found that even old
closets have a purpose.
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