Have
you ever taken the time to look at your hands?
Thank
them, shake them, wring them free of responsibility?
Because
those hands, they'll serve you well years and years into the future.
They'll
be your guide through the darkest times, leading you, helping you feel your way
through.
They
help you up after you've been knocked down, flat against the ground, holding
all your weight.
Those
hands, that you so readily take for granted, they are your life.
They've
wiped your tears and held your fullest laughs, they've etched your scars and
shown you the world.
You've
gotten them dirty to clean them off, used them for bad and for good, hurt them
and healed them.
Those
hands pair with your lovers, those hands allow you to brush the hair aside, to
feel his face when you gaze into his eyes.
Those
hands will allow you to hold your first-born child, they will discipline them,
and they will embrace them with tenderness.
Those
hands have shifted from a shaky pencil to the sure curve of cursive, speeding
through the keys on a keyboard, texting and writing and communicating.
Those
hands have scrawled simple figures, oval-rounded heads and stick arms, advanced
on to replication and idealization, further to expression.
Those
hands have been small, then larger, have held the weight of the world and more,
have shaken when afraid and fumbled when unsure.
They
have been shoved in pockets, swathed in gloves, hidden under polish and
jewelry, clipped and snipped and handled roughly.
They
helped you to crawl, and endured falls as you learned to walk, steadied your
spastic legs and guided your curious face.
They
gripped the hand of your mother, your father, they pushed and poked at your
siblings, they grew with you and learned as you do--right, wrong.
They
have proven points and started fights, they have occupied your time, they have
been set aside--so poised, waiting for you to beckon them once again.
They
have touched a broken friend to give comfort only they could give, clung to
your torso at the end of a nightmare, rested so perfectly over your heart as
you recognize the country you love.
They
have been used, abused, neglected, hated, underrated, unappreciated, mistaken,
blamed, shamed, and yet they stay with you--for life, and for death.
They
are the trials of time and the stories of life, the good and the bad and the
forgotten, the proud and the guilty and the indifference, the all that was, is,
and will be.
They
are clasped in prayer, begging the mercy of something you can't quite
understand, seeking the help you can't seem to find, needing something or
someone more than your life.
They
are the actions of hatred and anger and pain, of love and caring and hope, the
subordinate victims of mind and heart, loyal and loving and grateful.
They
are unique and strong, similar and fragile, links to the outside world and the
people in it, the things we hold dear to our heart.
They
are us.
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