I think bravery I think of a rain drop.
If Kermit thinks it isn’t easy to be green than that frog should think again. I can’t imagine being clear so people could look right through me. Nothing can ever be hidden, every goal, crush, enemy and tree that blooms inside you, would be a show cased. Like a fire place mantel every story I don’t tell my mother, every fight I can’t tell my friends; up for a Nobel Prize.
Everything about me the things I don’t say strung up like laundry out to dry. A notice on the bulletin board gives you the number to my heart, the hash tag to my past and the URL to my secrets.
Rain drops take the fall. The distance from the bed to floor can’t even compare to the miles from the sky to earth. If I could listen like dogs do them maybe I could open my ears and hear the screams as millions of tiny soles fall to our world. But maybe I am wrong maybe a raindrop doesn’t scream maybe it cries out in joy on its way down. Weeeeeeeee!
Or perhaps they tell tales to each other of their last journey down, how they smiled and aloud the sun to take them back up. I learned in Science class in grade 5 how rain returns to the sky, but Social Studies never taught me how to climb out of my hole.
Then after the all the feet the raindrop still doesn’t let the fall destroy them. If fact they hit and splatter sharing them self’s to the ground around them. Or they slip into a city of other gathering tear drops of the clouds and they wait. Wait for the rain boots to come and splash through them. For little kids to name them like how I named mine, Maria.
Even the windshield wipers don’t demolish these fierce rain pellets. Instead they glide along the windows like its December and the glass is their ice rink.
And as the rain slows to a good bye they paint the sky with colours, while I and the rest of the world scratch smog over top. Raindrops never let anything ever really get them down, for they are always bringing out the brighter side.
I think bravery think of a raindrop.

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