About Do I Really Want To Be Seen?

1. Opening the Ache

“Why do you sing just to be heard,
but grow hoarse
the moment the light finds you?”

  • Philosophical: We crave visibility, but visibility alters us. The moment we’re observed, we’re no longer fully free.
  • Psychological: Performance anxiety. A fear response—spotlight can feel like threat.
  • Social/Cultural: Society demands authenticity, but punishes it. Especially in women.
  • Personal/Soul: There’s a wounded voice here—one that wants connection, not spectacle.
  • Mythic: Echo and Narcissus reversed—this time Echo fears her own sound.
  • Rhythm: The pacing halts—soft, trembling. A pause before vulnerability unfolds.

2. The Vine-Wrapped Heart

“All my pain,
my not-enough,
my vine-wrapped heart
untended for years.”

  • Philosophical: Identity is layered with memory—what’s “me” is also what was left uncared for.
  • Psychological: Childhood neglect or invalidation becomes internalized shame.
  • Social/Cultural: We’re expected to be whole, polished. No room for wild, untrimmed hearts.
  • Personal/Soul: A soft admission: this is where I hurt most—where no one looked.
  • Mythic: Sleeping Beauty but without the kiss. The thorns grew, but no one came.
  • Rhythm: The line falls downward, like roots. Winding. Wrapping. Still growing.

3. When They Want Something

“You glance my way—
finally—
as if now
I am worth acknowledging.
Because I hold something
they want.”

  • Philosophical: Is value inherent, or given? If I’m only seen when I’m useful, am I ever truly seen?
  • Psychological: Recognition becomes conditional—love becomes performance.
  • Social/Cultural: This is the marketplace of worth. Visibility trades on capital, not connection.
  • Personal/Soul: A subtle grief: You only came when I became what you desired.
  • Mythic: The siren is heard—but only because her song now sells.
  • Rhythm: Broken pacing. Stops and starts. The breath catches on “finally.”

4. The Mirror Model

“So I become a mirror.
A model.
A hope they can borrow.”

  • Philosophical: Identity erodes when we are defined by others’ projections.
  • Psychological: The self splits: authentic vs. aspirational.
  • Social/Cultural: Woman as archetype, not person. Seen as a symbol, not soul.
  • Personal/Soul: If I become your reflection, who sees me?
  • Mythic: Persephone in glass instead of shadow—objectified light.
  • Rhythm: Staccato. Identity reduced to title after title. Mirror. Model. Borrowed.

5. Rust and Recoil

“But mirrors rust.
And soon,
the shine is gone.”

  • Philosophical: All projections decay. Beauty and status are fleeting illusions.
  • Psychological: Burnout from being the “inspiration.” The polished self erodes.
  • Social/Cultural: Society discards what no longer dazzles.
  • Personal/Soul: The grief of being unneeded once you lose your sparkle.
  • Mythic: The goddess becomes mortal again.
  • Rhythm: The poem exhales here. A truth spoken plainly—without ornament.

6. The Fear of the Gaze

“Will I be devoured
by sharp-toothed stares?
Tongues slicing
on the flavor of my flaws?”

  • Philosophical: The gaze is power. To be seen is to be consumed.
  • Psychological: Shame and fear activate the survival brain.
  • Social/Cultural: Judgment is not passive—it’s aggressive.
  • Personal/Soul: I don’t want to be eaten. I want to be held.
  • Mythic: Little Red Riding Hood, caught in the wolf’s mouth.
  • Rhythm: Jagged. Violent. You can feel the teeth in the consonants.

7. Tracing It Back

“Maybe—
when I was a child,
attention made me brave.”

  • Philosophical: Early attention forms the architecture of identity.
  • Psychological: Attachment. Validation. The nervous system relaxes under love.
  • Social/Cultural: Children who are praised for existing, not achieving, grow differently.
  • Personal/Soul: That’s when I felt whole. That’s when I believed I mattered.
  • Mythic: The child before the fall. Before the apple.
  • Rhythm: Gentle. Almost lullaby. The ache is nostalgic.

8. The Cost of Independence

“But left alone—
I learned this:
we all want to be seen,
so none of us
really see each other.”

  • Philosophical: Ego collapses empathy. The more we seek reflection, the less we offer witness.
  • Psychological: Loneliness in a crowded room. Everyone staring, no one seeing.
  • Social/Cultural: The epidemic of performative connection.
  • Personal/Soul: I needed someone. Everyone needed someone. We all missed each other.
  • Mythic: A thousand Echoes, calling across voids.
  • Rhythm: Sincere. Measured. The poem steps out of metaphor here—into wisdom.

9. The Final Ache

“Maybe…
I just want
to be held—
even if I shatter
in someone’s hands.”

  • Philosophical: Intimacy > visibility. To be broken and still embraced is the truest form of being known.
  • Psychological: A longing for safety that holds, even through fragility.
  • Social/Cultural: We’re not built for platforms. We’re built for presence.
  • Personal/Soul: Don’t just look at me. Stay.
  • Mythic: Humpty Dumpty rewritten. Not all falls need fixing—some just need holding.
  • Rhythm: Quiet. Raw. Slow breath. The softest crescendo is no crescendo at all.

Final Thought:

This poem doesn’t ask to be admired.
It asks to be held.

It unravels the myth of visibility as safety, exposing the ache beneath applause:
the need not to perform, but to exist.
Not to shine—
but to stay luminous, even when rust sets in.

It’s a quiet rebellion against a world of cracked mirrors,
a whisper that says:

“See me if you must.
But please—hold me if you can.”