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Cinderella’s Slippers


In the original (non-Disney) version of Cinderella, the evil stepsisters, unable to fit their large feet into Cinderella’s tiny glass slipper, cut off their toes. I always wondered what they were thinking. Of all the places to try to hide a bloody foot, a clear glass slipper isn’t exactly the best spot. Yet, they are so desperate to be the woman the prince wants that they are willing to grotesquely hack off body parts to do it.

The action is so horrific, it seems unthinkably insane, and yet today, I was thinking that it’s exactly what I’ve done and expected others to do in relationships. No, I haven’t literally hacked off my toes (although I’m sure you can find someone who really has undergone plastic surgery for more appealing feet), but at times (often without even realizing it) I’ve changed the clothes and makeup and jewelry I wore, the way I cut my hair, my body weight, the music I listened to, the books I read, or even the opinions I held. I did those things not for me, but to please someone else.

After all, isn’t that the way things are supposed to work in a relationship? I give a little; I get a little, right? So, I expected the same. I expected changes and concessions. I even demanded them. And I was angry when people didn’t surprise me with the flowers I’d asked them to surprise me with or wow me by repeating the scripts I’d written for them, words that would show me love much better than whatever they had intended to say themselves.

All of us — the people I dated and me — had an emptiness inside, something like Cinderella’s slipper. And, like the prince’s frenzied search across the entire land or the stepsisters’ desperate self-disfigurement, we were all craving that fit that was going to put our broken lives right again somehow. We were shaving off bits and pieces of ourselves or carving up our partners in a crazy attempt to fake that one true match.

It has taken me years to see that no matter how many toes I lop off, the blood pooling in a clear shoe and the pain of walking on broken feet will give me away every time. And the truth is, even without the knife, there is no perfect fit. I’m not someone else’s Cinderella, and my Cinderella isn’t out there walking around (on her two perfectly suited feet) in the form of some person outside me. She’s in me, in God. And oh, those slippers feel so good when they’re finally really filled.

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  1. Syd

    It’s something that we men do too. We hide our character defects to plesae and impress. Ultimately, all the baggage comes out though. It can’t be contained. And it’s much better to just be myself rather than trying to fit someone else’s image of me.

  2. Sophie in the Moonlight

    this post hit me on an entirely different note than I’m sure it was intended to b/c I was watching American Psycho this afternoon. All bloody body parts all over the place. (Plus my beloved Christian Bale. :::swoon:::) So here I am with all of these ghastly bloody toes scattered across my inner eye and then this phrase that Patrick Bateman (Bale) says popped up as well, “the mask of sanity is slipping away.” We wear this mask to Cinderella’s ball with the perfect slippers only to find that the mask and the slippers do not go together. We have to remove the mask in order to recognize that everyone is wearing the shoes most appropriate for walking their own path.

    See, isn’t Bale profound? ;) Just like you. Smooch.

  3. Katy

    Beautiful. You write so well it gives me goosebumps sometimes.

  4. marta

    I think that in one version of Cinderella the step-mother gets put in a barrel lined with nails and tossed off a cliff. Or some such horror. See? Trying to live a fairy tale leads to bloodshed.

  5. Hope

    What a beautifully written post. I’ve written many scripts for other people - and experienced the ensuing disappointment when it appeared they didn’t memorize their lines too well.

  6. woman.anonymous7

    Yes, yes, yes, yes, YES! It’s amazing the lengths we go to to fill up what we perceive to be missing, lacking, empty. I too am finding that everything I need is in me, has always been in me, is in the divine within all of us. It’s a concept that I need to make conscious effort to wrap my mind around, but the view from that perspective is…well, I can’t think of a world because there isn’t one. But wow, yes, THAT’S what I want to be present to.

  7. Diary of a Quitter

    You are a genius. Love this!

  8. Agent of HP

    All those fairy tales illustrated human folly in pretty grim terms until Disney sanitized them. It’s cool you know the real story and can relate it to real life. I think that was their intent. And I really appreciate you’re sharing it with us.

    It really reminded me of an essay Steve Martin published back in the early 80s. I don’t know if you’ve ever read “Cruel Shoes” - so here it is ( http://www.getasite.com/gj/cruelshoes.htm ) because I think you’ll get a kick out of it.

  9. Mama MPJ

    Agent of HP, thanks for the link. I did get a kick out of it.

  10. The Second Road Family » Cinderella’s Slippers | floralshoes.com

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