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Stripes of Resilience

Different not Broken

Sophie Youngs
Sophie Youngs
Professional Learning Manager
Kami
Stripes of Resilience

For most of my life, I was convinced I was a broken horse. I saw the other horses running in neat, predictable circles, and I tried to run with them, but my legs would always tangle. The trainers and tamers of my world saw it too. My "talking too much" was a wildness that needed to be bridled; a flaw to be disciplined out of me. My "being too sensitive" was a dramatic flair, a weakness to be dismissed with a roll of the eyes. I felt every flick of the whip, every tightening of the bit, as a profound personal failure. I believed them when they said I was wrong, that my spirit was fundamentally flawed.

Then, the truth arrived, not with a thunderclap, but like a field guide to an animal I never knew existed. The diagnosis wasn't a label; it was an explanation. The "talking too much" wasn't a behavioral flaw; it was the vibrant overflow of a mind that fired faster than the world could listen. The "too sensitive" wasn't drama; it was the high-definition color of hyper-emotions in a world that insisted on grayscale. The earth-shattering revelation landed with a quiet, powerful grace: I was never a broken horse at all. I was a zebra, and they had spent my entire life trying to tame me, to shame my stripes into fading.

And so, I am still here. A zebra, still learning to maneuver in a world built for horses. The path isn't always clear, and the old whispers that called me broken still echo on the bad days. But I am still standing, and I am still breathing. I am learning to move not in circles, but in the sprawling, beautiful patterns my mind was made for. I am learning that my stripes are not scars from my failures, but a map of my resilience.

I now see this world is full of tormented souls—other zebras told they were broken horses, horses told their gait would never be right. They take the pain from their own training and become torturers themselves, perpetuating the cycle. But I will not. My survival will be an act of defiance. I will use my voice—the one they tried so desperately to quiet—to tell the other zebras they are not alone. And I will use my heart—the one they called too sensitive—to offer the world a love so fierce it reminds them that different is not, and never was, a synonym for broken.

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