A Question of Fit

(One of Cinderella’s Stepsisters, who would like to discuss footwear, fairness, and narrative bias)

Now I understand I have been described as “cruel,” “vain,” and in one particularly enthusiastic retellin’, “structurally challenged.”

I won’t contest the last one, lighting and illustration have never been on my side, but I would like to address the broader characterization.

Because, as I recall it, we were simply attendin’ a social event.

On Upbringing (Which Is Rarely Mentioned)

First of all, we did not spring fully formed into wickedness.

We were raised.

Managed.

Directed.

By a mother who believed, firmly, that presentation mattered.

Now when a woman tells you, from the age of reason, that your future depends entirely upon your ability to secure advantageous attention, you develop a certain, shall we say, focus.

The Ball (Which Was Competitive)

Now the invitation went out.

A royal ball.

An eligible prince.

Open attendance.

You can dress it up any way you like, but let’s be honest. This was not a fairy tale.

This was a selection process. And we prepared accordingly.

Hair.

Dress.

Posture.

Smile calibrated somewhere between approachable and unattainable.

We worked.

Hard.

Cinderella (Who Was Present, Despite Appearances)

Now I will say this carefully.

Cinderella was… there.

Not at the ball; not at first.

But in the house.

Movin’ quiet.

Watchin’.

And, we didn’t exclude her out of cruelty.

We excluded her out of practicality.

There are only so many resources in a household, and not everyone can be positioned for success at the same time.

That’s not wickedness.

That’s management.

The Arrival (Which Complicated Matters)

Then she appears.

At the ball.

Unannounced.

Unrecognizable.

Perfect.

And, I would like to point something out.

Nobody questioned her credentials.

Nobody verified her invitation.

She arrived, and the room adjusted.

Which tells me the problem was not effort.

It was… narrative.

The Prince (Who Made a Decision)

I don’t begrudge the prince his choice.

He danced.

He smiled.

He selected.

But I will say this:

When a man chooses based on a single evening under highly curated conditions…

He ain’t necessarily selecting a partner.

He’s responding to an experience.

The Shoe (Which Has Been Overemphasized)

And now we come to the matter of the shoe.

Glass.

Impractical.

Structurally questionable.

And yet, presented as the final arbiter of destiny.

We were asked to try it on.

Publicly.

Under observation.

Now I ask you; have you ever attempted to fit your foot into a predetermined standard while an entire household watches?

It ain’t dignified.

It ain’t comfortable.

And it most certainly ain’t a reliable measure of compatibility.

On Effort (Which Was Misinterpreted)

Now there have been… rumors.

Suggestions that certain… adjustments were attempted.

I will not confirm specifics.

But I will say this:

When a system is built around a single, rigid criterion…

People will attempt to meet that criterion.

That’s not villainy.

That’s participation.

The Outcome (Which Was Predictable)

The shoe fit her.

Of course it did.

The story had already been decided.

We stood there, witnesses to a conclusion that had been written the moment she stepped into that ballroom.

And just like that, we became the opposition.

Closing Statement

Now I bear no ill will toward Cinderella.

She played her part, and she played it beautifully.

But if you are lookin’ for the truth of it, you might consider this:

We weren’t wicked.

We were prepared.

We weren’t cruel.

We were competing.

And if the measure of a life is reduced to whether or not one’s foot fits a piece of glass…

Then perhaps the fault lies not in the sisters, but in the system.

And that, as near as I can tell it, is how I became a cautionary tale for tryin’ too hard in a story that had already made up its mind.

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