• Published 13th Apr 2019
  • 1,142 Views, 13 Comments

Somebody Loves You - FabulousDivaRarity



Starlight reflects on her father, and how he reacted to her telling him of his past.

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Somebody Loves You

Author's Note:

It's the sequel.

And this is all about unconditional love and acceptance from parent to child. That is the most important theme I try to bring to my stories with those relationships. Love between them should always be unconditional, no matter what mistakes either makes. So this is my love letter to the testament of unconditional love by both parent and child, and the forgiveness of ones self for past mistakes.

Enjoy.

Acceptance.

It is hard to gain and easy to lose. I know that very well. I took a village of ponies, stripped them of their cutie marks- the very essence of they were meant to be- just so I wouldn’t be alone again. I thought by doing that I would not lose them, that I would not have to accept that my oldest friend leaving me for Celestia’s magic school because I had them. I thought I was filling a hole left in my heart by Sunburst that those ponies could fill. They accepted me, both as their leader and their friend. I thought I had it all. And then, Princess Twilight and her friends came and stripped me of everything. And I tried to destroy them like they had destroyed me, just to show them what it felt like to be me. But instead, they offered me friendship. A real, trusting hoof was put in front of me for the first time, and I was afraid to take it, but I did.

Becoming Twilight’s protege did not erase the mistakes of my past. I know. I live with those scars, those invisible marks that carve up my soul every day. Every scar left on me was baggage I had to carry. Sometimes that baggage could be removed- by accepting a situation or forgiving myself or others. But sometimes it stayed there, like a thousand pound weight on my back I was forced to drag around with me everywhere I went.

I have made scores of mistakes in my life. Everypony has I suppose. It just depends on the severity of them. We all carry baggage of differing weights and sizes, and we carry them, often times alone. But sometimes, with friends or family, we can carry them together.

I did not want to face my family- my Dad actually, because he was the only one I had left. My mother apparently left my father when I was a year old, and went to Las Pegasus. My father hasn’t set hoof in any place a thousand miles from that place since. In fact, he rarely leaves home- Sires Hollow. I always thought he didn’t leave because it was some place he shared with me. I was, as he often told me growing up, his world. It doesn’t surprise me that he never left. It was the place where our shared memories were.

Sometimes there were good ones- Playing tea party with him or flying kites with him when I was a foal. But there were bad ones too. The time after Sunburst left was one of them. I see now, in retrospect, that he was trying to be closer to me, because he knew in his own way that I needed him, but I pushed him away. I didn’t want to need anypony or anything ever again. That pain transformed itself into different things for the both of us. For Dad, it made him overbearing, and too attached to me. For me, it bred a hatred of cutie marks. I, in my misconstrued way of thinking, decided no pony needed cutie marks ever again, and that I would find a way to erase them. I was so focused on that that I did not see the pain I was causing my Dad.

I did not want to see his pain. I did not want to acknowledge that what hurt me also hurt him. I wanted to be alone in my suffering so I could say that I had no one. That I was alone. That there was a reason why I was what I was then. I needed something to blame, but my father didn’t give me that. Every day, every single day, I knew that he loved me. I tried for so long to unravel myself from those tendrils of love he tried to wrap me in, to plunge myself headfirst into the darkness that was consuming me, but he never let me go. I’m grateful for that now.

It wasn’t until I went to Sires Hollow with Sunburst and faced my Dad that I understood what he was trying to do. It wasn’t until he explained himself to me after I yelled at him that I could finally see beyond my own frustration and put myself in his horseshoes. I thought about what it must have been like for him to see that darkness turn me turn into something he couldn’t even recognize. I thought that for the first time, now understanding what he’d been trying to accomplish, that he had done all of it to keep me out of that darkness and pull me back. He might not have done it the right way, but the fact that he tried it at all… That meant so much.

On my next visit to Sires Hollow, I was carrying some of my emotional baggage with me. In this place, where everything began, it was hard to put down. When I told my father what I had done before, I had glossed over much of the unpleasantness of it. That day, I was going to give him my full confessional and just pray he would understand.

We’d grown back together in the time since that last visit. I suppose it was true, that old saying that sometimes you have to open a wound to let it heal properly. Dad had been working hard not to treat me like a filly anymore- I could tell from his letters that he’d seriously tried to change that. It made me comfortable, that change. He took me seriously. I needed to know that.

I got off the train and headed for home, and he greeted me with a warm hug. He really made an effort to cut down on the more cutesy nicknames, instead just using the more acceptable ones like honey, sweetheart, and sweetie. He wasn’t completely off of it, because a few times “Punky-Wumpkin” or “Sugar Plumb” ended up in there, but he caught himself and apologized for it. He was trying, and that was what mattered.

I wasn’t sure how to start that conversation, other than saying, “I need to tell you something, Dad”. But once I did that much it started coming out, like a dam of words that had been barricaded for so long just burst out of me. I went on and on about my mistakes, my regrets, the nightmares that still plagued me, and my feelings. When I finished, I was spent, and breathing heavily.

Dad hadn’t said a word during that whole speech. He just listened, and looked at me. His eyes didn’t give anything away, and when I was done, he was still quiet. I had enough time to think I ruined my relationship with him too by revealing all of that, and almost began to cry when he pulled me into a fierce embrace.

“Starlight, when I look at you I don't see mistakes you might have made or reasons to be angry. I look at you and see my pride, my joy, my love, and my perfect daughter, despite any flaws you could have. You're perfect to me, and you always will be, no matter what you do. I’ll always love you.” Were the words he’d said to me.

I had cried. It wasn’t a feminine cry either. It was one of those gasping-for-air-and-unleashing-years-of-stored-up-emotions kind of cries. He’d just held me the whole time, and told me how proud he was of me.

“I’m so proud of you Starlight. You’re my baby girl, and I love you.”

Ordinarily I might have been upset with the term of endearment, but in that moment, it just fit. For maybe a second, or just a heartbeat, I was a filly again, and he was comforting me after a nightmare. His acceptance was a warm blanket around me, and for the first time, I experienced how he had wanted me to feel all those years.

“I love you… Daddy.”

“I love you too, Starlight. I always will.”

Suddenly, the baggage I’d been carrying seemed lighter. Dad had taken some of it off of my shoulders and brought it to his own. And I learned perhaps the most important friendship lesson I could have learned that day.

Somebody loves you, just the way you are.

Comments ( 13 )

After reading “The Long Con” this was what I needed. It’s not that I didn’t like that story but it’s nice to know that after choosing the right path, Starlight has a happy ending. Really loved this story and the prequel :twilightsmile:

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I find it very ironic that you said that because I literally just finished reading that when I got the notification of this comment! Thank you! I appreciate you reading both of them. I'm even more glad you enjoyed them!

After reading both stories, I must say I very much admire the way you pulled everything together. There is no greater bond than parent and child. That's a lesson a lot of these bratty kids need to learn.

Much love,

-Marcellus

9563258
I know you likely get this all the time, but....


'What does Marcellus Wallace look like? Does he look like a bitch?!'

9563309
Yeah, I always get it. Nothing but love, man. :rainbowlaugh:

...Why am I feeling all warm and gooey inside?

Oh come on! I think I unintentionally boarded a feels train or something. :raritycry:

Great sequel. Very heartwarming.

Perfect sequel and pov of the daughters perspective

Very, very touching. This was also super easy to visualize from start-to-finish.

Starlight is the one character I genuinely feel I relate with on a 'Real World' level. I grew up in a small town of little, to no diversity. I lost use of my left eye before Kindergarten and my parents did all they could to keep me in 'Regular School' instead of being shoved in a 'Life Skills' class. They believed in me and made sure to always tell me I was just like every other kid in the school.

Of course, in a small town, cruelty is easy to put upon someone so noticeably different. There were so many times I despised who and what I was. How I wanted to get even with those who tormented me. How I felt I was 'cursed'.

The most painful moment was how my dad constantly would say, "They are just waiting for you to finish growing up before they fix your eyes to see like everyone else.". I loved having that to hold on to until the day I found a pamphlet on Glaucoma that clearly read, "Glaucoma is not reversible...".

My heart was broken, my hopes were shattered, and the full brunt of pain in knowing this nightmare would never end hit me with a ton of bricks.

However, like Starlight in this story, I found the courage to cry out my feelings. I found peace in knowing I could let it go without holding such hatred towards the rest of the world that, to this day, dismisses me and my ability simply based on how I can't see anything at all. I never asked, nor did, anything to lose all my sight outside of just being born with the condition. However, at least now, I've really made progress to make peace with it.

Like Starlight, I'm quite socially awkward as I try to make a positive life despite all the odd mannerisms that come with never truly being able to see a human beings face. I also missed a lot of opportunities as not too many people wanted much to do with me. However, also like Starlight, I keep trying. My past comes up as it does impact my future. However it gets easier and easier the more I work at realizing I am not defined based solely on being blind and awkward. Sure it's there but it's up to me, as it is up to Starlight, to keep an open heart and mind rather than putting up countless guards that keep me from ever getting past the pain.

There is a great line from "A Hearth's Warming Tale" I take seriously. Starlight seeing her young self, as Snowfall Frost, stating how, "The seeds of the past... Some hurts never go away...".

The pain never totally goes. However it can be managed through friendship and creativity so you don't cause yourself further suffering while keeping yourself blocked fro finding people who will be "True, True Friends". :)

I loved this! These are the kind of MLP stories that so tug on my heart. Having it told through Starlight's retrospect made for a nice change of telling this oh-so-tearful moment of reconciliation between parent and child. Kudos for writing a piece that had me grabbing for the Kleenex.:heart:

This makes me so happy and sad at the same time, sad for all the pain they both went through and happy for finally being able to work it out. It pains me that there are so few stories with these themes, for all the harping Starlight gets for her hasty redemption the fandom in general just chooses to ignore it altogether. Good thing I found your stories!

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