Fairy Tales are real.
- Mar 25
- 1 min read
_ Abia Blachaje
I now understand why fairy tales had to be written. I believe many are based on real events, though softened into imaginative stories, giving people the option to dismiss them as mere fiction. In reality, I see them as reflections of true evil—deeds so atrocious that one struggles to comprehend how anyone could harbor such malice.
These stories often depict special, kindhearted women who were targeted by individuals driven by jealousy and cruelty—the same type of people who have deliberately sabotaged my life. I continuously ask myself how to articulate the profound hate and betrayal I have endured, particularly by my ex husband and the community in South Orange County California.
Perhaps fairy tales remain one of the few platforms through which such truths can be told. It is tragic, yet I find myself in a position eerily similar to the stories we have long dismissed as fantasy. The wicked witches and villains portrayed in these tales are not simply symbols—they exist in reality, every bit as cruel as their fictional counterparts. Characters like Cruella de Vil
l may seem exaggerated, but figures just as ruthless operate in the real world, their actions excused by wealth and status.
Maybe it is time to reveal the truth behind these stories—to expose the real individuals and the forces they serve. Doing so might deter others from perpetuating such destruction in the lives of the innocent. This is not about sounding juvenile but about shedding light on the symbolism and truth hidden within these timeless narratives.




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