On growing up. |
I can, only in my youth, lament the slowness of the years. I can, only in my youth, regret adulthood growing near. How hard is it to understand that sand continues flowing, and that the loss of innocence shows no symptom of slowing. Scarcely can I comprehend what past my eighteenth lies; How I’ll mourn, and how I dread the day my parents die. Greatly cherished memories grow further by the day; most notably the moment I accepted I was gay. First it’ll be a month since that, the next time it’ll be two; then it’ll be a full decade completely behind you. Often I feel proud of just how far that I have come, but wonder if it’ll matter once I’m buried, dead and gone. I recall the bygone days I liked to play with toys. But now I cannot stand to be a little girl or boy. Soon I’ll have to leave this stage of fantasies and fears, the friends and hopes that symbolize these fleeting teenage years. There’ll be a time when I’ll blow out the last candle I will. And after that, the birthday gifts will all plummet to nil. Then I’ll be a massive fool to write a Christmas list, it’ll be all my own duty to work, and buy my gifts. I wonder if I still will want a lovely house and wife. I wonder if I’m damned to live a greatly troubled life. I wonder if I really know the person that I am; I wonder if to find that out is something that I can. |