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Printed from https://writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/1864706-Accidental-Addiction
by Ann
Rated: ASR · Poetry · Dark · #1864706
Don't grow up too fast, you'll be left with no where to go but forward.

We would usually sit there together,
on the front porch of my grandmother's house,
below the clearest glittering sky we've ever seen,

We'd each lighting up at the same time,
taking simultaneous drags and then almost immediately coughing.
But the coughs morphed into laughs and we were rocking back and forth,
knocking over and shattering the glasses,
my grandmother's glasses,
that held water for us.

The classes that were waiting for us to come to our senses.
They always waited.
They were older and wiser, knowing we were stupid kids,
lost kids.
Knowing that almost immediately after that first puff
we'd be snuffing the light on the earth below,
no matter how many times we did it.

No matter how many times we tried
to force our innocence away,
to dull it out with the thick haze of a cigarettes.
It never worked.
We always got the best of ourselves,
always looked down, at those little
cigarettes our fingers didn't even know how to hold,
and wonder why we'd even tried in the first place.

And the laughter would grow into regret
as silent tears rolled heavily down our young cheeks.
Because now we smelled
like the chain smokers next door,
and our only way back
was over the mess of broken glass.

So we'd kick back,
relight,
and repeat,
until the ever clear sky glittered no more.
© Copyright 2012 Ann (thewannabe at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
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