No ratings.
I wrote this last night! Also, I don't know how to classify it!! What do you guys think??? |
When I was 5, I wanted to be a hairdresser. Then a doctor, Then a mom. What I wanted to be changed every week. The possibilities were endless. I turned 6, and I wished to be a ballerina, Possess all the grace and beauty my baby siblings had. I wanted to be seen, And I wondered what they had that I didn’t. I turned 7, And boys turned mean. They didn’t want to play tag at recess anymore, Because I had cooties and girls were stinky. I hated the color pink and wanted to become a construction worker, “Just like my daddy.” I think it was less about my dad and more about wanting to feel equal to the guys. I turned 8, and I saw homeless people in the streets, so I wanted to become a cook to feed them. I wanted to give them warm soup and hugs and tell them it was alright. Suddenly, I was 9 years old, and I wished I were a scientist. The world was a big, magical place, and all I wanted to do was explore it. I wanted to make discoveries, Find new plants, Figure out what was wrong with them, Maybe even fix it. I thought if I could cure cancer, maybe people would want to be my friend. I turned 10, School became harder, My dreams became quieter, And friends became scarcer. It wasn’t so much about what I could give anymore, But about what I could do—and didn’t. I wanted to be smart, Get all the answers right. Be liked. Be praised. Maybe then Mom and Dad would smile at me the way they did at my baby sister. I turned 11, And the expectations only grew. I cared more about what everyone else thought. I didn’t want to help the world anymore; I wanted boys to like me, Girls to be my best friends, And to be pretty. I wanted to be popular, To be seen. But sometimes, late at night, I’d wonder, “Is this really me?” I turned 12, and I wanted to be strong. Stronger for Mom, because Grandma died. Stronger for Dad, because Mom was sad. Stronger for my siblings, because who am I if not dependable? I wanted to stand out, Not for the wrong reasons, But to be a good person and help my family. But I tried too hard, And being strong for them meant not being myself. It meant crying late at night and putting myself into boxes I was never meant to be in. I turned 13, and I wanted to be free, But to be free, I needed to know myself. Instead, I lost pieces of me, trying to be everything for everyone else. And there was no longer me. I turned 14, and I became afraid of change. I wanted to be stable, Know my favorite color and what I didn’t like. I wanted to know what came next, And I didn’t want to say goodbye. Now I’m 15 years old, And I’m trying to find myself again. Possibilities seem much broader than they did at 12, And now I want to be a teacher. I want to help kids. But I also want to be strong, beautiful, and graceful. I want to make people smile, Let them know they are loved. I’m not really okay, But I think one day I will be. Maybe I don’t know what I’m going to do Or who I’m supposed to be, But maybe the journey is the point. Maybe it’s okay not to have it all figured out. |