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claireymwang
claireymwang
i am thirteen years old and flowers bloom. there’s no limit to my horizon but my little dome, a terrible, oppressive thing. there’s something about the way the air feels—cloudy, unclear, like polluted water, bordering on stifling. last year i was scared, maybe, and this year i am too, but something gnaws at the ghost of last year and things are newer now; how is my life? good, thanks for asking— lotuses are of kind silence. i am thirteen and i visited china during the lotus blooms, watched the buds grow into blossoms as i walked on the winding lake bridges. and everyone wore dresses and i thought it was weird that their normal was our formal; the dome shatters when the sky is another sky. my mom’s company fell into chaos on her vacation, her seat shakes with the vigor of two average earthquakes; average because the only one that could ever hurt her she experienced a half a country away from the epicenter in 2008. stop—wait—be kind to me, please. my hands never shook before i turned thirteen, the pre-lotus waters slithered about my pulse— they were beckoning, told me china wanted me there, i’d always hold a home there, that i’d be back there soon enough, that if so desired i could prosper there in ways unthinkable to a me that stayed in america, if i just go there. sweet, sweet, little rain, xiaoyu, that was me and only me, i’ve only heard little rain in china, even the full-bloom lotus lakes called me little rain. i was little rain more than i was claire—i am thirteen and i am little rain, the lotuses told me i wasn’t home in the dome; the misty air— it clogged my nose, i couldn’t breathe the leftovers, sweet little rain—i only loved her when she didn’t connect me to my shaking hands. i am thirteen now, ask me how my life is; alright, and you?
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Jul 21, 2019
Jul 21, 2019 at 10:46 PM UTC
i am thirteen
i am thirteen years old and flowers bloom. there’s no limit to my horizon but my little dome, a terrible, oppressive thing. there’s something about the way the air feels—cloudy, unclear, like polluted water, bordering on stifling. last year i was scared, maybe, and this year i am too, but something gnaws at the ghost of last year and things are newer now; how is my life? good, thanks for asking— lotuses are of kind silence. i am thirteen and i visited china during the lotus blooms, watched the buds grow into blossoms as i walked on the winding lake bridges. and everyone wore dresses and i thought it was weird that their normal was our formal; the dome shatters when the sky is another sky. my mom’s company fell into chaos on her vacation, her seat shakes with the vigor of two average earthquakes; average because the only one that could ever hurt her she experienced a half a country away from the epicenter in 2008. stop—wait—be kind to me, please. my hands never shook before i turned thirteen, the pre-lotus waters slithered about my pulse— they were beckoning, told me china wanted me there, i’d always hold a home there, that i’d be back there soon enough, that if so desired i could prosper there in ways unthinkable to a me that stayed in america, if i just go there. sweet, sweet, little rain, xiaoyu, that was me and only me, i’ve only heard little rain in china, even the full-bloom lotus lakes called me little rain. i was little rain more than i was claire—i am thirteen and i am little rain, the lotuses told me i wasn’t home in the dome; the misty air— it clogged my nose, i couldn’t breathe the leftovers, sweet little rain—i only loved her when she didn’t connect me to my shaking hands. i am thirteen now, ask me how my life is; alright, and you?
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