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I look into the mirror, Someone else looks back. Her perfectly long chestnut hair And her perfectly invisible makup, And her perfectly blue eyes, Hidden behind perfectly feminine glasses, What a perfectly ordinary girl. A shell of me. A shell of my being. I don’t recognize the girl I see. ‘Samantha, come on! We’re going to miss the reading!’ I hear my mother yell, Echoing in the cavity in my head. Right. The bat mitzvah. At last my cousin was 13 But she acted twice that age. I’ve never seen someone So sure of who they’re Supposed to be. I put on the pre-ordered dress Destined for my shell to wear. I push down the feelings My shell isn’t supposed to have. I put on a smile, One proper for a shell going to a party. I build a wall over my feelings, They don’t matter today. They never have mattered. The minivan is cold, More so than usual. My father sits next to My mother, Who does all the driving. I don’t know how she stands it. I hate driving. Phillip, my baby brother Is put in his car seat. A spider-man car seat. Father puts an Ambrosia CD Into the CD player. Mother turns on the car. Adjusts the mirror-- It never stays put-- and pulls out of our Suburban driveway That connects to our Suburban house That sits on a Suburban street Hidden in a corner in a Suburban city. Luckily, our Subaru Thaws as we drive, And so does the morning frost. I avoid looking in the Rearview mirror. The clock turns to 6:00 As we round the corner And leave our home In Riverton, Utah. Landscapes of frost End when we turn Onto the interstate Connecting all the Vital cities to each other. Rather like veins. It weirds me out to think That each car is just A blood cell, travelling From ***** to ***** Taking its cargo From one place to the next, So I try not to think about it. Trees climb up a rocky precipise On one side of the car, And on the other Swaths of grassland Dotted with shrubbery. Distant clouds warn of Storms yet to come. It turns to 9:38 when we Turn off the I-15 At the exit marked Cedar City. 3 hours before Sarah begins to read From the Torah. I am glad I never had to read From the Torah. My family was never That religious, But my dad’s Brother is a rabbi. Very religious. When we’re at his place, He recites verses of scripture Before every meal. He doesn’t like my Table manners.
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Nov 14, 2025
Nov 14, 2025 at 9:10 PM UTC
Searching for Sam Part 1–Who I Am
I look into the mirror, Someone else looks back. Her perfectly long chestnut hair And her perfectly invisible makup, And her perfectly blue eyes, Hidden behind perfectly feminine glasses, What a perfectly ordinary girl. A shell of me. A shell of my being. I don’t recognize the girl I see. ‘Samantha, come on! We’re going to miss the reading!’ I hear my mother yell, Echoing in the cavity in my head. Right. The bat mitzvah. At last my cousin was 13 But she acted twice that age. I’ve never seen someone So sure of who they’re Supposed to be. I put on the pre-ordered dress Destined for my shell to wear. I push down the feelings My shell isn’t supposed to have. I put on a smile, One proper for a shell going to a party. I build a wall over my feelings, They don’t matter today. They never have mattered. The minivan is cold, More so than usual. My father sits next to My mother, Who does all the driving. I don’t know how she stands it. I hate driving. Phillip, my baby brother Is put in his car seat. A spider-man car seat. Father puts an Ambrosia CD Into the CD player. Mother turns on the car. Adjusts the mirror-- It never stays put-- and pulls out of our Suburban driveway That connects to our Suburban house That sits on a Suburban street Hidden in a corner in a Suburban city. Luckily, our Subaru Thaws as we drive, And so does the morning frost. I avoid looking in the Rearview mirror. The clock turns to 6:00 As we round the corner And leave our home In Riverton, Utah. Landscapes of frost End when we turn Onto the interstate Connecting all the Vital cities to each other. Rather like veins. It weirds me out to think That each car is just A blood cell, travelling From ***** to ***** Taking its cargo From one place to the next, So I try not to think about it. Trees climb up a rocky precipise On one side of the car, And on the other Swaths of grassland Dotted with shrubbery. Distant clouds warn of Storms yet to come. It turns to 9:38 when we Turn off the I-15 At the exit marked Cedar City. 3 hours before Sarah begins to read From the Torah. I am glad I never had to read From the Torah. My family was never That religious, But my dad’s Brother is a rabbi. Very religious. When we’re at his place, He recites verses of scripture Before every meal. He doesn’t like my Table manners.
This is the first of many Searching for Sam posts, a new book I have been devising. Feel free to give criticisms and things to add/improve upon, as this is a very, very early draft. 😊
Written by
Agender/Colorado, United States
Nov 14, 2025
Nov 14, 2025 at 9:10 PM UTC
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