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i remember us when we were young. we two little girls, not yet three, sitting on my front steps, you spitting sunflower seeds at my feet and me ******* on the salt and saving the insides for later. we, inseparable at four, singing and dancing at your bday party (only two days before mine), smothering cake all over our faces, shoving icing covered fingers into our open mouths. i remember that you were larger than life. your head was always trying to catch up with your body, that expansive geography of flesh. even when we were kids, you would pass your rolls of fat off for ******* (except for that summer, when i came back and you moved away. i was the one with the biggest ******* on the block then, and instead of boys, girls came running, wanting to see what was hiding under my shirt. that summer i started my first love affair with my new neighbor. the one i said had the ghetto name? we would meet in my livingroom- she on the couch and me on the floor or me on the couch and she on top of me and she would lift up my shirt, struggle with my bra and cradle my budding ******* like newborns. ...i never told you about that, but i wanted to, and i'm sure that's the summer when you came back to visit and tried to get me to come out in your sly way. you told me, "mali, what's the point of boys? they're all trouble anyways." and i mmed, and you waited and i changed the subject. remember that time i bragged to you about smoking **** for the first time? and little Rich from up the block tried to sell us bud, but we told him we had our own? so to look cool, we stole your grandma's **** and i felt bad about it but you told me it was okay because she bought it from my dad anyway. i remember we rolled a joint the size of your middle finger and we smoked the whole thing. i said i didn't feel nothing, but when your grandma asked us about it, the only answer i could muster was, **** what's that?" i don't think she believed me, but she let me off the hook and i wasn't allowed to come over for a little while. i remember being seven on summer nights and playing tag in the bushes that separated our houses or catching lightning bugs in jars across the street in front of the church because there adults couldn't hear our whispers about naughty things like cute teen boys and what *** must feel like. you seemed to have so much freedom. you could walk around the corner, past the crumbling apartment where crackheads would stumble out during midday- all the way to the gas station to get a huggie and a bag of chips, you said, but who knew what exciting adventures you might have had, what interesting people you might have met? my dad rarely let me go up and down the street. i remember being so mad about that that. my big brother said it was because me and him, we were different. now i realize he meant that we were (supposed to be) better. back then, i wanted to be like you. free to make my own choices. when your grandpa candy asked me if i wanted to go on a ride on his motorcycle, my little body shook with disappointment, because i knew i had to say no. i sat on my front steps and waited forever until you came back, half hoping that you had toppled off, or one of the other dangerous things my mom warned me about had come true. instead, you came back looking triumphant, your round cheeks burning with the excitement of your trip, your half-permed hair a messy halo around your head.
0
Jul 26, 2011
Jul 26, 2011 at 9:16 PM UTC
r.i.p. childhood friend (2/13/11)
i remember us when we were young. we two little girls, not yet three, sitting on my front steps, you spitting sunflower seeds at my feet and me ******* on the salt and saving the insides for later. we, inseparable at four, singing and dancing at your bday party (only two days before mine), smothering cake all over our faces, shoving icing covered fingers into our open mouths. i remember that you were larger than life. your head was always trying to catch up with your body, that expansive geography of flesh. even when we were kids, you would pass your rolls of fat off for ******* (except for that summer, when i came back and you moved away. i was the one with the biggest ******* on the block then, and instead of boys, girls came running, wanting to see what was hiding under my shirt. that summer i started my first love affair with my new neighbor. the one i said had the ghetto name? we would meet in my livingroom- she on the couch and me on the floor or me on the couch and she on top of me and she would lift up my shirt, struggle with my bra and cradle my budding ******* like newborns. ...i never told you about that, but i wanted to, and i'm sure that's the summer when you came back to visit and tried to get me to come out in your sly way. you told me, "mali, what's the point of boys? they're all trouble anyways." and i mmed, and you waited and i changed the subject. remember that time i bragged to you about smoking **** for the first time? and little Rich from up the block tried to sell us bud, but we told him we had our own? so to look cool, we stole your grandma's **** and i felt bad about it but you told me it was okay because she bought it from my dad anyway. i remember we rolled a joint the size of your middle finger and we smoked the whole thing. i said i didn't feel nothing, but when your grandma asked us about it, the only answer i could muster was, **** what's that?" i don't think she believed me, but she let me off the hook and i wasn't allowed to come over for a little while. i remember being seven on summer nights and playing tag in the bushes that separated our houses or catching lightning bugs in jars across the street in front of the church because there adults couldn't hear our whispers about naughty things like cute teen boys and what *** must feel like. you seemed to have so much freedom. you could walk around the corner, past the crumbling apartment where crackheads would stumble out during midday- all the way to the gas station to get a huggie and a bag of chips, you said, but who knew what exciting adventures you might have had, what interesting people you might have met? my dad rarely let me go up and down the street. i remember being so mad about that that. my big brother said it was because me and him, we were different. now i realize he meant that we were (supposed to be) better. back then, i wanted to be like you. free to make my own choices. when your grandpa candy asked me if i wanted to go on a ride on his motorcycle, my little body shook with disappointment, because i knew i had to say no. i sat on my front steps and waited forever until you came back, half hoping that you had toppled off, or one of the other dangerous things my mom warned me about had come true. instead, you came back looking triumphant, your round cheeks burning with the excitement of your trip, your half-permed hair a messy halo around your head.
Written by
American
Jul 26, 2011
Jul 26, 2011 at 9:16 PM UTC
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