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17 is charting a line. I stretch, I hide, I lie, yet I can’t stop it from cutting right through my eyes. Sigh. Every morning, at my best, I put on the coat of reluctant smiles, responsibility, and maturity to hide my very own incapabilities. Usually, I wear it poorly, sometimes I forget. Inside, a voice scratches my lungs: It’s not my fault! It’s not my fault to procrastinate writing my article till late Sunday night, to leave the scallops unsalted and the beans unevenly cut, and to forget reading the labels of your newly purchased shirt before putting it in the dryer. It really wasn’t my fault. I was reckless, But that’s not my fault–– At least… I thought so. Then, I realized that not giving a care, or “I didn’t know” itself is an irreparable guilt. As a kid, wearing the coat of responsibility is a pride, the complacency when being praised for picking up a fork, finishing a chapter of a book, or putting away dishes. As I grow up, the coat I wear with little care becomes an obligation. Heavy, but adults wear it so well; tirelessly, despite it’s 34 or 89 degrees out. Now, I must farewell the put-offs, The “not-my-faults”: my dear friends who have accompanied me for 17 years and more to come, my shortcut to bypass the consequences and blame–– I must let you go, for the next person who hears my excuses will not say a word before scratching me off the list of opportunities I once though that I deserve. In the world of survivals the fittest, animals wear their coats well, and they stride, heading somewhere far.
0
Feb 23, 2018
Feb 23, 2018 at 9:46 AM UTC
Farewell
17 is charting a line. I stretch, I hide, I lie, yet I can’t stop it from cutting right through my eyes. Sigh. Every morning, at my best, I put on the coat of reluctant smiles, responsibility, and maturity to hide my very own incapabilities. Usually, I wear it poorly, sometimes I forget. Inside, a voice scratches my lungs: It’s not my fault! It’s not my fault to procrastinate writing my article till late Sunday night, to leave the scallops unsalted and the beans unevenly cut, and to forget reading the labels of your newly purchased shirt before putting it in the dryer. It really wasn’t my fault. I was reckless, But that’s not my fault–– At least… I thought so. Then, I realized that not giving a care, or “I didn’t know” itself is an irreparable guilt. As a kid, wearing the coat of responsibility is a pride, the complacency when being praised for picking up a fork, finishing a chapter of a book, or putting away dishes. As I grow up, the coat I wear with little care becomes an obligation. Heavy, but adults wear it so well; tirelessly, despite it’s 34 or 89 degrees out. Now, I must farewell the put-offs, The “not-my-faults”: my dear friends who have accompanied me for 17 years and more to come, my shortcut to bypass the consequences and blame–– I must let you go, for the next person who hears my excuses will not say a word before scratching me off the list of opportunities I once though that I deserve. In the world of survivals the fittest, animals wear their coats well, and they stride, heading somewhere far.
Written in San Pedro, Belize, under a palm tree on 12/28/2017.
ericatang
Written by
18/F/Columbus, Ohio
Feb 23, 2018
Feb 23, 2018 at 9:46 AM UTC
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