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we were small children when we grew up wishing our parents would talk to us about the beloved Constitution, not at us wishing our parents would decide to quietly invite themselves into our ideas, questions, our favorite novels instead of constantly quoting their own favorite parts of The Bible instead of complaining so fervently about Islam and poor people wishing instead of asking scrambling instead of composing Do you remember anything? You were small, and barely talking But always laughing with me, listening pointing and nodding we were orphaned for 3 months as toddler and tiny girl, while they were mobilizing in Saudi Arabia, we were stuck with a violent guardian from the family, and I remember her biting my arm, and pushing her chair onto mine to crush my fingers when she was mad, and I remember mom screaming at her over the phone when she found out, and I remember she loved to kick our dog and sleep in their bed and I remember deciding to say nothing when I saw this and how she never saw me watching, the narcissist that she was. so by age 5 my parents now knew that I was certainly old enough to pay close attention and when mom and dad were deployed to Egypt for 9 months and 6 months, respectively, they orchestrated a sequence of 3 live-in sitters trading off every 2 weeks, periodically, we were stuck in a cyclical round of stuffy, busy au pairs and I was the host and I kissed dad's picture because he would call us almost every day and mom would not yet it was her I remembered the most yet it was dad that you actually forgot When we had them back I realized I wanted to forget him, too, sometimes. I hated worrying about them. I remember when I was 7 and our dog died His heart was so debilitated for months. Soon after he was able to fling our replacement puppies in a fit of rage, just once He retired first, that year, while mom was shipped off to Kuwait Soon we found out he had no friends, she was his only mate We felt sorry for him We ate tv dinners every day and night for 6 months And although I do have small handfuls of memories with his hands suddenly on my throat and me on my knees They always end with him apologizing and sobbing And me, unscathed but shaken, glowing but glaring by ages 8 and 10 we were reciting the bill of rights and criticizing welfare but still could never understand competition or war or cosmetics or long hair I would always march, I felt like a boy and a girl and also felt like neither one, I would always twirl I was taught early on that accomplishments are more valuable and profitable of an experience than forming, with no meaning, such fleeting relationships I've ending up simply not comprehending courtship I might be a light, empty holster that you cannot equip. I've never sensed the fond feeling of an honest liaison Except at funerals where I'm free to imagine my own expiration there are those of us who found kindness by insight while we were taught to play the offense and be glad to fight Yet intuitively we knew this aggression has a cost so we harbored it within our frontal lobes, where we became lost Some of us have been fighting demons since our own hearts could breathe and our own eyes could rinse, And the real reasons we did bad things were simply too boring, too excruciating these children fear, then assume, their best friend won't want to play having discovered that having daydreams may be impending dismay these are all the people who I haven't ever gotten to greet they echo my certainties that there are other stories to meet we were children who always imagined being a squib keeping faith that wizards and wands were real they'd take us away from this place to another glib world of feasts and friends A house consistently without parents, a house in which we could heal
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Jun 16, 2015
Jun 16, 2015 at 2:12 AM UTC
military brats
we were small children when we grew up wishing our parents would talk to us about the beloved Constitution, not at us wishing our parents would decide to quietly invite themselves into our ideas, questions, our favorite novels instead of constantly quoting their own favorite parts of The Bible instead of complaining so fervently about Islam and poor people wishing instead of asking scrambling instead of composing Do you remember anything? You were small, and barely talking But always laughing with me, listening pointing and nodding we were orphaned for 3 months as toddler and tiny girl, while they were mobilizing in Saudi Arabia, we were stuck with a violent guardian from the family, and I remember her biting my arm, and pushing her chair onto mine to crush my fingers when she was mad, and I remember mom screaming at her over the phone when she found out, and I remember she loved to kick our dog and sleep in their bed and I remember deciding to say nothing when I saw this and how she never saw me watching, the narcissist that she was. so by age 5 my parents now knew that I was certainly old enough to pay close attention and when mom and dad were deployed to Egypt for 9 months and 6 months, respectively, they orchestrated a sequence of 3 live-in sitters trading off every 2 weeks, periodically, we were stuck in a cyclical round of stuffy, busy au pairs and I was the host and I kissed dad's picture because he would call us almost every day and mom would not yet it was her I remembered the most yet it was dad that you actually forgot When we had them back I realized I wanted to forget him, too, sometimes. I hated worrying about them. I remember when I was 7 and our dog died His heart was so debilitated for months. Soon after he was able to fling our replacement puppies in a fit of rage, just once He retired first, that year, while mom was shipped off to Kuwait Soon we found out he had no friends, she was his only mate We felt sorry for him We ate tv dinners every day and night for 6 months And although I do have small handfuls of memories with his hands suddenly on my throat and me on my knees They always end with him apologizing and sobbing And me, unscathed but shaken, glowing but glaring by ages 8 and 10 we were reciting the bill of rights and criticizing welfare but still could never understand competition or war or cosmetics or long hair I would always march, I felt like a boy and a girl and also felt like neither one, I would always twirl I was taught early on that accomplishments are more valuable and profitable of an experience than forming, with no meaning, such fleeting relationships I've ending up simply not comprehending courtship I might be a light, empty holster that you cannot equip. I've never sensed the fond feeling of an honest liaison Except at funerals where I'm free to imagine my own expiration there are those of us who found kindness by insight while we were taught to play the offense and be glad to fight Yet intuitively we knew this aggression has a cost so we harbored it within our frontal lobes, where we became lost Some of us have been fighting demons since our own hearts could breathe and our own eyes could rinse, And the real reasons we did bad things were simply too boring, too excruciating these children fear, then assume, their best friend won't want to play having discovered that having daydreams may be impending dismay these are all the people who I haven't ever gotten to greet they echo my certainties that there are other stories to meet we were children who always imagined being a squib keeping faith that wizards and wands were real they'd take us away from this place to another glib world of feasts and friends A house consistently without parents, a house in which we could heal
guardians will fuggya up
aranciolightning
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Jun 16, 2015
Jun 16, 2015 at 2:12 AM UTC
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