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We Aren't So Different, You and Me

I sit at my dimly lit desk Gazing at an aged and dusty photograph. My father leans gently on the seat of his favorite bike Loosely gripping the handlebars with his thickly gloved hands alike He wears a big, warm jacket Patches of melting snow spot the ground And a shiny Cadillac sets the nineteen sixties scene around Life seems so simple here No anger fills his russet colored eyes Creases of middle aged worry and sadness vanished without a trace Nothing but a young and bright smile upon his face Father, how I wish we could be friends For into this photo, I stare And recognize the youthful face that I now compare The same smirk The same face The same obstinate and hard-working person So if we’re this alike, why does our relationship only worsen? Time is quickly withering away like the petals of a fragile red rose And now it’s time that we open our eyes and see We aren’t so different, you and me
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Written by
sara-lillian
American
Published
Nov 24, 2011
Lines·Words
26·168
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