On the evening of my sixteenth birthday I remember curling my hair with an iron and burning the tips of my fingers pink, mumbling pained words under my breath that I probably shouldn’t ever repeat unless I desire to live beneath the shadows of adult eyebrows being raised so high they might never come back down
as if they had never said something like that before
that night I put on a silver dress, and lipstick so red it almost gave the illusion that I had been bleeding from the mouth but I felt unstoppable, so why not?
“why not” was the question that was always replaced with stone-cold silence and the shrug of a shoulder instead of an answer
that night, I blew out sixteen flaming candles and felt beautiful, surrounded by the smiles of friends I had met in high school and ones I had known since the days when our only worries revolved around who had the prettier Barbie doll and who held hands during recess in the fourth grade and these thoughts caused my stomach to somersault because, now that we were illuminated by candlelight and the brightness of celebration, everything had changed.
I blew out my candles and did not wish for a car, or a new wardrobe, or for more faces to call my friends, but rather,
I wished to be taken seriously.
I knew there was a deep-rooted problem when I became acquainted with real love for the first time And everyone said that I was too young, too incompetent to understand What that word even meant, That I was silly for believing that such a concept could exist When you’re sixteen and five and a half feet tall and not that great at chemistry or parallel parking and can barely even hold up a strapless dress as if somehow that dictated that I was too small, too stupid to realize that love was something much bigger than I am but I did. I do.
And there is something so contagiously twisted That lurks in our society like a epidemic The idea when your age lies between thirteen and eighteen you are not really a person that instead, you are a shadow of ignorance that sleeps all day and clothes yourself in different shades of apathy and that the only things you care about are alcohol-induced parties on Friday nights and losing morals and hours of sleep while gaining temporary highs as if that is the highest I will ever go in life
you have to be kidding me.
because you might look at someone like me and snarkily remark that I never look up from the screen of my phone and you might think that my taste in music is repulsive or that I’m only holding his hand because I love the thrill of letting it go, and you might think that people my age have brains that contain only a spoonful of intellect and the rest is just empty space filled up with disease but maybe it is time that your pedestal falls and you realize that the older the wiser is hardly ever true at all
I have witnessed lives spiraling out of control
the truth is not that we are dirt and no, I am not taking pictures of myself unclothed or chatting with strangers in online rooms maybe the reason why I’m on my phone is because I’m talking my best friend out of killing herself and I’m researching time travel and why the happiest people hurt the most and a cure for my own depression and better words to fit my poetry I am not equal to the garbage you see kicked to the curb of the street Or scenery while you ride on by in your horse and carriage
I am just as great As someone who has spent 80 years of their life achieving And if time is uncontrollable Then why am I being treated like somehow, I have not chosen to be here long enough to know anything at all
And one day I dream of having my words praised for the truth that they are Rather than having eyes roll back in guilty judgment Because I have not lived as long as you have And yet I am the one writing the words
Because yes, I am sixteen. I haven’t even been here for two decades but I do not search for happiness in empty glass bottles and clouds of smoke like you think I do and I do not play with hearts like they’re made of matches because I know that they burn and when I tell him that I love him I am not doing it to **** time and I know that life is sacred and impossible to retrieve once it’s gone and I am not going to waste the precious seconds of my own aching until someone decides that maybe, I am worth listening to.
Because I know that I am. And on my sixteenth birthday, as I smiled scarlet in every photograph I was right-- I am unstoppable.