The first pair of shoes you wore were black, velcro straps sat atop your pair of dollies to make it easier to put them on for the park. They were meant to be smart, but you laughed as you wore them against the ground so free as dad slung the swings, smiling at his child.
Our mum told me I was a creative child: I didn't like to wear anything black. Red suited me in how I stood in puddles, free in indifference to how brown my wellies became. If I was asked why, I'd shout, “I'm pretending we're all at the seaside.”
From there we made our way to beaches, where the wind was crisp and the children we could see around us acclaimed screams of emphatic joy at how the sea was so blue and big. We had to wear pairs of sandals when we went, but being barefoot felt free.
All that time we had at being young and free soon went with the summer ending in school, the arrival of my freshly polished black boots was identical to almost every other child's- a lather of paint dripping over in mud yellows proved who I was with a mother's groan,
and this wasn't the only time she wailed. As we grew older and wanted to be free, my sister started to experiment with pink highlights in her hair as I visited clubs with fake ID. We were adults with childish personalities in how I wore my Docs
like a religion for feet, my sibling in high heels that you could hear in Sunday morning claps. The arguments broke out: she wanted a child, mother saying was too young, needed to free herself from lazy culture and find a workplace. I'd never seen both their faces so gushed red,
just like the red richness of those wellies I had worn in the park. I pipe up and say, “The best freedom is our time as children.”
A *colour* B *shoe* C *place* D *sound* E free F child