I found it while unpacking boxes of old books in the basement. It slipped out of a Spanish to English dictionary that I probably smuggled out of a middle school library ten years ago and haven't opened since.
I knew what it was, of course- whole years were spent with bad posture listening to substitute teachers and CCD carpool-drivers lecture about the bold beauty and senseless frailty that was youth. Their bodies were at once tense and earnest. Their voices were at once condescending and pleading as they sang deeply of the space we blindly occupied and they fiercely missed.
My understanding of youth was a sepia-streak stumble through tall reeds below an open sky; taking clumsy steps on sea-cut feet and one day regretting not passing enough notes kept folded in pockets or taking enough pictures of the faces whom I ran beside.
Youth, obviously, is subjective- It can be teased up or sculpted-in tight in relation to circumstance. In my own mind youth is a cool breeze, glory days thing- like prom night or my first kiss. Really each took place years ago but, since they didn’t carry the weight or sheen I was told they should, I still sit tight and wait for them.
They will find me eventually. They’ll arrive a loud booming from a furious sky that births open-prairie rainfall that quiets my teenage sadness as I sit shotgun in some boy’s pickup and we race a cornfield to the Wyoming border.
The fact that I’m in my twenties is irrelevant. The fact that I live in New England, where corn is imported and gas is expensive, is not worth noting.
So when, in the basement among the books I've hoarded and arranged around me like armor, I saw my golden-ticket youth slip out between pages and waft slowly down, I let it hit the ground. I could have crushed it with a sneakered sole like a cigarette or crumbled it into nothing with shaking fingers. I could have let it careen down between damp paperbacks to the box’s bottom and know for certain it would never reemerge.
But, surprisingly, I didn’t want to. It was light and lovely in a way I would have never guessed. It wasn’t as sticky as I thought it’d be. In fact, as I flipped my hair forward and double-no-triple knotted the bouncy, silky strings (Strings that felt more like existing than regretting) at the nape of my neck- a smile so severe I thought I'd crack found it's way to me.
My youth will never be something I flip through like a catalogue and miss and cry out for. I will never be haunted by it nor will I conjure it around a fire while trying to make a point. I won’t tell ghost stories about my youth to bored kids because I am not going to let it die.
I saw it today. For the first time I could touch it and smell it and I realized it didn’t have to be the sarcophagus of who I was, but instead could serve as the shifting and stretching prologue to who I will be.
I’ll let it hang loose and light from my neck. Its colors will fade in the sun and its beads will probably warp as it trapezes altitudes and climates. It will dull and tarnish. It won’t stay pretty but neither will I.
I’ll gladly sacrifice any lace and filtered polaroid memories and oft-repeared stories of my youth; kept behind glass and propped up among rags at a museum exhibit, for the low belly excitement of closing my eyes today and not knowing what I'll see when I open them tomorrow.