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“The street is dangerous” the boy says to his sister in hand at the crosswalk. It is 2pm on the corner and the school kids begin to pass the cafe. Strollers and stragglers others bounding alongside their tired mothers. Some gaze upwards stretching their arms towards buildings and lights, things they cannot reach but hope to one day grasp. Others absorbed into small devices held in their hands, things they cannot touch but will try to for maybe a long time. So many come still all at waist height in their multicolored jackets, Pokemon backpacks, and Spiderman sneakers that drag along the sidewalk. And finally the little girl who touches all she passes — the iron fence, my chair, the table — as if the world only becomes real under her palm.
0
May 1, 2017
May 1, 2017 at 10:27 AM UTC
On Madison and Seneca
“The street is dangerous” the boy says to his sister in hand at the crosswalk. It is 2pm on the corner and the school kids begin to pass the cafe. Strollers and stragglers others bounding alongside their tired mothers. Some gaze upwards stretching their arms towards buildings and lights, things they cannot reach but hope to one day grasp. Others absorbed into small devices held in their hands, things they cannot touch but will try to for maybe a long time. So many come still all at waist height in their multicolored jackets, Pokemon backpacks, and Spiderman sneakers that drag along the sidewalk. And finally the little girl who touches all she passes — the iron fence, my chair, the table — as if the world only becomes real under her palm.
Written by
28/American
May 1, 2017
May 1, 2017 at 10:27 AM UTC
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