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convincing a child that someone is now forever absent from their life is a matter of saying goodbye, wiping up tears, and never seeing a trace of them again. as an eighteen year old, i would have appreciated the child's version of this ritual of persuasion. instead, i got two-month intervals of delay and lingering, times of remaining identical to the stale soul i had become. i could count the intervals exactly to the day - two months was the longest anyone could go before shattering into insignificant shards. as a twenty year old, i have become skeptical of the idea that someone could leave at all. i might not speak to them, i might not see them, i might not notice things around me that used to define my vision of them, but the absence of habits gives absolutely no validity to the claim that they are forever gone from my world. i have spent four point zero two percent of my life with dulled senses. for ten months my vision was blurry, my hearing was garbled, my sense of smell was practically ripped out of my body. in this time, i forgot that: there is a certain angle to the shoulder blades that i find beautiful, i feel at peace when i hear a boy sing, a familiar scent can snap me back to whatever year i first smelled it. my lack of perceiving the world almost convinced me that someone could be forever absent. but my senses have recently come back to me, along with all the memories they originally created. i can finally see the bridges of noses and the straightness of forearms, i can finally hear voices tip toe around guitar strings, i can finally recall how comforting it is to know exactly how the most important people in my life smell. i took this reunion of senses as a sign to move forward, as a sign that i'm through with waiting. my life has taken a turn and i have swiftly started on a path to being someone no one knew before. i have heard quite a number of testimonials that explain in great detail just how different i have become. and some nights that is the last thing i want to hear - that i succeeded in changing myself, that i succeeded in giving up what i thought i stood for, what i thought i wanted, what i thought was permanent. i loved who i was. i still love who i was. but, i have almost been thoroughly convinced that who i was is now completely absent from my current spirit. i am learning to love my senses again, even though they remind me of how i lived the other ninety-five point nine eight percent of my life. strangers can smell like boys i thought were forever gone, strangers can laugh just like boys i thought were forever absent, strangers can have the same stretch of shoulders and the same strong forearms as boys i thought would never come back. and sometimes they take the seat next to mine on the bus, in class, at a movie or at dinner. so, as an almost twenty-one year old, i have decided that surely, no one can ever be forever absent from your life. the best you can get is a deadening of senses so that you no longer notice all the little things that bring the part of your soul that they labeled as theirs back into being.
0
Sep 12, 2013
Sep 12, 2013 at 5:49 PM UTC
it's true - i'm leaving you
convincing a child that someone is now forever absent from their life is a matter of saying goodbye, wiping up tears, and never seeing a trace of them again. as an eighteen year old, i would have appreciated the child's version of this ritual of persuasion. instead, i got two-month intervals of delay and lingering, times of remaining identical to the stale soul i had become. i could count the intervals exactly to the day - two months was the longest anyone could go before shattering into insignificant shards. as a twenty year old, i have become skeptical of the idea that someone could leave at all. i might not speak to them, i might not see them, i might not notice things around me that used to define my vision of them, but the absence of habits gives absolutely no validity to the claim that they are forever gone from my world. i have spent four point zero two percent of my life with dulled senses. for ten months my vision was blurry, my hearing was garbled, my sense of smell was practically ripped out of my body. in this time, i forgot that: there is a certain angle to the shoulder blades that i find beautiful, i feel at peace when i hear a boy sing, a familiar scent can snap me back to whatever year i first smelled it. my lack of perceiving the world almost convinced me that someone could be forever absent. but my senses have recently come back to me, along with all the memories they originally created. i can finally see the bridges of noses and the straightness of forearms, i can finally hear voices tip toe around guitar strings, i can finally recall how comforting it is to know exactly how the most important people in my life smell. i took this reunion of senses as a sign to move forward, as a sign that i'm through with waiting. my life has taken a turn and i have swiftly started on a path to being someone no one knew before. i have heard quite a number of testimonials that explain in great detail just how different i have become. and some nights that is the last thing i want to hear - that i succeeded in changing myself, that i succeeded in giving up what i thought i stood for, what i thought i wanted, what i thought was permanent. i loved who i was. i still love who i was. but, i have almost been thoroughly convinced that who i was is now completely absent from my current spirit. i am learning to love my senses again, even though they remind me of how i lived the other ninety-five point nine eight percent of my life. strangers can smell like boys i thought were forever gone, strangers can laugh just like boys i thought were forever absent, strangers can have the same stretch of shoulders and the same strong forearms as boys i thought would never come back. and sometimes they take the seat next to mine on the bus, in class, at a movie or at dinner. so, as an almost twenty-one year old, i have decided that surely, no one can ever be forever absent from your life. the best you can get is a deadening of senses so that you no longer notice all the little things that bring the part of your soul that they labeled as theirs back into being.
kally
Written by
American
Sep 12, 2013
Sep 12, 2013 at 5:49 PM UTC
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