Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
It was 8am on a Monday when a little girl walked Into her 2nd grade classroom Excited to show her friends her new pink skirt And light up shoes her grandmother had gotten her For her birthday just the day before. She unloaded her lunchbox and took out her purple stuffed animal, His name was puddles, And placed him carefully beside her backpack. She couldn't wait to tell her classmates about him during show and tell. By 11am, the room smelled of crayons and glue sticks As she worked on an art project due by the end of the day. At 12:05, she sat cross-legged on the carpet, Puddles tucked under her arm, Surrounded by other second graders who still believed That school was a safe place to be. But time does thus cruel thing where it keeps going Even though it shouldn't. The clock on the wall didn't know that it was about to become Nothing but a before and after. It kept ticking like it always does, Loud enough to be annoying, But quiet enough to be ignored. The sounds in the hallway changed. There was no more laughter Or sounds of little sneakers, But the sounds of things most adults will be considered lucky To never have to hear in their lifetime. Lunch boxes will fall to the ground, Desks will be pressed to the door, And little hands meant for crayons and glue sticks Will be pressed to little ears. Puddles fell to the floor, Now covered in a darkness that was once a child's innocence. And that is where he will stay. Later, someone will find a purple stuffed animal On the classroom floor, One light up shoe still blinking blue, And glue sticks still left uncapped. We will talk about this in numbers and headlines And debates that last longer than 2nd grade attention spans. And somewhere, a grandmother will stare At a receipt for shoes that were supposed To light up hallways, Not memorials. And a stuffed animal will never make it to show and tell. Tomorrow, the desks will still be there, The bell will still ring, And another class will sit on the carpet. They will add drills to the schedule And lock the doors a little tighter. Children will learn how to hide Before they learn how to tell time. And we will call this normal. Just another tragedy you see on the news. But it is not normal for grandmothers To bury grandchildren. And it is not normal for stuffed animals To outlive the children who love them. How many light up shoes have to stop blinking Before we understand that time didn't fail that little girl. We did
0
Apr 18
Apr 18, 2026 at 9:27 PM UTC
This is NOT normal
It was 8am on a Monday when a little girl walked Into her 2nd grade classroom Excited to show her friends her new pink skirt And light up shoes her grandmother had gotten her For her birthday just the day before. She unloaded her lunchbox and took out her purple stuffed animal, His name was puddles, And placed him carefully beside her backpack. She couldn't wait to tell her classmates about him during show and tell. By 11am, the room smelled of crayons and glue sticks As she worked on an art project due by the end of the day. At 12:05, she sat cross-legged on the carpet, Puddles tucked under her arm, Surrounded by other second graders who still believed That school was a safe place to be. But time does thus cruel thing where it keeps going Even though it shouldn't. The clock on the wall didn't know that it was about to become Nothing but a before and after. It kept ticking like it always does, Loud enough to be annoying, But quiet enough to be ignored. The sounds in the hallway changed. There was no more laughter Or sounds of little sneakers, But the sounds of things most adults will be considered lucky To never have to hear in their lifetime. Lunch boxes will fall to the ground, Desks will be pressed to the door, And little hands meant for crayons and glue sticks Will be pressed to little ears. Puddles fell to the floor, Now covered in a darkness that was once a child's innocence. And that is where he will stay. Later, someone will find a purple stuffed animal On the classroom floor, One light up shoe still blinking blue, And glue sticks still left uncapped. We will talk about this in numbers and headlines And debates that last longer than 2nd grade attention spans. And somewhere, a grandmother will stare At a receipt for shoes that were supposed To light up hallways, Not memorials. And a stuffed animal will never make it to show and tell. Tomorrow, the desks will still be there, The bell will still ring, And another class will sit on the carpet. They will add drills to the schedule And lock the doors a little tighter. Children will learn how to hide Before they learn how to tell time. And we will call this normal. Just another tragedy you see on the news. But it is not normal for grandmothers To bury grandchildren. And it is not normal for stuffed animals To outlive the children who love them. How many light up shoes have to stop blinking Before we understand that time didn't fail that little girl. We did
Written for/about Mary who will always be my little sister but is now living a better life up in the sky.
NeonGod13
Written by
Apr 18
Apr 18, 2026 at 9:27 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem