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I was the youngest daughter of the family
who lived in the last apartment
at the end of the burgundy carpeted hall,
with red curly locksthat everyone loathed,
brown eyes that watched the world
and a few missing teeth.
The son of the family, my brother
was my best friend back when
we crashed brightly-colored hot wheels,
and built two story Lego mansions until bedtime.
I can recall Patrick and I,
bursting with joy
as we raced off to the thin woods
that stood just behind our apartment.
The sunlight trickling down
through the frail canopy,
to us it seemed magical.
Rotting ropes,
an old red carpet,
and a gigantic fallen oak
thrived as part of our fortress.
As the sun would sink below the clouds,
we'd trudge our way back
across the parking lot,
yawning as we reached our doorstep.
Change came for us one day,
along with a moving truck,
a new adress,
and a real house
with our own little backyard.
Our magical fortress
was now in the past,
a whole new adventure had been ignited.
I soon discovered that clothing lines
were not meant to be turned
into saftey lines while climbing a tree,
no matter how much your brother insists
you won't get injured if you fall.
I learned that the ground is not one to be reckoned with,
and that saftey line wasn't either,
as I lay gasping for breath on the
frost hardened dirt.
I had my first adventure
at the hospital that day.
Time seemed to trickle by
yet it did pass,
I changed as I grew up
my curly red locks
turned into an untamable
orange mess upon my head.
I realized how the world was
and conformed to be acceptable.
My curious brown eyes
changed to a glazed hazel.
I've seen the shivering homeless
with their few blankets,
shopping carts filled with their only belongings,
roaming in California.
I have suffered through the dull sights
of never ending fields of corn
in the stretching state of Indiana
and woken up in the old blue Saturn,
thinking I'd be in gorgous Tennessee,
realizing the rusty welcome sign says Florida.
I've realized life
can be stolen at any moment,
so I learned to shove the bad memories
to the back of my mind,
where they wait restlessly.
I taught myself to forgive
those who shed my tears,
shattered my beliefs,
and tore me down.
I have to admit
I sank to their level from time to time
I've hurt others and lived with regret.
Yet regret
isn't worth the pain
time travel is physically impossible,
as much as you wish,
and you pray,
you only get one chance.
My heart has felt that feeling,
the one you can't really describe
and are unable to escape,
not the great feeling
that involves butterflies in your stomach
but the horrible emptiness
of losing someone
you thought you'd have forever
and missing someone
who you never really had at all.
I've felt betrayal,
of trusting the wrong people
I am a magnet for the foe
who I give my trust to,
only to reveal the pain of their lies.
Trusting someone today
is putting yourself
on the line for them tomorrow.
The stains they leave
in my memory haunt me.
Believing anyone is impossible
after the person that supposedly loved me
put me into a false reality,
a false security
only to reveal it had all been fake.
My hazel eyes watch the world,
taking it one day at a time.
With new memories to gain,
and trees to climb.
- Title: Hazel Gaze
- Artist: Ginjar420
- Description: Just a poem about my life my Creative Writing teacher assigned.
- Date: 10/17/2009
- Tags: hazel gaze
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