not the america we dreamed

Dear America,

times are changing

so listen closely

to the voices remaining.

 

The voices that shout and cry and scream,

“this is not the America we dreamed.”

 

Can’t you see the scarlet ground?

The bones and bags of bodies they found?

 

They say guns will save us from guns,

that this is the only way to go.

But Donald Trump and Wayne LaPierre,

our answer will always be no.

 

Stop selling those guns and take a look –

more than 1600 shootings since Sandy Hook.

 

“Never a right time to talk about gun policy”?

I really must say this with total honesty,

we’re tired of waiting to hear your lies.

“Thoughts and prayers” won’t bring back their lives.

 

So, what are you waiting for, America?

the time is now, God save Florida.

 

God save us all, for when I get older,

I want a daughter who will not look over

her shoulders every time she hears a bang

or fear death in the air that will hang

 

Or worse, if she comes home to say,

“mama, there was another one today”

 

But what can I tell her?

I don’t want to lie.

God, I sound like the politicians

who condemned us all to die

 

So, my dear sweet daughter,

the answer is clear

if we cannot fix this manslaughter,

you will not be here

 

I’m sorry if this has come to be true

but this life, was not one I dreamt of for you.

 

 


This was a poem I wrote after the terrible school shooting at Parkland, Florida. My thoughts go out to all the families and everyone affected. As part of the new generation, I promise I will stand up and speak out until there is change. I read this poem aloud at the student organized rally at Boston University – I’d like to thank everyone for being there and for supporting one another. I am incredibly saddened that this is how everyone got together but I am also extremely amazed at all the compassion shown at the rally and on school campus. I am so proud to be standing up, side-by-side with my peers at Boston University, and I hope that I will be seeing everyone on March 24, 2018 for the National Walkout.

 

Thank you so much for reading this post, please message me or comment if you are going through something or if you just want to talk. My contact page is always open. 

 

Love wins.

fifteen

When I was fifteen, I received a large, black tote bag from my mother. To start the school year off with something new, she said. I was no longer using my old bright pink colored backpack. A person’s bag says a lot about them, my mom said. During the first weeks, I kept it clean. There was a pouch in front where I would keep my essentials— my phone, my keys, and a tube of lip gloss. That didn’t last very long.

Crumpled homework and test papers littered the bottom of the bag, along with receipts from Starbucks runs and blue peppermint gum wrappers. Tangled earphones and torn sheet music also made the pile. Lost hairbands camouflaged with the black of the bag.

The sun had started to dry out the corners of the bag, making it fade to a warm colored brown. Everything in the bag was cluttered and jumbled up from the time I frantically searched for my math homework— which I found lying next to an English assignment from the week before and a pregnancy testing kit.

The leather handles had little crescent moons in it from the time I walked past him with his tongue inside another girl’s mouth. Digging my fingers into the leather was the only thing that kept me from crying out loud. It did not, however, stop me from trying to split my veins open like the stitches and seams that were falling apart. I was falling apart.

When I was fifteen, my mother told me to grow up. She told me to stop crying, to stop running to her. Smart girls are strong girls, she said. Smart girls are pretty girls with long, straight hair that will make boys fall in love with them. Strong girls are skinny girls with legs for days and arms that need to be embraced. Hands that need to be held. I listened.

When I was fifteen, I learned that my mother will not – could not be there for me. Because she was “raised that way.” When I was fifteen, I learned that no one will love me enough. No one could possibly love me enough if my own mother could not even try.

I asked my mother, what do I do about this boy? She said, put on a pair of heels, a short skirt, don’t forget the makeup too. Make him love you.

But mother, I said in my mind, you don’t even love me.

So, this time, I didn’t listen.

I learned to grow and to cry on my own. And with time, I found hope. I don’t need anyone to love me. I love myself. With every setback, every heartbreak, every rejection and failure. I repeated this louder and louder. My ex-boyfriend called me fat. I love myself. The girls at school called me a slut today. I love myself. My mother thinks I’m worthless. I LOVE MYSELF. I LOVE MYSELF. I LOVE MYSELF.

Yes, there have been relapses – many (that’s the thing with depression, I guess). My mom and I have a good relationship now. But I will never ever tell her the things that matter to me. My hopes, dreams, or fears.

She will never know that I played soccer in high school. She will never know how many times a week I see my psychiatrist. She will never know what I had for lunch today, or the day after that, or the day after that. She will never know that there are still four- no, five visible scars from the time I tried to feel – anything (because hurting meant that I was still alive). She will never know how much she hurt me. She will never know how much I loved her.

She did teach me some valuable lessons, though. Like how to walk in heels, how to properly hold a teacup, and how to curl my hair. But she also taught me to be kind, to have an open heart and open mind. She taught me that I should always, always put my daughter first.

So, dear daughter, if you are reading this one day, I love you. For who you are, and who you will become – wholly, and completely, I love you. I promise to teach you all the things my mother taught me (how to curl your hair, how to put on heels). I promise to teach you what life taught me – that no matter how terrible things become, there is always a silver lining. I promise to never restrict your creativity and capacity for imagination. I promise you can eat anything you want. I promise that you can carry any colored backpack.

I promise that I will try my best to protect you from the world and all the terrible things in it, but when the world hurts you (because it will), I promise to be there with you every step of the way. To hold you and hug you and make sure that you’re okay (even though you are equally as strong without me). I promise, you will be loved.

— I promise that I will never become my mother