Astigmatism | Teen Ink

Astigmatism

July 11, 2021
By elle-austyn BRONZE, Goose Creek, South Carolina
elle-austyn BRONZE, Goose Creek, South Carolina
3 articles 0 photos 0 comments

As I got older I began to see life in a new light. 

Colors no longer bright, I remember my childhood. 

A sticky canvas, stained with innocence. Remember

Its taste of dried playdoh and vitality. A childhood

haze, I spent my days by the water, the humidity 

Running its heavy fingers through my curls. 

Back then I relied on my hands, using them to 

Find new ways- new meanings to life. I didn’t use

Them to pinch my eyelids raw at night. I used 

Them to color in the lines. The only voice that

Whispered was the one I was told to use in the 

Library (shh), not the echoes of desperation clawing

Their way through my vocal chords.  


I remember when I could hear myself think clearly,

When I could find the words to explain what I wanted-

What I needed in that moment. Back then a cry for help

Was not a sign of weakness. But as I get older I struggle to find

Worth in myself; I channel my energy into someone

Who isn't truly me, a pixelated outline lost in a 

Static sea. I allow numbers to define me, a virus, the result 

Of a toxic society. The entirety of my existence

And future is embedded in a single transcript. My 

Whole life, nothing more than another statistic. 

 

Wild eyes speak words of an eternal abyss, kerosene 

Fingertips My shepherd. Kaleidoscope vision, I don’t see like

Others I see in broken sunbeams, stained murals in black and white.

Over time, I learned that I could not be trusted. That I would rather

Draw strength from the bitter words of others than myself.

Because sometimes it's easier to find purpose in the pain and

Harder to find purpose within self. 


The author's comments:

This is kind of like a self-portrait piece. It was written for a poetry slam.


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