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A Walk in the Neighborhood
  You run out into the front yard, door ajar,
  you reach out and grip the cold iron gate swinging it open
  down the steps onto the sidewalk
  one, two, three steps
  next square of concrete
  the lines race past your blurred eyes
  the setting sun slaps the back of your neck
  don’t stop running until you reach the next street
  leaving the perfect little white house behind.
  Turn left and you’re seven again
  towel folded over your swimsuit like a dress with your goggles on your forehead
  you remember swinging open the gate to your best friend’s house and you can feel the weightlessness before your first cannonball
  “Hey!” yells a strange man from his dark green pick-up truck.
  you’re suspended in water- trying to keep it from rushing into your lungs
  “excuse me” he says in a more reserved tone, “have you seen my dog? his name’s pepsi”
  his tired attempt at sincerity could come from exasperation or deception
  “could you please tell your friends to look out for him
  he’s been missing for two weeks”
  his pleading tone makes you reach out for the flyer
  as he drives off you watch until he’s out of sight
  crumpling the paper into a tight wad you shove it into your pocket and run the other way
  you don’t owe him anything- but your ears still perk up at the sound of a bark.
  
  You’re on the main street
  three cars pass you
  navy blue
  black
  and white
  they approach a four way intersection
  navy blue goes forward
  black goes right
  white goes left
  you stop in your tracks and go the opposite direction instead.
  You pass your dream house again
  olive green with a mahogany door
  glass windows etched with a floral pattern
  a garden in the front lawn with lilies and conifers
  a sense of hopelessness overwhelms you
  your dream already exists
  and is not nor ever will be yours.
  Round the bend to the left and a large expanse of street unfolds before you
  the gravel crunches underneath your feet
  and autumn leaves crackle
  you are immersed with the sense of winter soon arriving
  with a suitcase of worn out dreams
  the entire street has a ominous Santa
  nailed to a tree at every house
  ruddy cheeked and sideway eyes
  with a malicious grin partially covered by his stringy white beard
  painted on an upside down wooden heart
  the street’s artist had given them to her neighbors as peace offerings but left decades ago
  walking down the street, you call out the names of the different trees that have a Santa on them
  oak, pine, maple, pine, oak, willow
  you stop
  the second to last house
  it’s missing a Santa
  a multitude of explanations race through your mind
  maybe they weren’t home when she was passing them out
  maybe they moved in after the artist left
  maybe they were unpleasant people and the neighborhood disliked them in general
  the absurd explanations swirl together into an incohesive mixture until
  it hits you
  maybe they just don’t celebrate Christmas
  an attempt to bring the neighborhood together at the same time left a family out
  you begin to feel enraged by the community’s insincerity to accept others
  but then another thought strikes a blow across your face
  you’re part of the problem
  from the start you pointed fingers at them before blaming yourself
  your inclination to blame others is exactly why this happened
  and it sickens you
  the Hallmark image of Santa, reindeers, and candy canes
  takes off its mask
  and the wooden ruddy cheeked Santa avoids your gaze.
  Turn right and walk down the street
  at the end on the left you see two boys on the front lawn
  one sitting up looking outward
  one lying down looking within
  the boy on his back says something
  the other boy looks back in disbelief and yells harsh words
  words that sting your ears
  he gets up and storms towards a pickup truck
  as he drives off you run the opposite direction
  either way the boy is left alone.
  Go home, go home, go home
  the wind whispers, the cold screams
  you take the main road that’s a straight shot home
  you go behind the house and walk through the backdoor
  a tacit glance implies complacency
  you take a few steps back and find yourself
  stuck between the doorway.

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Walks around my neighborhood have been the earliest form of freedom I have ever been granted. Ironically, the harmlessness of a walking past your neighbors took a turn for the worst through certain vivid memories as discussed in my poem. Focusing on the relationship of the individual with society, I begin to understand my role in an interlocking network of events and although I walk alone, I can never actually enjoy a moment utterly alone. By simply breathing and being present, I have signed a contract with the universe to participate in its perverse games.