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The Things I Crave
  From the time I could hold a pencil,
  Could form shaky letters with the graphite tip,
  Only semi-legible,
  I loved to write.
  I'd write stories,
  Imaginative and mysterious,
  About wizards and dragons and princesses;
  About talking flowers and animals, and taking a trip to the moon.
  When I was a child,
  I had a routine with my father.
  A few days a week we'd practice pull-ups in the basement.
  He taught me a lot about life with those pull-ups:
  "You can always try to do one more."
  He taught me to push myself, and push myself I did,
  In every aspect of my life.
  I loved roller coasters,
  Especially ones
  With the biggest drop.
  I loved the feeling of my stomach in my chest
  And screaming loudly with my arms in the air.
  I know a girl
  Who loved fuzzy socks and hot showers,
  And skipping and dancing while she walked.
  When you're paralyzed,
  When you have a chronic illness,
  A lot is taken away.
  I can't walk; neither can she.
  We can't run or ride a bike,
  And both of us
  Have overwhelming
  Pain and fatigue.
  We're teenagers,
  And can't keep up with our homework,
  Let alone our friends.
But that's not what puts a lump in our throats everyday.
  When I think of the little things,
  Like writing with my right hand,
  Or doing pull-ups with my dad,
  My heart
  Aches.
  When I think of riding a roller coaster,
  When I think of the pleasant drop of my stomach
  Instead of dizziness and pain
  That lasts for
  Hours,
  I feel sick.
  I miss them,
  The little things in life.
  When people look at someone who's disabled,
  When they find out what ails them,
  They say that they'll
  Learn
  To appreciate the obvious
  Like walking and running.
But that's hardly what people take for granted.
  A girl
  Cannot feel the warmth of the water dripping from the shower head
  On her legs;
  It's something most of you experience
  Every.
  Single.
  Day.
  No one would give it a second thought,
  And yet she'd kill to be able to feel it
  Just once more.
  It might not seem like much,
  Since she can't feel the wind traveling through her hair
  As she runs,
  Or move anywhere
  Without pushing the metal rims
  On hard rubber wheels.
  And yet,
  When she sees the water
  Slashing across her lifeless legs
  Every day,
  The warmth is what she imagines and longs for.
  Not walking.
  You write with your dominant hand
  Every
  Single
  Day.
  You use it to write out checks,
  To scribble out a grocery list,
  To write a quick note to your mom:
  "I'm at Jane's house".
  You've written like that since kindergarten;
  There's no reason to give it
  A second thought.
But I miss it.
  I miss writing with my right hand,
  But I can't.
  Paralysis has ruined it
  And it's doubtful it'll be
  "Fixed".
  Yes, it's the little things that hurt the most;
  We may never know them again.
  It's the little things that make my heart ache,
  That make me the most nostalgic.
It's the little things I most often wish to have back.
  The minuscule,
  "Unimportant"
  Things are the ones we do
  Every day.
  The things that are part of a routine,
  The ones we are most used to,
  Are small puzzle pieces in life
  That leave holes
  When taken away.
  And we want to find those pieces,
  To put them back where they belong
  Because they create a sense
  Of normalcy.
  Because when so much of your life has been taken away,
  When so much is missing,
  You crave the little things
  Day
  After
  Day.

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I have a condition called Transverse Myelitis, which essentially is inflammation in the spinal cord (from an autoimmune reaction, aka my body attacked itself). I was paralyzed (couldn't move my arms, sit up, or walk) and was left with crippling pain and fatigue. That was 4 years ago, and though I've recovered greatly, I still face the challenges it has granted me. Anyway, I write a lot of poems about it; this is one of them. :)