Fifth grade in my school is when
one of the kindergartners is your
book buddy,
when we read to them every Friday morning,
and when we leave,
it's when we mourn
the loss of our little friend
who wrote us notes and read to us
with a shaky hand, stuttering voice
smoothing into
grace and ease as we taught them
as they grew
like ivy, taking over our hearts and height charts
(or maybe I'm just short)
and when we're in high school
and we visit
we'll marvel at how they've grown again
and they'll recognize us
in that fourth-grade, fifth-grade
barely-making-eye-contact tweenage hair-flip
we do
when we see ours.
Except
everyone else gets to come back
and watch their book buddies grow up
but hey guess what
mine's moving to Chicago
this summer,
my wonderful book buddy,
who can read perfectly, fluently, whose writing
maybe isn't so great yet
but he hardly needs help anymore,
and he's moving to Chicago this summer,
and I'm never going to see him again,
and he wrote me a card
in his blocky, rounded kindergarten handwriting
saying
will you ever come to Chicago to visit?
and god
I wish I could
come back in high school
and see him again,
because
fifth grade in my school is when we have book buddies,
but I'm never going to see mine again.
Is this
what graduation
feels like?
Is this
what getting older
is?
Comments
Because if so, I think Peter Pan was right.
I'm crying.
Oh no I didn't mean to do that!!! I'm glad you like it and want to express it!
It's fine, I cry a lot at the end of the school year. If you ever did visit Chicago you should look at the Bean which is a large metal reflective bean in the middle of the city.
Same I just graduated today and was literally weeping. The Bean sounds cool! I think I read about it once; also, if I ever have a layover or go to visit Chicago I will buy SO MANY BAGS of the Garrett's popcorn. It is amazing.
My dad grew up in Chicago so I know a lot about it!
Amazing. So much power in this poem. Well done.
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