I exist as an interminable wave of everything and everyone I’ve ever known.
I ebb and flow through the motions of life;
Of loving,
Of losing,
Of acceptance.
Even through such limberness,
I cling to things I know will change.
I cling to everything I shouldn’t:
People,
Places,
Smells,
Feelings.
Creaks in the floorboards
And cracks in the walls,
I lap relentlessly at the shores of things I will inevitably slip away from.
I fill spaces between grains of salt and sand with the hope that everything will remain as it always has.
Rather than relying on change, I rely on the presence of those who cross the stage in 17 days.
I rely on the presence of those whom I have one final summer with.
The presence of those who, come August, will not exist in the places they have for so long. Places in which I will continue to exist, without them.
I rely on the presence of a family we created for ourselves.
A family that fills the spaces between grains of sand and salt.
A family that allows any worries of change to lie dormant.
A family I feel I should be following, but I am not.
Because at 15, 16, 17, 18, we became a sea of reliability.
We became a monotonous current of predictable patterns.
At 17, I am no longer a child, but I am not yet grown.
At 17, I feel orphaned without my sea of family.
At 17, I feel misplaced amidst blood I never came to comfortably rely on.
At 17, I feel I should not reside here anymore, but I do.
At 17, I continue to rely on the creaks in the floorboards and the cracks in the walls.
I rely on my presence among these
People,
These places,
These familiar smells,
And consistent feelings.
All of which I, too, will soon cease to exist amidst.
Yet I continue to lap at the shores of those who erode beneath my feet,
and all I can do is watch with pride.
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