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Blind Spots
Shattered glass tastes like shock.
Smells like the sanctity of white flowers by the roadside.
What could have been, what was, and what will be,
sitting shoulder to shoulder with ghosts on the eucalyptus leaves and asphalt,
united by the familiar sirens in the distance.
What a cruel joke.
I lived.
That's the difference between the two of us,
the white flowers and I.
I’m sorry for your loss, I whisper months later.
Shattered glass tastes like shock.
Smells like the car is no longer on the ground, wind in my hair,
Feels like peace.
Peace when it's all over.
The beating of my heart competes with the screams echoing down the mountainside.
Every night is a stop motion picture
as I remember things that I don't actually remember.
As I crave emotions I can’t bring myself to feel.
To emote.
As I myself,
crave to shatter.
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This article has 2 comments.
In my sophomore year of high school, I flipped my car off the side of a mountain. Luckily, I was able to walk away from the crash uninjured, but as I sat on the side of the road waiting for the first responders, only then did I realize there was a bouquet of white flowers that had been set out for the last person who died in that same spot. This piece is about how trauma resonates differently with people. It's about how selfish grief is, and how we as teenagers function in blind spots of perceived immortality.