(assignment for English class)
If raindrops are the
tears of those dead, what is
snow, you wonder? It is
magic, sometimes:
bringing spice into an
artist's world with ice,
frost covering blood-red
berries the color of your
older sister's lipstick she
bought at a spa in
NYC, and
small dots of white that cover the boring
shades of brown and green
earth that you're used to.
It is
a nightmare, sometimes:
too much of it traps you
inside and freezes your
water supply, heavy storms
with thick clouds that never end
roll into your small town
and turn the blue sky and the
nighttime skyline that you love
so dearly to an
abyss of white, and frigid
temperatures that make you think of
those without homes.
Today, you have the
good kind of snow: soft and
beautiful. It is late,
past midnight and you are
still going home. But you
don't live in this town. You
don't have a designated home
anymore, so you walk the
abandoned streets and think. The
echoes of children screaming
with nothing but pure delight
follows you around; the footsteps
of those who have walked this path before
are now frozen into the ground, a
perfect snapshot of how we
are not alone in this world. The wind
throws your hair in front, behind, and
all over your face, but you
don't mind. You never were one for
ponytails or
braids or
anything like that. Your
feet are frozen and
you can no longer tell one body part
from another, but some part of your
brain keeps you walking, keeps you
alive. The
soft flakes start to fall again,
sticking to your thin hoodie and
tangling your hair. You
should find shelter, because
good people do exist. Sometimes, though,
you don't want to believe that
anymore. So
you keep walking, a
single person in the world, and
hope the snow stops so
no one will see your
fresh footprints etched into
the frozen ground, hear your
screams from earlier in the day
that still make your throat sore, know
who you are.
Sometimes, it is better to be
no one.
If raindrops are the
tears of those dead, what is
snow, you wonder? It is
magic, sometimes:
bringing spice into an
artist's world with ice,
frost covering blood-red
berries the color of your
older sister's lipstick she
bought at a spa in
NYC, and
small dots of white that cover the boring
shades of brown and green
earth that you're used to.
It is
a nightmare, sometimes:
too much of it traps you
inside and freezes your
water supply, heavy storms
with thick clouds that never end
roll into your small town
and turn the blue sky and the
nighttime skyline that you love
so dearly to an
abyss of white, and frigid
temperatures that make you think of
those without homes.
Today, you have the
good kind of snow: soft and
beautiful. It is late,
past midnight and you are
still going home. But you
don't live in this town. You
don't have a designated home
anymore, so you walk the
abandoned streets and think. The
echoes of children screaming
with nothing but pure delight
follows you around; the footsteps
of those who have walked this path before
are now frozen into the ground, a
perfect snapshot of how we
are not alone in this world. The wind
throws your hair in front, behind, and
all over your face, but you
don't mind. You never were one for
ponytails or
braids or
anything like that. Your
feet are frozen and
you can no longer tell one body part
from another, but some part of your
brain keeps you walking, keeps you
alive. The
soft flakes start to fall again,
sticking to your thin hoodie and
tangling your hair. You
should find shelter, because
good people do exist. Sometimes, though,
you don't want to believe that
anymore. So
you keep walking, a
single person in the world, and
hope the snow stops so
no one will see your
fresh footprints etched into
the frozen ground, hear your
screams from earlier in the day
that still make your throat sore, know
who you are.
Sometimes, it is better to be
no one.
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