Life and Lines
I remember my first box of crayons,
And the waxy scent
Of color.
I whirled though page after page
Of coloring books,
As I left my mark on every sheet
Of recycled paper.
Daily,
I filled the face of our refrigerator with twisted balls of color,
Chaotic scribbles
That equated me.
Then,
In first grade
We learned about lines
And what belongs between them.
Each day,
The teacher would leave a single chocolate
On the desks of the children who got it right,
And while in love doing things my way,
Greedy children
Crave Candy.
So,
I fell in line.
In high school,
I sat in lines of desks,
And wrote diligently
Between the narrow lines of a
College ruled notebook.
I squeezed myself
Into a line of burly boys
Who played vicious games
Between painted lines on grassy fields,
While crowd lined up to cheer us on,
As we destroyed each other.
As an adult,
I tow the line,
And wait
In lines,
And drive down roads dotted
With lines,
I didn't put there.
All the while, living tucked comfortably
In a valley,
Surrounded by rigid mountain ranges,
Drawing even more lines between earth,
And sky.
The other day,
I found an old coloring book,
And even though I put color
In all the right places
I didn't feel like my work belonged on the fridge.