7.6 billion
I have been asked before
a million times
Who is your hero?
The first day of school
one year, and the next,
my teacher smiles
and places in front of me
the student survey with the
dreaded question—
And what do they expect me to say?
For me to recount the tale, perhaps,
of the man who had a dream;
or of the singer who was dragged away
from hers at twenty-two;
or of my parents, one of which had
driven me that morning,
drives me everyday;
And every single one
is an answer, and they're true—
but what even is a hero,
anyway?
Someone special?
Someone strong?
A role model;
someone with the superpower
to speak and be heard,
to make the difference?
As I walk my halting pace through life
I am surrounded by a forest of trees
that tower far above my four feet eleven inches
while I can only stand and marvel
at the sunlight filtering through the leaves,
crane my neck
to watch what I cannot reach;
The woman who hid her students in the cabinet
and took the bullet;
the stranger who told me she liked the pins
lining the side of my backpack;
the girl who stood and sang on a stge
having crawled out of the blackest Pit;
the stranger who tole me my mile time
was pretty good
and gave me a smile
that dragged me out of the ocean
my mind had become—
And those bullets, the bang-bang-bang of gunfire,
they spray without discrimination—
no hesitation, even for heroes;
But the trees are more bulletproof
than any titanium-gold alloy or metal suit;
I see the glint of red-white-and-blue
off a shield in my teacher's eyes, too;
And I can't think of anything more a superpower
than the way that new sprouts flourish
when the forest is singed clear
and the last dregs of smoke disappear
over the horizon.
There are 7.6 billion trees—
and each one of them
has grown at least one shiny leaf;
yes, even the ones burned and flaked by hatred—
And when I look up at the great
bullet-ridden canopy so high above,
my greatest wish is that,
though my height has remained the same
after one year, and the next,
I could grow that final inch
and make a leaf of my own
to shield those below
and drag them out of their oceans,
give them the seeds they need
to have their own dreams.