That Day

I don't remember how I met my best friend, 
but I remember That Day. 

I don't remember how I felt 
when the lungs embedded in my grandpa 
turned to ash like the poison sticks he smoked, 
but I remember That Day. 

I don't remember the equations that 
unlocked a whole new world of spiraling numbers 
from trigonometry, 
but I remember That Day. 

I remember the clothes I wore: 
white short sleeved shirt, pink button-up 
with stripes like shiny bamboo, 
knee-high socks that no one could see 
underneath Mossimo jeans, 
my favorite black boots with tassels and charms on the sides 
and just a hint of a chunky heel. 
I remember That Day. 

I remember how we started off playing tag in a group of ten, 
and I remember how you slowed down, 
letting others catch you. 
You wanted to be It. 
I remember how you caught up to me, 
grabbed my wrist, 
pulled me, dragged me,  
hint of a chunky heel digging into loose rocks and dirt, 
leaving my own Trail of Tears. 
I remember That Day. 

I remember how you pushed me on the ground, 
suffocated me with all of you, 
like an unwanted comforter in the middle of summer. 
I remember how your hands slid up and down 
underneath my white short sleeved shirt and pink button-up 
with stripes like shiny bamboo, 
reaching the gate to my Mossimo jeans. 
I remember That Day. 

I remember my silence, 
and how inside my head, there was anything but. 
I remember looking to the side, eyes like a frightened doe, 
convinced that if I could focus with sight, I would stop feeling. 
I remember my friends pulling you off, 
until you weren't It anymore. 
I remember running 
like you still were. 
I remember That Day. 

And I think That Day is why I can't remember anything else. 
Because I try so hard to forget That Day, 
that I block out everything else, 
leaving only one memory: 
the fear I felt on 
That Day. 

Comments

Additional Resources

Get AI Feedback on your poem

Interested in feedback on your poem? Try our AI Feedback tool.
 

 

If You Need Support

If you ever need help or support, we trust CrisisTextline.org for people dealing with depression. Text HOME to 741741