Scribbles | Teen Ink

Scribbles

January 15, 2022
By YcLi GOLD, Nanaimo, Columbia
YcLi GOLD, Nanaimo, Columbia
12 articles 0 photos 0 comments

Favorite Quote:
“Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world. ”<br /> <br /> ― Archimedes


The walls are cracked, dented in awkward places,

with tangled lines filling in the spaces

already devoid of paintings and frames,

yet seemingly overflowing all the same.


A three-year-old child once was here,

producing lopsided figures that appear

unrecognizable to anyone you ask,

the first masterpieces of a grand artist.


An eight-year-old child once was here,

tip-toeing riskily on a wooden chair,

practicing her spelling on the cold concrete,

“Incomplete · Incomplete · Incomplete.”


A twelve-year-old child once was here,

lamenting the problems that preteens bear,

dreaming about a world so big

that her drawings can no longer contain all of it.


Overtime, the little girl has disappeared,

and most of the lead has been smeared;

visitors glance at the wall with disdain,

wondering why it hasn’t yet been replaced.


But they do not know that within the art,

forever blooms an innocent, youthful heart;

no matter how old she grows, or how tall,

she’ll always be a child before that wall.


The author's comments:

This poem was inspired by my grandmother's wall. To this day, the pencil drawings and scribbled lines that I left on the wall as a young child remain. I always wondered why she was so adament on keeping the wall instead of replacing it with a cleaner, newer one, until I finally realized that by keeping the wall, she was not only keeping my lopsided drawings, but also a piece of my childhood. Whenever I stand in front of the wall, I remember the times when I carefreely drew and wrote on it as a little girl and am thankful that in a world where we are all forced to grow up, my grandmother was able to hold onto a part of one of the happiest periods of my life. I hope that readers will learn from my poem that some of the simplest things hold the deepest meanings.


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