put down my dolls
I never got to say goodbye to my childhood
I don’t think anyone ever did
Everything was just a blur
Praying to grow up
Like looking through a glass filled with water
Blurred and distorted
the things you remember
Always seem to be the things
Morphed through that glass
One day you put your doll down
And never picked it up again
One day you had a bed full of stuffed animals
And you never slept with them again
One day you had a birthday party
With pin the tail on the donkey
A piñata that exploded with your favorite candy
With all the friends from your class
Now i feel guilty even sending the invitations
What happened when the glass shattered
When you became aware of
what you gave up
Just to be older
All the birthdays are a sad cake
In a poorly lit dining room
Your cards full of cash
no one knows what you like
I guess you don’t know either
Birthdays now are realizations that
The love you were smothered in
Is gone
You begged for it to stop
You were a “big kid”
Now you wish you could beg for it
The love you lost
But you know
You’ll never get it back
The glass shattering
You can see all the pieces
Your torn apart life
In those still shards of glass
All those stuffed animals you gave away
Cause you were a “big kid”
Replaced with a mountain of pillows
An attempt
To trick yourself into thinking
You’re not alone.
You try to pick up the leftover shards
In a desperate attempt
To put it back together
We all know what happens
The sharp edges cut your hands
Putting a red film
Over those last shards of hope
They stop reflecting
You put down the dolls you used to play with
Just to turn into them
At least you’re trying to to
Putting on pounds of makeup
To have the same desirable quality
Not eating till you take pounds off your weight
Just to be wanted by a teenage guy
One who only texts you at 3 am
One who doesn’t take you out
One who’s talking to 6 other girls
One who isn’t loyal
One who is oblivious
It’s that moment when you realize
How much your priorities changed
When you realize the innocence you gave up
Just to become a “big kid”
It’s a choice we all make
And all regret