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Sad Girl Hours
3:00 A.M. My slumped head and shoulder silhouetted
against the flickering golden light of my bedside
lamp. I am
wondering.
My mind travelling, floundering down the tunnel of lost hopes,
unfulfilled dreams, fantasies of what
could have been. I am
wandering.
The memories swirling before me, each one threatening to take me
farther and farther into my past, until my mind is screaming to let go
and my face is matted with tears,
almost as if I have waterboarded
myself.
水刑.
A perfect ode to the ways I am not Chinese,
Although I wish to be.
I look up characters on Google Translate,
ask my parents about calligraphy, and
barely manage basic conversation,
all ways in which my Chinese struggles to remain
itself.
Even in China, the land of animal abuse,
pets receive respect, but my neighbor’s
furball of a dog
scares me to no end with its
growling and sharp teeth,
so I speed-walk away and throw
grass at it
whenever it stops by my house.
I play the piano, the instrument grudgingly
practiced by all the Chinese kids I know,
But my body can never sit still for more than
30 minutes, and my hands would rather
Scroll through social media.
It is 3:00 A.M. and if I were really
Chinese, I would be preparing for
the trials of my future, but instead,
I procrastinate, my mind
wandering.
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When I wrote this piece, I was attempting to force myself out of a creative block at a residential summer writing camp. Although I’ve always thought of myself as being able to balance my Chinese identity with my American environment, as I’ve grown older, that belief has grown weaker and weaker. Sitting in my dorm room at night, racking my brain for ideas, I approached my “identity crisis,” an inner conflict I didn’t know if I was imagining or actually experiencing. This is what I came up with.