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Gifts from Above
The new Amigos School building
at 15 Upton Street
is in many ways
inferior
to the old, mostly demolished one
at 101 Kinnaird.
But there is one improvement.
The ceilings at 101 Kinnaird
are shy
and reluctant to share
their wealth of knowledge.
But the Upton Street ceilings
are generous
and willing to give the Answers
to a Select Few.
The ELA ceiling
writes long messages
written neatly on the grid lines
in elegant cursive
that drone on
and on
and on
that nearly lull me
into a slumber
like the repetitive waves
of the ocean.
The SLA ceiling
like a strict teacher
says “get on task!”
and rarely gives advice.
The Social Studies ceiling
wants me to do the work
and gives short, cryptic answers
scrawled carelessly
across the plaster
in English
leaving me
to translate.
This Ceiling enjoys
making fun
of Mr. Batt,
laughing
about all the things
he fails to notice.
The ceiling of Science
has quickly learned
to give memos rarely
and sneakily
so as not to attract the attention
of Ms. Ferhani.
The ceiling of the Math classroom
is sharp and pointy
quick with its solutions
very moody.
Other ceilings
surprise me
with rare messages
when I have nothing to do.
Even the gymnatorium
talked with me once.
I don’t know
how it’s possible
but occasionally,
I simply have an urge
to look up
and there’s writing
on the ceiling,
answers
that will come in handy
sometime today.
I don’t know
why no one else
except for Kalier
can see them,
But all the answers
are on the ceiling.
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About the references in this poem: I go to an english-spanish bilingual school, so Social Studies class is in spanish. ELA stands for English Language Arts and SLA stands for Spanish Language Arts.