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That Crazy Feeling
my mother always used to say when you find someone you love,
you’ll know.
It’s a warm fuzzy feeling, like that white blanket
you throw over your shoulders when you're cold
or when you pop a toasted, golden marshmallow
into your mouth
once you finish roasting it
over the large flames
of a brilliantly colored bonfire.
It makes you smile bigger that your first trip to Disney World,
where you met Cinderella and Mickey Mouse and thought
this really was a fantasy,
a dream come true,
or when you first put a paintbrush on a canvas,
the even strokes of color filling your senses
and covering your brain with wild ideas
and perfect dreams.
But,
she also told me that I was too young to understand,
that someday I would.
That thirteen, fourteen,
maybe fifteen,
was still too young to know
that feeling inside.
Well,
this could be a problem.
Because here I am,
fourteen years of age
standing in front of someone
that gives me that feeling.
And that someone
is you.
But that can’t be love,
because my grandma once told me
that it takes years of crushes,
and dates,
and heartbreaks,
to find someone that actually makes you
as happy as this.
But I’ve never felt happier.
Or safer.
Or more comfortable.
But,
my father once told me that love is stupid.
That it’s just a trick of the eye,
the brain,
the heart.
That it gets your hopes up for something,
just to be left behind,
with nothing,
but a broken heart
and endless tears.
Before it starts over again,
before you meet someone else
and trick yourself into that too
and the cycle is never ending,
once you have fallen one time.
Just stay away from it, he said,
ignore the signs, ignore the people
who have kind words for you
and who wrap their arms behind your back
or intertwine your fingers with theirs.
It’s not worth it.
But what if it is.
Maybe he was wrong about it all.
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