Don't Look Down
I am terrified of heights.
Not sure how it started,
But whenever I reach
A certain threshold,
I see myself tumbling over the edge
And smashing against the ground,
Or something to that effect.
But I’m stubborn.
I’ve never liked
Allowing my fears to have
Power over me.
When I was little,
I begged my parents to
Take me on escalators.
The entire way up,
I was a frenzied mess,
Tears rolling down my cheeks,
Face flushed,
Body quivering.
But as soon as my feet
Grazed the firm ground,
I’d tug on my mother’s shirt.
“Again!”
Up I went, and
Down the tears trickled
“Again! Again! Again!”
Now, I go rock climbing,
Trek to the tops of mountains,
And have marveled at the blinking city lights
From atop the Empire State Building.
The tears no longer fall,
But my body still trembles
At the sight of the
Beautiful little world below.