I can see it
I can picture it
the lines behind the well
the people on the grass
leaning up against the trees
walking in and out of the buildings
rushing to be on time
sitting on the steps,
chatting with friends
books piled next the them
phones in hand,
texting across distances
too far for a day to comprehend
missing the place where they know when to wake up by the smell of breakfast
the place where they know what the screams on Monday mean
where lights are unnecessary, and feet work without brains
where safety is a blanket
and comfort is silent
where “image” means photograph, not perception
and laundry day means they didn’t get up until noon,
but also excites to be gone
not because they hated where they were
but just because they had somewhere to go
where adventure only takes a moment
and unfamiliar is around every corner
and silence can’t comfort
the blanket is homesick,
and growing up means doing more homework
and getting less assignments
I can see it all in the tamped down grass
and the worn sidewalks
in the tarnished doorknobs
and the photos on the walls
and the papers in my hands
that tell me all I want to know
and I try not to think of myself on this grass
on those benches
in those rooms
but I see it anyways.