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the first time I spoke into a megaphone
I was looking down
at the piece of paper in my too-tight hand
words waving in the wind on a white flag of surrender
(hands up don’t shoot)
and ash was falling from the sky
and the crackle of my voice
stoked something crackling inside
and the voice was not the unfamiliar spit of the megaphone
it was mine
I was looking up
and all around me were eyes
gazing through still-smoldering moments of movements
of years of youth rising
against a country that once sold black bodies on shores
bombed its children in churches
fought fruitless wars
and still
leaves black and brown children with trauma at their cores
plugs its ears from the gunshots behind bedroom doors
shuns its huddled masses,
its tired and poor
but that day we rose up to say
no more
proved the truth that the spark survives
lived the legacy of the voices that burned down the sky
that moment, we could have been huddled under desks
still shaking our brains free of numbers from a test
and now counting bullets, covering our heads
while our leaders count dollars instead of the dead
so with our backpacks touched by ashy white
we breathed each other’s breaths of smoke taking flight
and built a blaze of flaming light
nerds geeks jocks turned activists
never thought we were bound for this
never thought we’d stand proud for this
never thought we’d chant loud for this
the first time I spoke into a megaphone
I was listening
to the echo of our anthem
we are here.
we are here.
we are here.
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My work has appeared in the journals Polyphony Lit and Flip the Page: Central Ohio's Teen Literary Journal, I have attended the Kenyon Review Young Writers’ Workshop, and I edit for Polyphony Lit. I also dance, play the piano and violin, and engage in political activism.
I wrote this poem soon after the walkouts to end gun violence that occurred in high schools across the country during March 2018. I organized my school's walkout; I had never planned a protest before and had no idea how successful it would be. On the day of the walkout, when I saw that over two hundred students had chosen to participate, I was inspired by what young people like us can do. Through this poem, I hoped to convey both the palpable sense of loss that was present with us that day, and the inspiring feeling that young people like us can make a difference.