Baby steps.
Thatâs what Suzanne tells me each week when I see her. One step, one day at a time. Some days are good. Some are bad. And some are just days, moving me forward, little by little.
But each day, I feel more like me.
Suzanne was right, though: the work of healing is not easy. She makes me face my biggest fears, doesnât let me erase my mistakes, walks me through what it feels like to fail. Sometimes my anxiety feels higher than ever as we work, but she gives me stress balls to keep my hands off my skin, and skills to bring myself back when I start to slip away. Iâm pushing back against the glass, cracking it slightly so I donât run out of air.
The monsters arenât gone.
They visit often, actually.
When the rumors swirl at school about me on the cliff. When the track team goes to state without me and Kaliâs winning project gets displayed in the lobby. When Damon struts the halls, as cocky as ever, unpunished for his crimes. When the darkness feels heavy and the road back seems far too long.
Thatâs when they come, whispering, yelling, repeating words I donât want to hear.
But Suzanne is helping me choose when to listen.
Which words to keep.
I write those words down. Poems and stories and all the ideas that pop into my head. The new notebook that Dad bought me is almost full only a month after the night on the cliff.
I read my poems to Micah, to my family, to Suzanne. Even though the summer program scholarship is long gone, I keep writing.
âYou should share your poetry again,â Alice says one night after Iâve read her and Micah a haiku. Micahâs on the floor, filling out an application for a killer summer art program at UCLA. Heâs not sure about college yet, but itâs back on the table.
âYou could read them on my YouTube Channel. A guest segment!â Alice says, her eyes gleaming the way they do when she gets an idea. Sheâs more like regular Alice every day, full of life and ideas, only the swings arenât as high or as low.
I shake my head. âNot sure Iâm ready to share my most personal inner thoughts with a bunch of internet randoms.â I take a bite of the pizza Staci ordered. Itâs actual, real pizza with carb-loaded crusts and cheese from a living, breathing cow.
she said.
Alice takes a bite and talks with her mouth full.
âSo what if they werenât randoms? Like, what if you do it at Tonyâs? I could get you a slot,â she says. Sheâs been doing a shift a few nights a week to save up for school in the fall. She and Dad have decided sheâs ready to take some baby steps, too. âYou could invite people. And everyone can bring something to share.â
I chew while I think about how the words have saved me since I got home. How the chalk poetry outside the school got people talking about all their secret wishes and worries. Even though the words are gone at Ridgeline, #mywords #mystory is still going strong online with people posting new poems all the time.
âWould you do it, too?â I ask.
âSure, why not,â Alice says. âIâve been working on an amazing new stand-up set for my channel.â
âIâm in, too,â Micah says.
The electricity I felt as a guerrilla poet of Ridgeline High surges through me again.
âSo, weâre doing this?â
âSounds like it,â Alice says. âNow we just need people to come.â
Join us at Tonyâs café.
Bring your art, your poetry, your songs, your whatever.
As long as itâs real.
#mywords #mystory