What Happened To Selfishness
Grace Q. Song
Great Neck, NY
Great Neck South High School
for grandpa
& at last when all my
ten eleven twelve-year-old selves grew up
ripened & died
clair de lune came whispering
the secrets of how to serenade
what a quiet still heart could do
moonlight came
enchanting the days i had
shoved behind me & locked away
you loved that black & white music box
but i didn't
i looked at your pruned hands
weary with nights of dishwashing
how they spelled out each arpeggio &
i thought
how could you possibly play anything beautiful?
i know i was a selfish girl
you taught me how to save myself in water
sprint down a ski slope & understand my
ancestors’ brushstrokes forming characters i
never quite cared
but you stole my sunshine afternoons meant for play so
i tore your lesson books in return
what was there to lose when all along
i had been forced to learn?
we fought over my
holiday breaks
you won as always
we spent christmas in the
bone-seeping cold of vermont
as i sat in front of the
blazing fireplace wet & hungry
tired & raw
i reached deep inside of myself &
choked out the fruit of our years
underneath the same roof:
we would always be too cold, too bitter to
allow anything warm
& kind to grow—
what good came from two different hands
trying to play a duet on an
out-of-tune piano? the answer was
nothing
but as seasons left & returned
we aged along with the earth
we let the land
fold upon itself sleep
there at the corner of the living room
the piano rested waited
& years later
when a clear, soft french tune asked for
permission to enter at the gates of my ears
what else could i do besides
watch as it left my ungrateful ten eleven
twelve-year-old selves sprawled all over
in my heart?
the truth was
printed in chinese paragraphs
howled among frozen mountains
wrestled in water embellished
in ink-stained music
hidden underneath barren fields
love did exist
it did it did it did
it did.
EDITORIAL PRAISE
I do not cry over literature, but this piece—in the middle of physics class. The last stanza especially got me, with the culmination of every line in those simple words. The raw emotion, the beautifully illustrated backstory, the symbolism of the piano and the metaphor of music—all of it was so well done.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Grace Q. Song is a sophomore from Great Neck South High School, New York, and she will be graduating in 2021. When she's not writing poetry or YA novels, you can find her staging photo shoots or playing the flute. She thinks you're awesome.