KidSpirit

On a Question

HappinessPoetry

The other day, I began to ask
people what made them happy.
I heard of dinner dates and bookshelves, of
baby’s laughs and rainbows that curl over the sky and wink at the passers-by,
Of cups of coffee and Taylor Swift, of earphones, gaming consoles and children that look straight at you and never stop asking why.

I heard of marble cake (vanilla only), of love letters and football matches where Barcelona wins,
Of historical fiction, of poetry, of French fries dipped in extra ketchup and parks with jumbo swings.
I heard of passion and saw what it meant
as my question sparked a galaxy of smiles.

I heard of satisfaction and knew how it felt
as I caught their infectious laughs, a little louder each time.
I heard of miracles and witnessed them becoming more real than the truth as I could only look on in startled surprise,
For I heard of faith and felt it turn my skepticism to belief before I could even stop, wait, question or realize.
I heard of mouthfuls of chocolate, long texts, simmering pots whistling away to perfection.

The other day, I asked people what made them happy.
One question, a hundred answers and I knew
It does not take a perfect life
to bring a perfect smile.
For somewhere among the drizzle there was a lover of the rain, and somewhere among the plea for autumn a young girl asked for sunshine.
Somewhere among the pennies there was talk of art as a luxury and somewhere among the comforts of life, a boy demanded his father’s time.

That day, talk of happiness lit up the street as even the roads told me how much they await the arrival of the moon that drowns them in white,
Conversations of joy took over as the telephone booth came up to me and asked me to gift it a penny in words.
The sky leaped purple and blue as if to tell me that all those eyes on it gave it its pride,
And as the stars came down that day to wave me a cheerful goodbye,
They told me they lived on glimmers of hopes that turn into flickers of smiles.
Those were the hopes, they said, I had lit into existence with the colors I built of imagination,
And today, a star came down to deliver a thank you note to my palm, just because I asked a single question.

Himadri Agarwal, a 17-year-old bibliophile, believes she is made of stars and painted with words. A seamless optimist, Himadri maintains that she believes in forever. If not reading or writing, Himadri can be found listening to Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran.

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Art by Jaden Flach, Brooklyn

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Art by Jaden Flach, Brooklyn