Bildungsroman
A bildungsroman,
From child to woman.
When did hide-and-go-seek
On playgrounds and
Yelling “cannon ball!”
Into meadow creaks
Become too childish?
When did asking for dollars-
guilt-free, no hassle, no interest
from a mother
turn into-
guilt, debt, and worry
from a teller?
When did asking
for permission
Turn into declarative statements
Under parental genuine worry?
When did adulthood
seem so far away.
and now childhood
a distant memory.
A bildungsroman,
From child to woman
Hindsight says that
Maybe adulthood arrived
The moment hands touched
Budding rose nips and
Hushed confusion into dominance.
Maybe adulthood arrived
The moment beer bottles,
Vomit stains, hungover days
Were taken care of
By an underling.
But surprisingly,
Adulthood came with a
Different cliché.
You see,
No amount of forced touches
Or taking care of drunks
Gave so much fear
Than failure ever provoked.
Stiff was life.
Because rules, expectations,
Manners, and respect
Had no room for
Anything less.
So, when life began bending-
When failure started becoming apparent-
I began falling.
But wise words
Had reached my stiff life-
It’s ok to fail, to fall, to tumble,
Even if we give our ambitions
The best we got
And still stumble.
At least I can say,
Proudly, that I tried my best
Without a mumble
Of doubt.
For now I know
That when failure reaches for me,
I accept with an open mind
That failure is not
Always on losing grounds.