I tapped nostalgia on the shoulders,
And it called to me.
I wasn’t resistant to its grasp.
I’ve never been strong in this way,
Always compliant to its quiet plea.
Nostalgia has always unsettled me.
How is it that I wish for the future
Thinking only about how I long to return?
They told me once to never grow up,
Yet every candle I extinguished
begged time to speed up.
Now every birthday carries a muted dread,
A fear that the clock is now irreversibly sped.
I recall the past in saturated colors,
A warm light that spills across all my memories.
Holding it tight, hoping it might stay alive.
This comfort feels like a quiet snare.
No path back to the past,
Only life’s unblinking clock pushing me forward.
I can’t plan the life I have already lived,
I can only chart the future that lies ahead of me.
But what if what felt most real
Has already passed?
All that has happened seems more promising
Than what the future may hold in store.
I no longer see the familiar bright colors
And yellow lights from my childhood memory.
Only a grayscale broadcast of grim news
And the relentless stir of humanity.
Isn’t it strange to plan for a future
That might never arrive?
The world seems to fracture right at my feet.
With every new headline, I can only see
A world that simply might not await me.
When I tapped nostalgia on the shoulders,
I carried one silent plea.
That it could have just swept me off my feet,
To the safe haven in the echoes of my dreams.
I've never been resistant to nostalgia.
And it seems, it never truly resisted me.

Janeyliz Baez is a graduating senior at PPCHS. This free verse poem comes straight from the inspiration she got from the emotions felt as a senior. It has been such a nostalgic journey being in the same school for 13 years and having to leave and make her own way in what seems like a crooked world at times. Yet, she tries to remain hopeful about what the future holds.
