One Wrong Thing
By Alexa Dunsche, age 13, New York.
Don’t be quiet at school
otherwise people won’t like you;
be kind
but don’t be too kind otherwise it’ll come off as desperate;
you have to keep up with your work
but don’t go too far ahead otherwise you are a “goody two shoes”;
you have to be yourself
but you also have to be what other people want you to be in order to fit in;
“Aren’t you the quiet kid in school?”
you have to be nice to everyone
even if they don’t treat you right;
“I have to be quiet because if I stand up for myself,
I will get shut down”;
you have to be loud and proud
otherwise no one will hear you;
“You are doing everything wrong!”
you have to smile for the picture
even if where you are smiling is purgatory;
you have to keep your cards close to your chest
but not too close otherwise people will think you are hiding something;
you can’t dress in black otherwise people will think you are emo
but you can’t dress too colorful either, otherwise people will look at you
like a little kid;
you have to follow the trends
but you can’t be too invested in them because it’s not cool the next day;
“I’m trying!”
you have to stay and not cry
because if you do, they will get pleasure;
you have to be perfect.
you just have to be.
if you make one little mistake,
you’re a failure;
one bad mark
can damage your grade forever;
one misstep
can send you to the hospital with a cast on your leg;
one wrong move
and you lose the game;
one new friend
and you lose the whole friend group;
one public embarrassment
and no one can be seen with you;
one wrong thing
not the whole story
By Alexa Dunsche, age 13, grade 7, New York. Alexa adds: “This poem came from the pressure I feel to be perfect, and how one wrong move can feel like it ruins everything. In the moment, I felt like each mistake I made erased everything else. Writing this poem helped me realize it doesn’t have to be that way. One wrong thing can feel huge, but it doesn’t define who you are.”
