Once Upon a Time…
There was a Little Girl with Too Braids
She liked a lot of things
She liked to play on the swings
Pumping her legs, going hire and hire
And she liked numbers
She liked being the best at numbers.
And you would think, with being the best at numbers
She would be the best at words, too.
But faster than you can add fifteen to itself
She'll tell u
‘No.’
‘I don't like words’
‘I don't like to rite!’
She would put her hands on her hips
And explain,
That words wear the monsters in her mind
That they would get all mixed up
Like a song
With the wrong tune
And that she couldn't use them
Ever
And that was that.
Two say that she had a reputation
Was an understatement
A reputation for trouble
Maybe that reputation was
What got her into this mess
Inn the first place
Won day
Someone gave her a chance
A chance to grow up
Learn more
A chance to go to a knew
Better
School
All she had to do
Was
Rite
Once
And she did
Abhorrently
She hated every moment of it
She hated the crunch of her fingers
As her knuckles cramped
She hated the words
Flying around
In her head
Like the butterflies were fluttering
In her mind
Instead of her stomach
But she scratched the pencil into the paper, anyway
Hating the words:
Once Upon a Time
Her hands turned clammy as she picked up the pencil. The rubber eraser on the end was sketchy, little veins of black etched across her notebook paper. Only four words were written at the top. Once Upon a Time. Tears were pricking at her eyes, like they always did when she tried to write.
"Ten more minutes!" The proctor called out. The Little Girl with Too Braids hugged her knees to her chest, felt the floodgates pound at her eyes, begging to pour out. But she couldn't cry. Not now. Not when she was so close. So the Little Girl with Too Braids used the sleeve of her sweater to wipe at her red eyes and clutched the pencil with her fist, etching her watery story into the page, even though she knew it would probably fail her. At that moment, the girl swore two things. She'd pass the test. And then she would hate writing. Forever. Because it was hard. Because it hated her. And because without it, she would've passed.
The Little Girl with Too Braids failed
She didn't fail badly
She wasn't the only won to fail
But she failed.
And it was humiliating.
'I WANT A CHANCE!'
She screamed.
'I'LL DO ANYTHING!'
Maybe they would've just brushed her off
She was just a little girl, after all.
But there was enough draw,
Enough interest,
Enough spirit,
That they looked into it.
"We've checked." They said with a grin, "We checked your records." The Little Girl with Too Braids clasped her hands, squeezing her Mommy, praying.
"And?"
"And you're in." They exclaimed, with big smiles. The Little Girl with Too Braids pumped her fists in the air and squealed. Yes. "As long as you can improve in your lacking areas." Her smile dropped to the floor.
Darn it.
She thought about her usual tricks
To skip writing
Would they work this time?
At this knew school?
Only won way to find out
She put her hands together
And pasted on a sly smile
"Okay. I'll do it."
The knew teacher
Commanded respect
Her face was prim
But kind
She smelled of lavender oil
And graded assignments
Most of all, though
She was the kind of teacher who would
Never
Miss
A
Beat
Even her name was demanding
Za-pot-ticky
Like lightning against her tongue
Leaving a sweet-but-sour taste
Like the perfect tangerine
It was the very first word
The Little Girl with Too Braids
Liked.
"Okay, class. We're going to start today by writing an essay." The Little Girl with Too Braids waited for a collective groan to come from her class. Or at least a frown. But nothing happened.
The entire class
Was made of
Writers
And readers
They weren't afraid
They could do it,
But she couldn't
"Just tell me what you want from me, the teacher, this year." The Little Girl with Too Braids slouched in her seat, the screws of her chair knotting her hair painfully.
"Excuse me." She raised her hand. "May I use the restroom?" The entire class watched her with an expression that had to be disgust. The teacher took off her glasses so she could see her glare.
"Only after you finish your piece." With a groan, she started writing. The teacher watched her closely, watched her struggle, without offering any help. The Little Girl with Too Braids gulped, frustrated. Did the teacher know? How bad she was at writing? There was a cough in the back of the classroom. Someone dropped their pencil. Were they all watching her? Or were these generic classroom noises? The teacher was still watching her closely, gesturing at her mostly-blank page. With no idea what else to do, the Little Girl with Too Braids glared back.
The teacher was flustered,
Shocked
With her audacity.
But she didn't mind.
She had been looking for a crazy kid
To teach
The Little Girl with Too Braids tried
As hard as she could
But
Naturally
Her paper looked like a white shirt
Put into the washing
With a block of lead.
The words were impossible to read,
And what you could gather,
Sounded like a language
That couldn't bee English.
"Have a good weekend, everyone!" The teacher called, before pointing a finger at The Little Girl with Too Braids. "Can I have a word?" The Little Girl with Too Braids gulped. Uh oh. The entire class froze.
"Okay," She dropped her backpack onto the ground. The teacher nodded at everyone else to continue packing up.
"It has come to my attention that you're… how do I say this… slacking a bit in the writing department. If today's assignment had been graded, you would've undoubtedly failed." The Little Girl with Too Braids tensed. Failing was not acceptable. Failing meant her parents would make her work. Make her write. Failing meant the end of her.
"I guessed that." She admitted. Her lips were trembling. "Please don't fail me." The Little Girl with Too Braids felt a lump grow in her throat, her feelings pounding at her eyes, like water behind a dam.
"Fail you?" The teacher raised an eyebrow. "No, I'm going to try to help you." The teacher smiled, just a little bit, noticing the fall in her student's eyes. "I promise, by the end of the year, you'll love to write." The Little Girl with Too Braids remembered her own promise. To forever hate writing.
"I doubt it." She muttered under her breath, slinging her backpack over her shoulder, turning to leave.
At the edge of the door
She met her whole class
They had been watching through the window
Slit into the wall
Pretending that they had been getting their bags
The Little Girl with Too Braids
Scoffed.
Meanies.
She was about to storm away
When won of the kids
Caught her eye
She stopped in her tracks
Dazzled
He wasn't necessarily
The most attractive
And she knew
That he had a reputation
For having
A temper.
But,
She couldn't help staring
At him
His hair
Was all over the place
Like sticks gathered together
Waiting to start a campfire
He hadn't been gossiping
Like the other kids
He had been watching her
Sadly
As if to say
Sorry this is happening to you.
Her heart
Skipped a beat
As she rushed
Home
With a pack of prompts
In tow
"I'm going to ride my bike." She said to her mother, eagerly. But Mommy shook her head.
"No, your teacher gave you writing prompts. Do them, please." Mommy insisted, slipping notebook paper towards her. She groaned.
"Fine." She took the pages and finished them as fast as she could. When she was done, her eyes were red and puffy. They always looked like that when she wrote.
The next day
The Little Girl with Too Braids
Took her mixed-up stories
To her teacher
The teacher was quiet for a few moments
As she glanced over the papers
The whole class fell
Silent
As they waited to hear the verdict
"No, no! Here." The teacher scolded, sliding her a book. "If you're going to learn how to write, you have to read. You don't read much, do you?" She gave The Little Girl with 'Too' Braids a knowing look.
"Um." She was about to say of course I read! Who doesn't? But was that true? She thought a little bit. What was the last book she read? Her face turned pink as she realized it was one of those kiddy books, with only fifteen words on every page. "Yeah, I'm not much of a reader."
"We're going to change that." The teacher assured.
The Little Girl with Too Braids sighed
And agreed
To read
more.
The first class novel
Or maybe second
(She didn't do a good job of reading the first)
Was
'The Mixed Up Files of Ms. Basil E Frankweiler.'
It was hard at first
The words were big and long
Like a cobra
Out to kill her
But then she saw the patterns
The way they came together
The way they made a picture in her mind
Action
Drama
Wanting
An Angel statue
The way
Claudia
Wanted more
Than the world had to offer
The ending
Was a plot twist
The Little Girl with Too Braids
never expected
She never expected
That writing could do that
That writing could make her feel like that
Make her feel so important
So worthy.
"So, what did you think?" Her teacher asked. The Little Girl with Too Braids clasped her hands, rubbed her temples, thinking about what to say. Were there any words? And then it all clicked into place.
"I think… I want to learn how to write. How to write better." She explained. Her teacher cracked a grin.
"Great!"
The Little Girl with Too Braids
Was different now
Her hands didn't cramp up
When they touched the pencil
Her eyes didn't grow puffy
When the going got tough
"You've done enough writing for today," Mommy said, staring out at the window, watching the other kids kick a playground ball around. The Little Girl with Too Braids sighed.
"This is for a project, Mommy. We're presenting tomorrow." She looked out into the distance. "I hope I finish. I hope it's good."
And
She finished it
The words were a little tangled
Strained, like they were struggling to be free
But it was better
So much better
In class
She was so giddy
That she didn't even wait
For the teacher to call her name
She bounded up to the front of the room
In her new dress
With her freshly oiled braids
And chipmunk-style grin
And
Started
To
Read
She had written about
'The Mixed Up Files of Ms. Basil E Frankweiler'
About how she loved it
How Ms. Frankweiler
Could've been hiding something
Something more.
She gestured her hand
To the right
Then to the left
Like she had seen adults do
Then with an extravagant bow
She placed her writing on the table
And plopped back into her seat
"You all did pretty well." The teacher said, as she laid the graded assignments on desks. Everyone was watching as The Little Girl with Too Braids got her grade.
She squeezed her eyes shut, slowly turning the paper over. In sloppy red were the words: B-, good job, I'm proud of you! We have another assignment coming up. Use the critiques I wrote to improve.
The other kids
Could see the grade
And they snickered behind their hands
But it didn't matter
She had passed
She had gotten a good job
And she had one more chance to redeem herself.
"Our next topic is going to be poetry." The teacher said, handing out papers. "Today's assignment is small. Get into groups of two. One person will be the poet, the other will be the artist." The Little Girl with Too Braids knew exactly who to run to. Her best friend. Another girl, a pretty girl, who had a flair unmatched by any. But she wasn't just extravagant. She was kind. She was helpful. And she cared more than anyone else.
The Little Girl with Too Braids
Was scared
Of poetry
So she told her Pretty friend
To write
But the teacher heard her
Talking
"No, I want you to write." The teacher said, pointing at the Little Girl with Too Braids.
"Are you sure?" She asked, biting her nails. The teacher nodded.
"Yep. Just get creative."
Her Pretty Friend
Winked
So creative
Is what she did
The Little Girl with Too Braids
Straightened her back
And let the pencil touch the paper
Feeling the magic pulse through her hands
And when she was done
She read it to her class
Let the words flow out of her mouth
Like bees
Delicate
But powerful
So powerful.
"Class, give-" The teacher didn't have to say it. She didn't even have to utter a single word. The class stood up from their seats and put their hands together.
Because they had felt the magic, too
All of them
Except one
"Hey," The boy with fiery hair, the one that made her cheeks warm, poked at her elbow. She instantly felt her face grow pink, an urge to curl her hair around her finger, but she ignored it all and looked at him with big eyes.
"Yeah?"
"They're talking. About you." He said. His face was serious, solid like stone, as he took her arm and led her towards the table.
"I bet she's going to need summer school!" One boy called out. His hair was brown, like dead branches. The rest of the class was standing around him. Watching. Laughing. The Little Girl with Too Braids felt her throat grow clammy as the words weighed her down, but she waited for a quirky comeback to come to her. It did. If there was anything she was good at, it was quirky comebacks.
"Well, I hope you didn't bet much." Was all she could croak out, before turning away. The words hurt too much. Words could hurt.
But words could also heal
The boy with the fiery hair
Looked like he was about to bubble over
Lose it
Until the Little Girl with Too Braids put a hand on his shoulder
And shook her head
'It's not worth it.'
He unclenched his fist
'I'm sorry that they're that way.'
'I know.'
So she sat down and kept writing out her big poem.
"I'm going to need another paper!" She called out, loud enough for the whole class to hear. They all looked down at their own pages, only half full with words, dumbfounded, as she sashayed across the room to staple a green-tinged page onto her assignement. A few jaws dropped. Including the jaw of the Branch-Brown boy.
She went home that day
Feeling mellow
Bittersweet
Like maybe, even if she was hated by some people
Like Branch-Brown boy
But the Pretty Girl
And the boy with fiery hair
Wouldn't hate her.
But fate was cruel,
Too cruel
To her.
"We're moving?!" She screamed, putting her hands over her ears like it could change it. Like it could change reality. Her parents gently approached her.
"It's alright, Texas is a great place to live. You'll like it." They assured, patting her hand, but there was no more assuring. Nothing could comfort her.
She would be alone
Alone again.
Without the Pretty Girl.
Or the Fiery haired-kid.
Or even Branch-Brown-boy.
She would be all alone.
So she did the one thing
That could suck out all the
Loneliness
She got out a page
And wrote
She wrote like Claudia
Who was yearning for more
She wrote like the characters
In the books
That lined her room
That made her laugh
Under her breath
After years of never reading
She had
A room
Full of books
She could picture it
Reading out to her class
Once Upon a time…
There was a Little Girl with Too Braids
"What are you doing?" The Little Girl with Too Braids asked her mother on the day of the poetry presentation, as her hair was being combed. Instead of parting it down the middle, her Mommy brought it all together into her hand, before snapping a rubber band on.
"A ponytail." Her mother explained. "You're old enough."
The Little Girl with Too Braids gulped
She was now The Big Girl with One Ponytail.
In front of her class
She trembled
Watching all the kids watch her
'Nice hair-do!'
The Pretty Girl had said.
'Good luck!'
The Now-Big Girl with One Ponytail
Cleared her throat
And began.
Knowing no matter what
Even if she moved
She'd always remember
This
Moment.
…
(3 years later)
The Even Bigger Girl with One Ponytail
Now felt lonely
There was a cotton mask
Covering her face
Terror
pulsed through her veins
Her skin was sticky
From the Texas heat
She thought about
What she did
As a little girl
When she was scared
And of course
The first thing she thought
Was to write
To put the shyness
Of Auggie
The excitement
Of Zippy
The yearning
Of Claudia
All into one story
So she ripped off the mask
Opened her computer
And hit the keyboard
Remembering the Pretty Girl
The Boy with The Fiery hair
Her teacher
Her friends
Words popped up on her screen
The Little Girl with 'Too' Braids
By Karma P
Yep
That Little Girl
Was
Me
So I hit the keys, typing out the first words:
Once Upon a Time…
There was a Little Girl with Too Braids
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