AmLit Spring 2022

Page 135

Time’s Autobiography Nicole Flanagan

The bittersweet symphony of life. Time. A double edged sword which marks all living things, deliberately scaring scarring us with an insatiable desire to understand it. Lifetimes pass only to realize we cannot. We go on, surviving under an ambiguous countdown of our very existence. Not quite sure what to make of it, not quite sure what meaning to believe in. Oh, to be unaware; to be a soft, thoughtless rabbit perusing the sweet, flowery meadows with only the most basic instincts and needs. We grow up nonchalantly brushing off our parent’s pleas pleads to stop getting older. To appreciate where we are, because one day, the cruel nature of life will knock you off your feet, leave you stunned by harsh anxieties and broken hearts, and cripple you with an array of seemingly impossible challenges. Time weaves together to taunt you when she wants to and to heal you when she decides to. She juxtaposes herself, watching you soak your pillow with relentless tears as you beg her to skip to the good part- to fast forward to a place and moment where the pain is left in the past, where it’s no longer actively working against you, where you have conquered it. She doesn’t. She slowly passes you by as you battle each day as fiercely as you can with the little strength you have left. She toughens you as she weakens you. She leaves you with little choice but to persevere. Suddenly, after tireless effort when old problems are now old and you’re all bandaged up from past wounds, she creeps up during your most authentic times. Perhaps you met the love of your life. Or reconnected with old

friends in a new city. Maybe you are excelling in your field of work. That’s when she decides to hit the gas, go full throttle. The sweetest victories are the most fleeting of moments. So much so that you learn to breathe it into your soul, to recognize that this present moment will be one that nestles into the files of your mind to create a home in your future daydreams. It will be amongst a collection of “perfect” evocations, ready to be summoned until Time gradually devours it, leaving you no longer able to reminisce or relive it. In times of distress, loved ones will remind you that time goes on, that there is much life to live. In moments of carefree wanderlust, friends will shout that life is short. We craft our ideals concerning Time based on our own and other’s convenience. Because somewhere within us, we all know the time we’re worried about, the time we’ve interpreted is man-made. And humans are imperfect, flawed. So time haunts us, residing someplace constant in our minds, triggering our fear; our hope; our nostalgia; our amnesia; our uncertainty; our pain. She lusts to be everything and everywhere despite being invisible and intangible. She’s what we make of her- a complex, messy, life-long, ticking time bomb of an ultimatum. And we can do nothing but allow her to sink her teeth in and enjoy the taste of our blood, sweat, and tears. Oh, to be a soft, perusing rabbit. To be simplistic and unmarked by the sword of Time. To stay young, free, detached from the shackles of the Grandfather Clock of all Clocks. She may be cruel and sweet and all things under the sun, but as everything else, she ends too. 139 | Spring 2022


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Someone I Love is Slipping Away • • • Isabella Paracca

0
page 139

Cleaning my room • • • Olivia O’Connor

1min
page 136

Time’s Autobiography • • • Nicole Flanagan

2min
page 135

I Hate the Texture of These Sheets

0
page 138

Reflections on Time • • • Emma DiValentino

2min
page 134

Found in Nature • • • Demi Benard

0
page 133

Childhood Dwellings • • • Isabella Paracca

1min
page 131

remains • • • Alexia Partouche

1min
page 132

Ripe, New Beginnings • • • Zahra DeShaw

0
page 128

Speak, Hear, Listen • • • Hope Jorgensen

1min
page 120

Weep • • • Miriam Yarger

1min
page 125

Big Three • • • Kaitlyn Chesleigh

0
page 118

Childhood Absence • • • Hope Jorgensen

1min
page 126

Loneliness • • • Emma Southern

0
page 114

The Ocean’s Fairy Dust • • • Grace Hasson

1min
page 81

Grief • • • Emilee Rae Hibshman

0
pages 82-83

i will try to remember this • • • Heather Roselle

0
page 79

Another Life • • • Jordyn Baker

1min
page 76

an ode to the brown

1min
page 75

ache is a noun and a verb • • • McKenna Casey

0
page 78

Lights Out • • • Kathryne McCann

3min
pages 72-73

The End • • • Mara Shepherd

1min
page 67

we are womxn • • • Stella Thé

3min
pages 64-65

To the Woman I’ll Meet Tomorrow • • • Olivia Traub

2min
page 62

I Thought I Knew What Love Felt Like • • • Emily Rae Hibshman

1min
page 60

Right? • • • Julia Kane

0
page 56

Like broken pottery, fondly I think of you • • • Annika Rennaker

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page 52

There is So Much to Love in a Laugh

2min
pages 54-55

I Remember Everything • • • Kaitlyn Chesleigh

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page 59

Stories • • • Miriam Yarger

0
page 49

Diamonds for My Daughters

3min
pages 46-47

untitled_1 • • • Katherine Mahan

0
page 48

The Worth of an Elephant • • • Hope Jorgensen

5min
pages 39-43

It Was Just a Game • • • Emma Southern

1min
page 38

I don’t know why I like old things • • • Annika Rennaker

0
page 34

a concert in the square • • • Isabel de Oliveira

0
page 35

Things I Need to Fix • • • McKenzie Taylor

2min
page 33

Fern After Dark • • • Dori Rathmell

1min
page 32

Bloodrush • • • Audrey Magill

3min
page 26

Banshee • • • Tilly Boraks

1min
page 24

ICARUS! • • • Mei Matute

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page 27

Bloom 2 • • • Isabelle Ri

1min
page 17

Josephine • • • Mara Shepherd

1min
page 19

heitara • • • Caroline Siebert

2min
page 20

A Letter to My Maker • • • Connaught Riley

1min
pages 28-29

The Girl in the Yellow House • • • Kathryne McCann

1min
page 16

indifference • • • Sydney Muench

3min
page 7

She Shoots, She Mourns • • • Liah Argiropoulos

1min
page 10

It’s the Little Things • • • Olivia Traub

2min
page 5

Wrath • • • Hope Jorgensen

2min
page 14

Spring 2022

2min
page 3

60,000 • • • Jordyn Baker

2min
page 6

A Civic and Orange Slices • • • Ellie Blanchard

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page 15

No One Told You? • • • Julia Mitchell

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page 9
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