I S I O N The 2 0 2 4
V
Dear Reader,
Thank you for lending The Vision your unyielding support. Throughout the year, us at The Vision have been joyously inundated with your contributions in all genres of creative work. We cannot imagine the magazine without our dedicated and artistic readers indeed, you are our backbone, our bloodstream, and our heart. Without you, reader, Hackley would have no Vision.
Ever y year we have strived to showcase the best of what Hackley has to offer in terms of artistic merit, talent, and effort. This year is no different; the work gathered here is at the summit of our class’s output, portraying your eclectic thoughts and unspoken dreams on ever y page.
As you give your undivided attention to read this magazine, know that The Vision stands proudly with and for you.
Joshua Lee, Kylie Oh, & The Vision Staff
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“ The Road Less Traveled” by Nkechi Ude
Photography by Annabel Hardart page 6
“I remember” by Lara McComiskey
Painting by Elyse Wang.................................................................................................page 8
“ The moon is a beautiful peacekeeper” by Lilo Haidara
Photography by Annabel Hardart.............................................................................page 10
“August” by Arri B entsi-Addison Posey
Photography by Enrique R amirez page 12
“Fruits of her Labor” by Nkechi Ude
Collage by Elyse Wang................................................................................................page 14
“ Trace” by Rowan Pedraza
Drawing by Fiona Pedraza.........................................................................................page 16
“ The Moment When” by Allison Chin
Drawing by Hailey Won..............................................................................................page 18
“A year too soon, too late” by Anonymous
Photography by Charlie Perlman...............................................................................page 20
“Compromise” by Anonymous
Photography by Mika Nuzum....................................................................................page 22
“See Me, Feel Me” by Cassandra Stand
Drawings by Reagan B egley........................................................................................page 24
“ The Old Toy Van” by Anonymous
Drawing by Gabrielle Hogrefe page 26
“I want to retrieve you from the crinkled paper prints” by Anonymous
Photography by Kalin Huang.....................................................................................page 28
“Music Yet Lives” by Samuel Sugiura
Photography by Jasper Quattrone..............................................................................page 30
“ The Duty of a Woman at Sea ” by Madison Cruz
Photography by Frances Clifford page 32
o n t e
ta bl e o f c
n t s
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“Origami” by Talia Tirschwell
Collage by Elyse Wang.................................................................................................page 34
“ The Invisible Mask” by Ar ya Gauba
Painting by Allison Chin page 36
“Sinking” by Isaac Ahn
Photography by Annabel Hardart..............................................................................page 38
“How to Say Goodbye” by Kylie Oh
Photography by Fiona Pedraza...................................................................................page 40
“Five Ways of Looking at a Mallomar” by William Earley
Photography by Annabel Hardart..............................................................................page 42
“R andomness / Decay” by Talia Tirschwell
Painting by Hailey Won...............................................................................................page 44
“Intertwined” by Anonymous
Photography by Frances Clifford................................................................................page 46
“Staring at purple” by Francesca Jones
Painting by Reagan B egley..........................................................................................page 48
“Barbershop Questions” by Allison Chin
Photography by Anonymous......................................................................................page 50
“Evanescent Daydream” by Anonymous
Painting by Allison Chin.............................................................................................page 52
“Cheap Ink” by Kylie Oh
Drawing by Ella Chen..................................................................................................page 54
“ The Little Ant” by Miya Lauher
Photography by Jasper Quattrone..............................................................................page 56
“Your R adiant Company ” by Madison Cruz
Photography by Annabel Hardart page 58
“Cycle” by Talia Tirschwell
Drawing by Gabrielle Hogrefe....................................................................................page 60
“Haikus” by Talia Tirschwell
Photography by Annabel Hardart..............................................................................page 62
“Big Shoes to Fill” by David Lefkovits
Photography by Isaac Ahn page 64
“snacking thoughts” by Anonymous
Painting by Elyse Wang................................................................................................page 66
“honor me with the comfort of knowing” by Madison Cruz
Photography by Olivia Houck.....................................................................................page 68
“Jumanji” by Anonymous
Photography by Samantha Reyes page 70
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Z ion B ennett ’26, drawing
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The Road L ess Traveled
by Nkechi Ude ’26
Sometimes I wonder why Nobody ever takes the road less traveled by the masses They never take the time to understand why highways end in crashes
I wonder why the woman who passes by ever y Sunday in a shiny red Cor vette has an empty passenger seat with 4 kids in a back that only seats 3, her attention forever divided but in the winter months the heat of her heart only warms three why the man to her woman sometimes drives and sometimes occupies, a faded silver Honda on dirt roads in the night, how he sometimes forgets the quality of a Cor vette when he knows he’s deser ving of something less, that its shine is much too bright for the fragility of his ego why the fourth passenger in the back of their car, looks to find comfort on her sister’s lap, as there isn’t enough room and getting a new car would’ve meant driving past the roundabout, something her tired mother refused. So instead she watches her little sister stick her nose into the driver’s manual, long before she can read. She watches her attempts at driving when her feet can’t quite reach the pedals, and her hands are far too small to steer. But even still a little sister finds her way to life on the highway, where she speeds in the fast lane as often as she pleases. For the directions to the road less traveled were hidden in the fine print ofthe manual she’d never understood. She traveled much too fast. Which eventually led to a crash. A cautionar y tale told so that I, somebody to nobody, might pave my own path.
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Annabel Hardart ’24, photography 7
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I remember
by L ara McC omiskey ’27
I remember when the sheet hugged us tight but not as tight as our friendship I remember making up stories to you when I couldn’t read I remember looking out the window and seeing fireworks light up the sky. I remember drawing on your blue wallpaper. I remember watching you play games on your computer. I remember when I broke your headboard, I remember all of it.
It was all in one room. The blue room. It wasn’t my room, but it had my favorite things It wasn’t my room, but it might as well have been It wasn’t my room but it holds memories my room never will. The air was homey, the light bright and happy.
But now when you reach for the doorknob the door gets stuck, overtime the door and the wall have melted together. The air is stagnant like an algae ridden pond. The room has a cold hospital-like feeling. The light dimmed, maybe from lack of use or lack of joy
The room just has old memories; it no longer creates new ones. It’s just a place with blue walls. Just a place where my favorite person used to be
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Elyse Wang ’24, painting
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Annabel Hardart ’24, photography
The mo on is a b eautiful p eacekeep er
by Lilo Haidara ’25
The moon is a beautiful peacekeeper
She rises at dusk a bat from a cave
The leaves, fallen from the day, leap to her
She bows to sun, an amenable slave
With no such complaint she rises above
Her milk eyes splatter across the dim night
Witnesses wistfully below the dove
Fear the mighty sun, her great ray of light
Take me, I fear before the sun will rise
Your light is perfect for star sunken eyes
Write me a passage from words that are wise
Relinquish your guilt the sun also lies
La lune please guide me through this librar y
You smell dewy of rotten rosemar y
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Enrique R amirez ’24, photography
August
by Arri B entsi-Addison Posey ’25
“Love camouflaging under strife
Or other matters
Minds over matters
Let there be more!”
- “Isle Unto Thyself ”
Minds over matters
Funny.
Funny how often I believed the two depended upon one another. And yet
A mere gaze in your direction
(And I’m quite aware of how corny this sounds)
Sends the matters fleeing from within my mind.
Now I refuse to be one of those poets who writes nonstop cliche poems
Above love And romance
And dreams that don’t exist in even the most star ved imaginations.
But even so
I ask myself
And I ask my highest powers
My greatest divinities
Love
Hope Dreams
That there will be more!
Lest my woeful cries ever resound throughout the forsaken, neverending Valley of Broken Hearts.
It’s a craving that I cannot fulfill
A feeling, a high that cannot be matched
A comfortability.
And even amongst the bright fluorescent lights
That flash across your face
And your messy oxtail-flavored kisses
I find our love undisguised. Revealed through its camouflage
For it has nothing to hide from.
No strife. No means or want for discretion.
Please.
Please Love.
Letthere be more!
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Elyse Wang ’24, collage
Fr uits of her labor
by Nkechi Ude ’26
On sunday mornings when i’m home alone with him they often ask me to cut a piece of fruit
For ever yone who wants it
My father gets the biggest piece, because he earned it for all the work he does ever y weekday 9-5 So on the weekends he enjoys the most sweetness
Never mind the fact that taking care of 3 incredibly high maintenance children is no small feat
My little big brother has the second largest piece, because he’s a growing young man who needs all the sweet he can get for the ugly world that is his daily environment as the only the only kid representing an entire culture that his classmates can mock and imitate the good parts of but never the lows So for that he is deser ving of a moderately sized piece
I ser ve my baby brother next, because it’s selfish to not put him before myself, because that’s the job of the eldest
So my 4 year old brother has the third largest piece by this point a mere 1/5 of the melon remains the smallest scraps leftover
and of course I never complain so as my mother and I glare, at leftovers from fruits we cut, cleaned, and ser ved today fruit we selected, taste tested, bought and checked for mold
My mother hands me the last piece without a second of thought she gives it to me and although I cut my piece in half and leave it in the fridge for her against her wishes
I wonder if she’ ll ever taste the ripest part of the fruit that is my fathers piece
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Trace
by Rowan Pedraza ’24
Our canoe paddles spun whirlpools in the water.
Sometimes a whirlpool held, long after the others dissipated.
The wakes traced by our canoes made the clouds dance.
Light travels in a straight line, but I caught it pliéing when it felt nobody was watching
The trees, in particular, came into focus. B efore we left camp for the Allagash, we studied the leaves of trees found in Maine I had learned when I was ver y young that there are two types of trees - trees that lose their leaves ever y year and trees that don’t
But something was changing in my fifteen-yearold perception.
Fiona Pedraza ’26,
drawing
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I had often looked at the façade of trees along the bank of a river But in those days on the Allagash I gazed in wonder at arms outstretched in an eternal struggle with gravity. From those arms grew smaller limbs, and from those smaller limbs still, all part of the same body, all fighting gravity. Each smallest limb ended in a treasure. For some trees, a veined membrane, thin enough to tear ; for others, a cluster of flexible, fearless needles. Each capable of magic, of turning light into food. Throughout our coexistence with the trees on the banks of the Allagash, we practiced mindfulness in the form of leaving of no trace. Cooking over fires of only dead wood hardly needed a reminder once we became aware of the formidable sensitivity surrounding us, the wonders of nature who exhale the air we breathe and share the ground they hold in their roots for us to sleep on.
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Hailey Won ’25, drawing
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Charlie Perlman ’25, photography
A y ear too s oon, too late
by A nony mous
it’s worse honestly because I can’t even be mad at you There’s nothing I can pick out to make this more bearable: no snide remarks or ignored texts dropped hands or unsavor y jokes and I don’t want to despise you for making me like you for smiling at me holding open doors and buying books determinedly tying on bracelets with too-short strings sending me songs you think I’d like “good morning”s and “good night”s nicknames and gentle teasing and I don't know what to do when I think of something you’d laugh at because I can't send it to you not without risking us dragging this on longer falling back into old patterns until the temptation to re-ignite what we had grows too strong But I don't want you out of my life I don’t want to look back on this in a year and it’s like we never crossed paths like this was a foray into an ephemeral dreamland but in the blink of an eye, it never happened that we ’ ll just become lessons before finding The One something we ’ ll pause and remark upon once in a while but never really remembered.
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Mika Nuzum ’25, photography
C ompromise
by Anonymous
I’m learning to love the damp heat of Tokyo
So we could retire to Florida
even though the humidity frizzes my hair and smothers my skin because I would have you.
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S ee Me, Feel Me by Cassandra Stand ’24
had a complicated histor y with h.
mber being held between the inviting y mother, remember the way her olds and protrusions created a warm hich perfectly fit my small form. I ember lacing my small, delicate gers between her rough and alloused ones, worn from bleach, room handles, and brokenness. She as a landscape I knew well, knew t if I rested my ear to her breast I ear the steady drumbeat of her heart, own from the womb. Back then, she ve. I couldn’t imagine her ever falling
hers, she had a heavy hand which my flinch and protest as she pulled a s, willing them into submission.
n I was younger. I felt as if it was a ng me from my childish antics. I my mother’s hands, but could no mpenetrable knots of my own
tive, gentle hands of the social all of my back as she led me out of ember when those hands he table to pull me out as I d begged. In those moments I rough hands I knew so well, that . Hands that I could hold me so I t fall apart.
eagan B egley ’24, drawing
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I remember being hungr y. No hands touched me unless they delivered blows: with combs, with belts, with hands and foul words. Hollow, gentle hands dragged me from house to house, none of them mine, none of them HOME. I was star ving. But, I learned what older women could do; I was a clever child. To be felt was to be seen, to be heard, to be loved. I subsisted on the hands which ran through me and over me and in me. I thought the touch of these strangers would keep me from falling apart.
It took me so long to realize how wrong it was.
It was only on park benches, on the subway rides, in the visiting center of Abbott House where I was allowed to hold my mother. She was the only pure touch I had left. Despite years passing by, her body still retained its shape, her hands their roughness. In these glimpses of familiarity when she was still mine I held her close to me. I listened for the drumbeat, proof she was still alive. In these moments, all we could do was hold onto each other to keep from falling apart.
But that heart betrayed me; She never let me say goodbye.
I sometimes envy how easy it is for others to have physical relationships. To touch and be touched. To be felt without pretext. Though, I’ve been learning the power of my own hands, a p
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m m
The Old Toy Van
by Anonymous
For a toy left behind we would obsess. Trekking through the sand, we’d look around, searching for hours with our heads down. Although we seemed like fools, nevertheless, we found a toy van: our greatest success. Its pink and yellow faded into brown. That scratched old thing with chipped paint would astound me.
But my prize I tossed in the basement, Now forgotten to the dust that collects below. Not unlike the way I’ve mistreated you, a golden antique bound to misplacement. We only have a few years left, you know. To find us again I’d love most, it’s true.
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Gabrielle Hogrefe ’24, drawing
I want to retrieve you f rom the crinkled paper prints by Anonymous
Kalin Huang ’26, photography
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I want to retrieve you-
from the crinkled paper prints, of shattered frames;
from the loose lipped souls, the ones that lit the flame;
from the monster that sprung itself alive, with your opening eye; from the broken kitchen, watching your hopes fly.
I so wish to reveal to youthe frail wings will make die; brass bands play a sorrow cr y ; the ashes of tomorrow, clear expired rose fields; and in lieu of expected solitude, flowers of rainbow colors bloom.
I would give this splintered worldto dr y your eyes of salt. to teach you love composes ever y sentence, ever y wrinkle, ever y laugh, ever y wail, ever y word, ever y embrace, ever y meeting with hail; to embed your impressionable soul, with nothing but boundless love.
My heart aches for a future untouched.
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Jasper Quattrone ’25, photography
Music Yet Lives
by Samuel Sugiura ’26
Music is a kinda funny thing. There’s ambient so soothing it could put you to sleep, or death metal so loud it makes your ears ring. but sadly not all live to see the rewards they should reap,
Like Nick Drake, the Van Gogh of song, Who never saw the gain from his tunes. But regardless of death, the sounds still live on. Speaking from the dead, his words like some runes.
But there are pieces from the living that carry sadness just as major.
Like Microphones and Mount Eerie, His guitars strumming the chords of nature. Though still alive, his songs are just as dreary.
But not all music of the dead must be glum. Take Fishmans, though Sato’s dead, from Otokotachi happiness is the outcome.
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The Duty of a Woman at S ea
by Madison Cruz ’26
If a man is like the sea, what is a woman ?
B ecause i know for certain i will never love a boy the way i love the ocean
A pitiful man can’t compare to the way that the ocean tends to my ever y wound
The originator of tough love
When you scrape your knee, she offers a sharp caress that heals and strengthens
The pain is simple and concise, yet you can feel the love through the platelet growth
Now if your heart has been thrown into the sea
It is lost forever
Held captive by the man that’s only use for it is to hoard
Clinging to the pure love he steals from these innocent beings
He takes the heart from those that flow and spin
All their sustenance now his
An assertion of the power that he has over them, but not a key
Mass accumulating their hearts is not the same as owning it
There is no entr y way with this theft
’ Tis not a door, but a cage
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Francis Clifford ’24, photography
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Elyse Wang ’24, collage
Origami
by Talia Tirschwell ’24
To fold, and to unfold, and to refold, and to unfold, and to fold thatis the course of life
When the paper begins, it is nothing but a thin, flat, smooth essence, not even capable of imagining what it may later become O ver time, though, with each crease of an edge, seal of a fingernail, and outgrowth of a shape, that flat paper develops into something three-dimensional, and it slowly fleshes out into a full, rich, depth-filled form.
In the majority of cases, the paper does not, or cannot, go straight from its simple flatness to its rich complexity. Instead, it must stop along the way, sometimes to reverse, sometimes to rewind and start over, and sometimes to morph into something new or even unexpected. The paper may not always have a clear shape as it goes along this path, but that reality is only due to the nature of its change.
Whatever happens, it is true that, for the paper, nothing is permanent: ever y fold can be undone, buried, or repurposed, and the simple, flat structure can always be returned to. Nonetheless, it is also true that, for the paper, everything is permanent: like lines on the palm of a human hand, each crease made will always leave a mark, and the paper will never again fold in quite the same way as a result of that mark.
While the days, months, and years slide by, the once-smooth paper will accumulate a collection of these marks, their lines haunting it like ghostly traces of the past. And with each new crease, the paper will grow slightly stronger, for it will have fought the ever-growing temptation to fold back over old lines and become something it was before. But with each new crease, the paper will also grow slightly weaker, for it can only fold a certain number of times before beginning to tear and unravel, before beginning to lose all semblance of the form it once held.
From a simple heart to butterfly to paper airplane, to fortune teller to swan to crane, to floral wreath to spring to spike ball, and back to all stops that came along the way…
To fold, and to unfold, and to refold, and to unfold, and to fold…thatis the course of life.
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The Invisible Mask
by Ar ya Gauba ’27
The mask is invisible,
A sheer piece of glass covering her face. A piece of glass that allows her to hide, To lie.
To let the world see a version of her that’s so fake, That it’s allowing the old version of her to die.
The social pressures of school and life Is a silver knife.
Blood flows out as memories of her life, A life where she was happy, Silly, Imperfect.
Now her life consists of perfect smiles.
Her personality is kind, but she feels vile.
She hates how she feels, like a fake, Like she’s drowning in a lake.
She’s through with it, she’s done.
She’s realized that she hasn’t won,
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Allison Chin ’24, drawing
And is ready to run. Run back to her old self, To a life of real smiles, A life where she’s not in exile. She used to feel like fraud, But now she feels like god. The mask has been broken, Catched, And thrown away. She’s happy now, Living her life,
Hoping to help those who are living on the same isle.
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Sinking
by Isaac Ahn ’26
People who go unknown in this world
Like sinking stones in the water
Never realized of their actions and deeds that changed this world
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Sinking, sinking
Until they take rest at the bottom
Never known, sinking history
Annabel Hardart ’24, photography
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How toSayGoodbye
yb yKhOeil42’ 40
I go to sit with the sunrise, admiring its beginning as I approach my end. Its rays dance on the surface of a bench, and on each blade of grass, bathing the strands in golden glow.
I also sit with my family : My mother, at breakfast and on the couch. (She is watching T V, I am watching her). My father, in the car as we drive to CVS for our last of many candy & shampoo runs. My sister, through grey and blue bubbles plastered on the phone screen.
I don’t tell them, I don’t think I could. Yet my dog feels my impending absence, and he sits with me as we have done countless times before, us both sensing the weight of this embrace as different bittersweet.
B ecause I had accepted what would happen when I realized the day before. Ready to be the golden blades of grass, the sunlight that traces them in warmth. And so I give a piece of myself to my families. They will see me in the calm of their mornings, in the frenzied last-minutes shopping trips.
I give a piece of myself to the earth, to the sea, to the air. Surrounding what I love, what I love surrounding me.
Fiona Pedraza ’25, photography
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Five Ways of Lo oking at a Mallomar
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Annabel Hardart ’24, photography
by William E arley ’25
I Nostalgia
The marshmallow popping through the chocolate
Taste of special occasions past
II
S orrow
The graham cracker snapping briskly
Taste of those gone by
III
Surprise
The chocolate melting with a touch
Taste of days yet to come
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Heartbreak
Flavors melding into one whole
A small joy through pain
V Remembrance
A cookie gone with the spring
S omething tied to the good old days
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R andomness / Decay
y by Talia Tirschwell ’24
Pristine, white new sneakers
A mesh tray filled with number two pencils
Paper cups, stacked next to the coffee machine
Soft-ser ve ice cream, swirled perfectly to its point
Freshly braided hair
Recently mowed grass
Glistening, rounded quarters
and A midnight-filled sky, exploding icy meteors
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Light tan leather, beaten at the edges
A blue pen ’ s ink cartridge, only half way full
2 smears of lipstick, against the cr ystal glass
One single bite-mark, car ved from a sandwich
Gently disheveled curls
Rugs after a first vacuum
Andrew Jackson’s crinkled face and A murky, green-blue sea, swirling with fish
Mud-soaked yellow boots
A dried-out quill, scratching uselessly at its surface
Empty thermoses, stained with ancient tea
Tiny scraps of food, piling up in the trash
Frizzy, fraying pigtails
Eroding wooden floorboards
Pennies tarnished with age and A beat-down, trodden-on Earth, hovering beneath humanity
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Hailey Won ’25, painting
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Inter twined by Anonymous mirror opposites and you are ever ything–have ever ything I wanted. long lashes, adorable dimples, a melodic laugh, an ease around ever yone, as they all slowly fall in love with you. Your permanent assuredness in who you are; your beautiful soul. I know you aren’t thinking the hateful barbs I think toward you when I am feeling my most loathing. And I can’t even really hate you because I’m a bit infatuated with you. How you would choose me with my awkward angles, braced teeth, and framed eyes. And because you didn’t have it easy you still don’t, I know how hard it is but I can’t help wishing I were you and getting a little mad that I’m not at myself and at you as if there’s a difference, really.
Frances Clifford ’25, photography
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Reagan B egley ’24, painting
Staring at pur ple
by Francesca Jones ’25
Purple means You crazy bitch
But at least you know where to find me
All my words are stolen
You have your feelings And I have mine
Portraits of love stories don’t Always end the way they Should Or is it could?
Expressing yourself can be so stifling
You make my nights so
B eautiful I become nocturnal
Getting my vitamin D from Bioluminescent jellyfish
It’s funny
Lying on the floor at Grand C entral
I can see the constellations In your face
Orion the only one I’ve ever remembered
Obscuring midnight rain filling your bathtub
As we write our play
Let’s have them
run away
What a tantalizing cliché
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Anonymous, photography
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Barbershop Questions
by Allison Chin ’24
The barbershop is a bubble of light In the darkness autumn sweeps in, earlier and earlier.
Your brother hops down from the chair, with his hair swept back and a self-conscious smile.
You urge your baby brother to go next. He toddles over, hands clutching candies he clumsily took while we pretended not to notice, as you lift him up, lips pursed in concentration. The barber sweeps the white fabric over him, fanning around him, the way the skirt of a wedding dress does as the bride swirls on the arm of her lover, until he is a floating head suspended in a sea of white.
You come back to me, walking with your head down, the leather seat crinkling as you sit, the hum of the electric razor continues. Hair brushes your eyes until you tilt your head back, shaking your head slightly until those strands fall away, revealing your face like curtains opening to reveal daylight, and your magnificence is suddenly so clear that I wonder how I’d never noticed. Our words slow to a trickle, until the moment hangs over us, like a blanket of contentment, as if our lives have led up to this moment.
The barber looks up at the TV, sighing as he notices it’s frozen, A pitcher mid-throw The batter still poised in anticipation. His gaze then flicks to us, alternating between you and me, and I look at the mirror across from us, to see what he sees.
I see a boy and a girl, talking about everything and nothing, close yet far on the same seat, as if hyper-aware of one another’s limbs and presence, backs against the wall, warped replicas of each other, and I can feel his question before it leaves his lips.
I glance over at your reflection as he says it, your cheeks turning red; the linoleum floor suddenly becomes fascinating. Everything sharpens as the question echoes around my head, seconds soaked in anticipation pass as you finally find your voice, the gravelly sound spilling out and stumbling over itself, until the laughter slips out of me, an answer in itself.
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I’m sorry for laughing slightly when you first kissed me but how could I help it? it felt surreal, I’m still unsure if it actually happened -as if yesterday was just a beautiful dream concocted by my mind to reassure me that life can be exquisite but I know it happened because I can still feel you
Evanescent Daydream
by Anonymous
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your fingers stroking mine as we held hands the softness of your sweater as you stood behind me. I kept admiring you instead of the artwork but how could I help it? paintings surrounded us of famous muses and artists’ adoration and devotion but all I could think about was how I wish I could fill a hall with art of you.
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Allison Chin ’24, painting
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Ella Chen ’26, drawing
Cheap Ink
by Kylie Oh ’24
Staring back at you, two years later, its persistence etched in your ver y skin. An unwelcome guest, yet has embedded beneath, rendering you powerless to politely ask it to leave. But good manners have gone long untouched as you scrub, scrape, scratch, & scream at your own self your betraying self What depicted itself careless concealed commitment What took minutes lasted years. And after all the impermanence in your life, why is cheap ink the thing that stays?
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Jasper Quattrone ’25, photography
The Little Ant e
The Little Ant
by Miya Lauher ’27
I feel like an ant
I feel like an ant
I do the work, I bend my back just to be in a place that I don’t wanna be or feel like I deser ve d t ork, I get invited to the big stuff and I walk in line with the others but people know that I’m different t t e ig a alk I’ d e e t
I do the work, I bend my back just to be in a place that I don't wanna be or feel like I deser ve I get invited to the big stuff and I walk in line with the others but people know that I'm different
More of an ant goes marching all alone than 1 by 1 let alone 2 by 2
More of an ant goes marching all alone than 1 by 1 let alone 2 by 2 ore lone
But most importantly I feel small and overlooked
But most importantly I feel small and overlooked
No one seems to recognize the work and the effort, just what I show and present to the group o r gn e w rk an e ffor , u
I’ve climbed hills and mountains, swam through rivers, waded through creeks ve cli be l h rs,
No one seems to recognize the work and the effort, just what I show and present to the group I've climbed hills and mountains, swam through rivers, waded through creeks
And yet I manage to disappoint myself when I compare myself to the others, looking at their gaping trenches and their highest peaks
And yet I manage to disappoint myself when I compare myself to the others, looking at their gaping nd mysel m a o othe s, oki e trenches and their highest peaks renches
It's hard to feel accomplished when others' shadows are completely drowning me out Hoorah, Hoorah
It’s hard to feel accomplished when others’ shadows are completely drowning me out t’s Hoorah Hoorah o ah
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I had imagined our future together and something changed in me
B eautifully, crushingly so you look like the rest of my life
I’m unable to imagine even a single instance of inharmonious existence with you
Ever ything feels so soft and warm when I’m talking to you
So safe and comfortable
You’ve created a safe space in your sparkling presence
So I love you as all best friends do Surely and soundly
Like the whole world conspired to help me find you
Like when we crossed paths and the stars started pointing
Knowing then what we only know now Can we always be this close” I ask
Yes” you reply, as certain as anything
And I add another quality about you I admire to the list Your R adiant C ompany
by Madison Cruz ’26
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Annabel Hardart ’24, photography
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Cycle
By
Talia Tirschwell ’24
Cycle
by Talia Tirschwell ’24
Is there a real p oint to the act
Of folding laundr y with such tact
Is there a real point to the act
S o so neat it will stay
Of folding laundr y with such tact
For no more than a day
S o so neat it will stay
For no more than a day
Till it’s cr umpled and once again sacked
Till it’s crumpled and once again sacked
Gabrielle Hogrefe ’24, drawing
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Annabel Hardart ’24, photography
Haikus
by Talia Tirschwell ’24
Haiku 1
When I catch the wind
My flower will spin and spin
Petals fly away
Haiku 2
The lone deer watch me
Frozen, eyes wide and alert
I pose them no threat
Haiku 3
A fallen acorn
Its echo pierces the air
Cracking on bare Earth
Haiku 4
Holly on the door Frosted mint coating the leaves
Howls rush through the breeze
Haiku 5
A cold Christmas night
We slipped down memor y ’ s lane
Us, darkness, and ice
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D , A V, , I, D, David. InHeb r ,we דוד.
Big Sho es to Fill
by David Lefkovits ’26
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Isaac Ahn ’26, photography
Three letters, two syllables.
This means “beloved”.
In honor of my great grandfather.
A doctor and first generation immigrant.
S omeone to carr y on his legac y.
Yet expand on it at the same time.
Although my name, to some, may seem common, it may n o t be taken for granted.
My parents always tell me, You are OUR beloved.
My parents always wanted a son named D avid.
Me, the second child of the four th generation.
Would get the privilege of such a sacred name.
A biblical hero, yet a humble man.
Big shoes to fill.
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snacking thoughts
by Anonymous
I am waiting
Waiting for the weekend
Waiting for Summer
Waiting for something exciting.
Waiting, waiting, waiting.
I am stationar y. I need to
I need to move.
Stretch my legs, breathe.
I need to go, go, go.
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Elyse Wang ’24, painting
But what if everything goes quiet and it smells of grass and suddenly I miss the patchworked corner, of my room and the warm embrace of my mother and I curl my legs up and bring them against my chest and I squeeze, squeeze, squeeze until I can’t and allow myself to feel.
And sundays are Sundays
winter is winter, and I am happy eating my tiramisu.
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I d o n ’ t e v e n w a n t t o w i n
I j u s t w a n t y o u t o s i t
w i t h m e i n s i l e n c e
H a v i n g a c o n v e r s a t i o n
o n l y o u r e y e s c a n s a y
1 0 0 0 i l o v e y o u s b a t t e d
a w a y i n a b l i n k
I f i t ’ s o v e r i w a n t t o k n o w
T h o u g h i c a n ’ t s a y i t
n o w , y o u h a v e t o k n o w
Olivia Houck ’25, photography
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honor me with the comfort of knowing by Madison
Cruz ’26
Jumanji by Anonymous
I sleep in rooms with mirrors in the sky, but wake in fields with stars around my neck. The longing stops and tears begin to dr y once tarps of guilt can cover up the wreck.
And in these fields, I saunter through the west where lavender and cherr y blossoms grow. The fairies sing and put my mind at rest but reaping’s not about what you can sow.
Samantha Reyes ’25, photography
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Mercurial and cynical are those who hunt the bad, but take the sash and crown. And competition’s written in the prose of those on airplanes looking at the ground.
The touch of hands could light the town ablaze, and blinks of eyes could put the fire out. The mastermind is one who simply plays with rocks of life that live in river spouts.
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The Visionaries
Editor-in-Chief: Kylie Oh
Co-Editor: Joshua Lee
Francesca Jones
Fiona Pedraza
Ella Chen
Ben Nadorf
Isaac Ahn
Madison Cruz
Ashley Hollingsworth
Zena Hume
Ms. Bottalico
The readers
Alex Booth
Alex Nuzum
Angela Croce
Annabel Previdi
Ari Spiegel
Arya Gauba
Austen Shapiro
Ava Derby
Cara Minello
Cecily Lewis
Gabrielle Nunes
Gabrielle Paes
James Devereaux
Kareena Parasnis
Keisha Johnson
Lara McComiskey
Lilly Rosenthal
Lucia Butterfield
Max Michael
Molly Perla
Nkechi Ude
Owen Spencer
Peter Roberts
Rafael Von Spiegel
Sabrina Reyes
Sam Sugiura
Sasha Haider
Sofia DeSpirito
Sophie Huang
Tristan Payne
Zariah Stewart
Submissions to TheVisionare chosen by volunteer peer readers who judge each piece without knowledge of the author’s identity. All students are encouraged to submit work, and all are invited to participate as readers. Thank you to the members of the Hackley Upper School student body who supported our efforts.
Cover Art by Lucia Butterfield ’25 72