Box
Magazine
From emotional portraits to enticing poetry, I am excited to present to you the Winter 2022 issue of Gunn High School’s Pandora’s Box Creative Magazine! The intricacies and creativity that our student body has showcased are truly a sight to behold.
In this semester’s submissions, I was particularly impressed with the quality of photos, writing, and artwork. I would like to thank and congratulate more than 100 contributors who decided to share their creativity with us.
I would also like to thank all our officers for the countless hours they have put in to make this issue possible. You all made this issue’s production incredibly smooth. An additional thank you to Mr. Dunlap for supporting our goals along the way.
Yours,
Nimisha Sivaraman Editor-in-ChiefTable of Contents photography
mice Lydia Gray 83 crush Siena Tacy 85 untitled Samhita Krishnan 86 MargotEleanor Stern 87 City Dalia Gutierrez 88 The Lone Snowman Olivia Souter 89
art Museum of Overwhelmingness Aeron Man 8 Survival
Obsession Kaylee Cheng
Reincarnate Labyrinth
Paranoia Flying
Aeron Man 32
untitled Madison Lee
9 Ascending
Aeron Man Madison Lee
Kaylee Cheng Jenna Ahmed
24 59
30
Kaylee Cheng 58
27 71
Headache Claire Xu 74
Swollen Eyes Glancer Us
Claire Xu Aeron Man Aeron Man
poetry what do want to do before you leave
75 90 91
What Are We Flood
Margot Zelkha Claire Xu
what do want to do before you leave
At The Doctor’s
Saniya Sajith Claire Xu
“Remarkable, A Must-See” choose carefully
Kaylee Cheng Saniya Sajith
Sparkling Carry Me Through The Pine Neighborly
Kaylee Cheng Margot Zelkha Jasmine F
Miscommunication
Saniya Sajith Margot Zelkha
10 72
17 73
34 76
17 84
36 49 69
Museum of Overwhelmingness Aeron Man
What Are We
Margot Zelkha
What are we Without our own words The stains Of a page Binding together in Nebulous forms without these hazy ideas These emotions Realizations Conveyed We are a mere Shell of Demure acclamation And deprecation Of the Harmony We hold What are we Without our own voices Without our laughs And our freeing bodies For without This peaceful portent of humanity We are no longer
Even within our trembling words And whispered voices
There are constrained beauty And power
Like dew silently trickling downwards against a Family tree for after the dew Always comes an untouched morning air
Untitled Rachael Gold
what do you want to do before you leave?
Saniya Sajithif you determined your end, why not make it happy? people who have been given a certain end make sure that it is happy and light. if you so stubbornly ensured your end, why not live dangerously, why not live happily?
if you’re going to leave, at least before you go, go tell them you love them, go do the thing you’ve been too scared to do, go say yes, go appreciate life one last time, go be happy.
light at the end of the tunnel Misha Vasilevskiy
Untitled Ezra Furtado-Tiwari
Untitled Tejas Thiyagarajan
Reincarnate Aeron Man
New York Skies
Midori Saito
The Webs of My Mind
Margot Zelkha
The webs of my mind Entangled as the world
Becomes clearer One of a spider’s silk Gently wrapping around my intellect Opening my heart
My cheeks flushed with Understanding To kiss the earth And dance upon the marigolds Becomes not a wish But a tranquil longing
Paranoia Kaylee Cheng
This photo was taken during Gunn Prom 2022, at the City View at Metreon in San Francisco. This was the first Prom since 2019 on account of the COVID-19 pandemic, making it many seniors’ first and last Prom experience.
untitled Kaylee Cheng
Survival Kaylee Cheng
“Remarkable, A Must-See!”
Kaylee Cheng
Maybe if the crime scene tape were sparkly or the yellow an octave higher in saturation, I could imagine it strung across a stage, framed by a proscenium that tortures its audience over a slow flame, wringing bodies of their sweaty anticipation that runs down the velvet stairs— burgundy ones, the color all too jarring and real. The bolded letters—crime scene do not cross—would weigh the same as all the other styrofoam props: the fantasy able to dissolve into buoyant pulp at any whisper spoken too loud. The audience might clap, astonished at the chilling accuracy of the scream, wondering how an actress could deliver pain so tangible and how the ticket only cost thirteen dollars. And when the knight is held by the neck and submerged underwater, everyone will hold their breath
and cross their middle finger over the pointer until they hear knuckles cracking even though the play is not a tragic one. The knight will plunge his sword through the enemies’ heart and resurface, coughing out water and blood and fish but his face will look just as handsome, cheeks rose with kisses from his damsel. But the stage is gone when the pale man wheezes his last breath, ripping out the last few pages of this story, pulling the curtains closed.
Sparkling
Kaylee Cheng
It was the summer of sticky armpits and pinkies unscathed in their promises, of that nauseating sunscreen smell sticking like a filter to my cupid’s bow. Back before I needed to be marked on a map, before I needed to be scared I’d slip and fall in between those lines of latitude, when I was allowed to blast music on the highways, pretending to be a dog out the rolled-down windows, tongue out, taunting the wind’s inability to keep up. I remember it as the summer
I started drinking sparkling water. It wasn’t that initial flash of bitterness that I enjoyed but rather its fleeting, almost unruly nature. I liked gambling on the risk of not knowing if the drink had been shaken up, if, after the hiss of air, the contents would regurgitate and stain my skirt. The bubbles rising to the bottleneck, defiant against the laws of gravity they’ve been told, fascinated me. But nothing, exhilarated me more than the possibility of the soda going flat, losing its life and fizz, deflating into something boring. I loved the chase against time, with Cronus on my tail, desperate
to capture me as I chug and chug and almost choke on my breath. I don’t remember when I stopped loving that, when I started leaving my sparkling water out to get flat before drinking. The pragmatic thing to do, I thought, is to accept the inevitable, to eliminate the stress and enjoy something less fleeting, but I never stopped drinking it despite the hassle, perhaps it brought me back to those summers, perhaps it allowed me to revel in my diminishing wisps of youth, but perhaps, I just hated admitting to myself that the only thing I love about sparkling water now is the bitterness.
Dress Abby Kuang
Infatuation Will Racz
Waterfowl Lakes
Fiona Li
Tangle Creek Falls
Carry Me Through The Pine
Margot Zelkha
From the stillness of winter In the foamed branches of snow Lies peace of a new kind The fuzz in our brains seeps into our warm coffee by the fire and The rumble in our stomachs is simply set aside Long days and time
Come to a pause When you are alone For the sweet smell of pine And the chill of the swift wind carries us through the beauty of winter granting nothing Yet everything for you
Waves Zara Wang
Grey Whale Cove Zara Wang
Underground Cave Nickan Soliman
Ascending Madison Lee
Steps of Nature
Kai LobellA Pool of Mud Kai Lobell
A Reflective Lake Kai Lobell
Trotting Zara Wang
Calm Waters
Katie ShihNeighborhood Cat Zara Wang
Mid Autumn Moon Zara Wang
Neighborly
Jasmine F
Dear Neighbor, I can finally enjoy some Peace. Today, you’re getting Evicted. Only thing that separates us is one piece of Dry wall. Every time you sing, it gets Thinner. For 18 years, I’ve suffered through your Christmas carols Prematurely in November. Blaring rap music hurts my ears every Night. I hate your overly enthusiastic “Good morning!” when there’s nothing good about Mornings. It’s quiet now. Yet weirdly, neighbor, I still hear the echo of hardwood floor, Creak of stairs, Ponytail swish of your sun-bleached hair. Wind brushing past orchid leaves on your dresser, Strumming of your ukulele,
Trickling water from your fish tank. I’ve kept your room the same, Even though I hate the mess, smell of old fish food, pink curtains
Only thing we have in common is Mom, Dad, and one piece of Dry wall. Everything else, We refuse to share. It’s that habit When siblings pretend They don’t care. So now that you’ve moved out, Perhaps, I’m finally starting to love My neighbor.
Flood
Claire Xu
Author’s Note: I wrote “Flood” in April 2022 for a New York Times poetry exercise that, in celebration of National Poetry Month, challenged writers to use the Golden Shovel form. In this form, you end each line of your poem with words from a line of another poem or text. The New York Times advised to practice with a headline, so I randomly chose “Moon Knight Starts Well Enough, But Interest Wanes With Each New Phase” (not my personal opinion).
In the early mornings where the moon is the guardian of the darkness, a knight cloaked in clouds, the starts of a rainstorm hang in the air. Well nourished are the trees after the downpour, there is enough water to flood the streets—but too much of anything is bad, too much and we lose interest; the pale moon wanes until all that is left is a sliver, with the darkness eating at it each night-it’s nothing new, an inevitable phase.
At The Doctor’s
Claire Xu “good,” she said when asked how she was doing; but the nurse’s lips twitched and their eyes disbelieved, for “I don’t think you’d be here if you were good,” they said with a disinfected smile and the girl laughed dryly, realizing her lie, her swollen throat smothering the last embers of artificial ecstasy
Headache
Swollen Eyes
choose carefully
Saniya SajithAuthor’s Note: for mera dil, mera jaan, your memory will stab my heart until my last breath mera jaan, there is poison flowing thorugh my veins, and at my fingertips. there is venom at the tip of my tongue. be careful when you choose me because then you will understand why storms are named after people. my love is a dagger; i will carve and gut you with it. beware, for a woman’s love is dangerous. it will destroy you in the most beautiful way possible. her cries will shake the earth and skies. screams etched into her throat. a woman in love will drag the devil himself from the depths
of hell for you. she will look at the darkness inside you, yet still she looks at you as if you are the sun and the moon and the stars. she will see every terrible thing you’ve ever done, you are still her sun and you are still her moon and you are still her stars shine brightly, mera jaan. at least for her.
Untitled Clea dal Cero
Untitled Clea dal Cero
Miscommunication
Margot Zelkha
I spend my days writing Trying to communicate Saving poems to the drafts Forgetting the words written n letting them desecrate Yet they resurface in conversations
In the problems I face
The written words kept unspoken swallowing with a bitter taste No empathy seeps through the cracks in my cage and no opinions take flight off of the page
The Lone Snowman Olivia Souter
Glancer
Aeron Man
Artwork Blurb: I really wanted to emphasize the uncertainty of the woman. I further immerse the viewer to this ideology by deliberately leaving the girl in black in white to add a sense of enigma.
Us Aeron Man
Winter 2022 Staff
Editor-in-Chief: Nimisha Sivaraman Vice President: Fiona Li Layout Officer: Julia Kang Publicity Officers: Abby Kuang Managing Officers: Julia Kang, Katie Shih Club Advisor: Mr. Dunlap
Rotational Layout Members: Emma Cao, Kaylee Cheng, Stephany Handoyo
Pandora’s Box Creative Magazine has been a part of Henry M. Gunn High School’s student community for over 25 years. We are a student-run literary and creative magazine, featuring work by student artists, poets, writers, and photographers. Pandora’s Box provides an outlet for students to explore their creativity and showcase their talent.