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Friday, January 30, 2015

Art

I am not your masterpiece.
You cannot change me, and burn me, and stain my skin
And sign your name at the bottom
And claim me as yours.
I am not your masterpiece.

I am not a masterpiece.
You cannot leave me hanging on the wall
And admire me from afar.
Steal me, hold me, break me out of this museum.
I am not a masterpiece.

I am a work of art.
You cannot replace me, for there is only one.
He has molded me, shaded me, and loved me.
I am ever-changing, I am His.
I am a work of art.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

When I was Sick

Two Haikus

You gently tucked that
Strand of fallen hair in my
Messy ponytail

And that's exactly
When I fell in love with you
All over again

Monday, December 22, 2014

What You Are Not Does Not Compare to What You Are

I'm not a phone talker but I'll answer your calls
I'm not an all-nighter but I'll stay awake
I'm not a fast walker but I'll keep up
I'm not a great dancer but neither are you

I'm not a million things

I'm not a Frozen fan
I'm not a health nut
I'm not a good singer
I'm not tall
I'm not sane
I'm not daring

I could tell you all the things I'm not
Without a second thought
But these do not compare
To the things I actually am

I am a fast typer so I'll respond quickly
I am a book reader so I'll get lost sometimes
I am a loud laugher so you'll catch yourself smiling
I am a music listener so I'll make you playlists
I am an early riser but I'll try not to wake you
I am an adamant writer so I'll annoy you with my excessive and crappy attempts at poetry

But there are a million more things that I am

I am reliable
I am organized
I am a Lutheran
I am passionate
I am a decent baker
I am seventeen

I am me
And the things that I am are far more important than the things I am not
And I am enough

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Lost in Gold

timidly step up the stairwell
his bright eyes find you through the crowded room
lost in a first impression
adjusts his tie and shakes your father's hand
camera phones flash
frigid air races up your dress
he holds your hand carefully
headlights burn through the misty night
everything is gold
visibility levels at an all time low
but all you need to see is
his shy smile
and your heart racing
he takes a wrong turn
you're both lost
then found
he pulls out your chair
and moves his closer to yours
knees touching, eyes meeting
giggles and winks
thoughts passed without a word
cold wind is still blowing
but his presence keeps your heart warm
stepping inside to a hot blast of an unknown tune
a spectrum of light bounces from wall to floor
picture frames hang from the ceiling
gold glitter on the walls
more camera flashes
you feel his hand in yours again
streaks of light cut through the hazy air
and your favorite song plays
the world disappears
you're lost
with each note,
each heartbeat gets louder
he holds you up and you float to the rhythm
there is nothing
and everything
he steals glances
but you know he owns them
twirling, swaying, falling
purples and blues and greens
the little lights twinkle in the lanterns above
fairies float around your head of falling curls
lipstick smeared
you're still lost
gold glitter covers your soles and your soul
everything is sparkling
you meet his eyes again
and you feel safe
his favorite song plays
the air is filled with light and laughter and glitter
he is lost
you know better than to ask for this dance
for he let you have yours
sleepy eyes dash back out into the brisk wind
a small water please,
with lots of ice
simply to enhance the feeling of freezing
irony is your forte
accidental dreams in the passenger seat
with his voice as your lullaby
good night
good night
a sweet kiss on the cheek
the golden highlight of a golden night
you're both lost underneath
the golden porch light
intertwined
good night
drive safely
good night

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

The Fault in Our Portrayal -- An IBD UC Perspective

This week marks two years since I was diagnosed with Ulcerative Colitis, Inflammatory Bowel Disease. I thought it would be appropriate to share this narrative I wrote in my college English class earlier this year.

The Fault in Our Portrayal

As I step out of the cold wind and inside the large familiar doors, I catch my breath. This is Infusion Number Five. The musty elevator dings, I light up the button for floor number three, and soon I’m zooming up to a whole different world. Stepping into the bright, playful pediatrics wing, I’m greeted by beeps and cries and footsteps. I exhale, feeling a sharp deja vu of a similar place two years previous. There are countless connotations behind “hospital”: scary, intense, romantic, or exciting. People often desire to go to the hospital simply as a pathetic pity plea. Seeing the general media promote these assumptions is annoying and cliché; especially for someone among thousands cursed with an out of control, chronic, autoimmune disease for the rest of her life. In my instance, I’d do anything to never have to step foot in this place again. Unfortunately, that won’t be the case. The memory strikes my mind again, threatening my tear ducts and short fuse.
I was rushed into the small waiting room and plopped down into the seat against the cold beige wall, doubled over, struggling to breathe, and wincing in pain. I faintly heard my parents recite my birthday a few times to the receptionist. The strong, pungent odor of sterilization stung in my nose. I felt a cold band wrap around my limp wrist. The squeaky sound of wheels whizzing down the hallway and into the room was almost too much to bear. My eyes still squeezed shut, I was lifted from the scratchy chair and into the wheelchair. I looked up suddenly, the sharp knife in my stomach subsiding for a brief moment, and saw the bright flashing light and the loud obnoxious dinging of the elevator. I was barely coherent as the nurses flew me into my cramped hospital room and hooked me up to an IV, like a dog tied to its leash. I could instantly taste the bitter saline flowing through my vein. I laid my head back on the flat rock they called a pillow and closed my eyes once more. I listened to the steady rush of people coming in and out of my small room, their footsteps as constant as rain on a window. I tried focusing on the strong smell of the nurses’ hand sanitizer to distract me from the hurt in my stomach. What felt like hours later, the doctors came in, talking a mile a minute and poking and prodding at my body like a middle school science experiment. When the mass of busybodies left, I was alone, and in more ways than one. Way One: Physically. I heard my parents step out of the room to speak with another nurse and I finally had a chance to take in my surroundings. A million cords and tubes and wires were attached to my arms and chest; random, yet constant, beeping was coming from three contraptions to my left; an itchy, beige blanket was tossed over my weak body; and a small, outdated couch sat under the expansive window. Way Two: Emotionally. Why me? Why now? I was supposed to be at school, laughing with my friends, making awful jokes, and procrastinating my homework. What now? I was there instead, lying on that terribly uncomfortable hospital bed, unable to move because of my anemia, malnutrition, and lack of will power.
By the time night fell, I expected the world to quiet down. But of course, I could do anything but sleep. The persistent green glow coming my IV pole seemed as bright as daylight, the orange light seeping under my closed door could not be harnessed, and the random red flashes from various equipment kept me easily distracted and paranoid. The sticky pads of my heart monitor were constantly itching, the lines from my IV kept getting tangled up in my blanket, and my dad was snoring emphatically from the couch in the corner. The kind nurse was ordered to come run a cool thermometer over my head, squeeze my arm for blood pressure, and steal the warm crimson blood from my vein every hour, on the hour. The night was endless and restless. I yearned for my comfy, warm bed at home; I longed to be tucked away and dancing in my dreams. The cold, itchy blanket tugged me back to reality.
Bright and early the next morning, I was informed that I would not be able to consume any food or liquids for at least the next ten days; and instead, I would receive full nutrition through my IV. Instantly my mouth began to water. Liquid nutrients would not suffice for my sanity. I needed the delectable taste of a sweet, cold popsicle or maybe a hot, juicy burger. Even the thought was painful. I could feel my stomach growl violently, threatening to eat itself if not given anything else soon. Every delicious scent in the air became untouchable and unattainable. In my case, with my disease, food is the enemy. It destroys and tears and shreds my insides; but at the same time, food is the ultimate craving. We take it for granted every day. The emptiness inside gurgled and churned, only making the pain grow stronger.
On the thirteenth day, that day of freedom, relief, joy, and gratitude, I was released from my temporary home. Saying a bittersweet goodbye to my trusty IV pole, I hesitantly stood up to walk once more. Stepping outside into a cold world of reality and misconception was quite an adjustment. I reached to touch the hole in my upper arm where my PICC line used to be, caressing the scar and mustering the confidence to move forward. Remembering that first hospitalization experience is still traumatic for me. Seeing movies, books, and TV shows in the media today portray chronic diseases and hospitalization as romantic and exciting sickens me. I’m sure two lovers suffering from life-threatening illnesses have perhaps cherished their last few days together. I’m sure it is possible that a few pediatric patients diagnosed with various diseases have banded together through friendship and trial. But the truth of the matter is, real people are out here suffering from real diseases and real illnesses. There is a concerning misconception of hospitals in our culture today. As I sit here during my fifth infusion in this cold, uncomfortable hospital bed, hooked up to an IV pumping fluid into my right arm and a blood pressure cuff squeezing every fifteen minutes on my left arm, I wish the world understood. I wish the world could see the intense reality behind the movie screens and book covers and try to realize the story of the real person instead of simply the actor.

Monday, October 27, 2014

I Found a Thing I Wrote About Two Years Ago

What am I doing?
What have I done?
Am I not who I am?
Am I not who I was?

If I can't answer these,
Solid and true,
How can anyone else,
Especially you?

There is something wrong with everybody
And I desperately need to find out
What is wrong with you.
From the surface, there's nothing.
But there has to be.
Something hidden, something dark.
And I desperately need to find out
What is wrong with you.

Friday, October 17, 2014

The Taylor Swift Phase

So as you all may know, I'm a huge TS fan. She's basically my role model.
What you all may not know is that I've been a huge TS fan since I was eight years old.
I have the Taylor Swift, Fearless, and Speak Now CD's and I used to play them in my bedroom in this huge blue boom box that barely worked. I think we still have that thing.
I also had the poster that came with her Fearless album (you know, the one where it's all mosaic-ey and she's on the balcony in her gorgeous Love Story dress?) hanging up on my wall.
Sometimes I tried to dress like her wearing "Taylor-inspired" outfits.
I also had this little tiny book in which I'd attempt to write songs. Yeah. I'd shove the thing under my bed and lie awake at night until I thought of something that rhymed to write down. 
I have this conspiracy that that's where my love for writing poetry came from; sitting on my bedroom floor intensely studying Taylor's lyrics in the CD booklets. They're all so beautiful, from Tim McGraw to Out of the Woods. 
Now I know you're all thinking: hey Katelyn, we really want to see those songs you wrote when you were ten!!! Well okay. I found that little book along with three little ditties in there. Please, read these in the most dramatic, fifth grader voice that you possibly can.
__________________________________________________________

Lucky
Could it be
Yeah, wait and see
And just maybe
I'm a girl
Who got really lucky

Just last night
I laid asleep
Thinking up a storm
About my hopes and dreams
And thought- yeah I thought

Could it be
We're not meant to be
And just maybe
I'm a girl
Who thought she got lucky

Three weeks later
I'm back in bed
Dreamin' about all 
The things you said- yeah oh you said

"Could it be
You never did see
When you're with me
You're the girl
Who always gets lucky"

Cuz when luck runs short
And days drag on
You can always count on me
To make you strong
When things...Go...Wrong

Could it be
Yeah, wait and see
And just maybe
I'm a girl
Who got really lucky

You
I wanna see you
I wanna talk to you
I wanna tell the whole world 'bout my love for you
And you can't stop me, no, nobody can
Ya you can't stop me, just take my hand
No, I don't wanna, like, just be friends...

Cinderella
I wanna be your Cinderella
The only girl you sweep off her feet
I wanna be your Cinderella
The only girl dancin' to your beat

When you're all alone
In your bedroom at night
Do you think about me
Starin' into your eyes
Leanin' into that kiss
That's oh-so-forbidden
Yeah I know I'm just dreamin'-
I figured you didn't

I wanna be your Cinderella
The one and only girl you sweep off her feet
I wanna be your Cinderella
The one and only girl dancin' to your beat
__________________________________________________________

SOOO there you have it folks, Miss Taylor Swift has had a big impact on me and my little self.

Monday, October 13, 2014

Untweetable Tweets:

1. LOL HERE GOES NOTHING 

2. Time to get lost in a book; I'm sick of the real world

3. Good morning sunshine time to listen to Ed Sheeran

4. A 'maybe' from me usually means 'um no'

5. Blasting #hardcore punk rock because I'm a #hardcore punk rock bro

6. It's kinda funny, because we became exactly what we didn't want to be

7. "If you never break, you'll never know how to put yourself back together."

8. If it's not one thing, it's another, a never ending cycle of cynical stares

9. I wish it could rain without getting me wet

10. I hate you

11. I wonder if you still listen to my mixtape

12. I like my music loud enough to drown out my thoughts

13. Ripped jeans are tacky but I wear them anyway

14. I'll tell you I #love you until the words lose their meaning

15. My mom says she can see the happiness in our eyes

16. I like the way my lips feel after we make out 

17. Ew boys no

18. I wish my hair looked like yours in a ponytail on top of your head

19. I only really like the macaroni & cheese that I make myself does that make me conceited

20. Or that my aunt makes

21. You're toxic and I'm glad I know that

22. There's a 64 pack of crayons sitting on my bedroom floor am I the cool kindergartener yet

23. I have a lot of shitty advice inside me just waiting to be let out

24. Maybe I should tell the world

25. I ship Larry 

26. Sometimes I think about what we could be and then I remember what we were

27. Acoustic versions aren't always better

28. I get a headache just hearing you name

29. WHAT DID YOU DO?! YOU REALLY ASK WHAT YOU EVEN DID TO ME?! LIKE YOURE SO INNOCENT!!!

30. Ok is so much more sassy than okay

31. 20 bucks everyone in the world could guess the password to my laptop

32. Fireproof is holding strong at number one on my iTunes with 63 plays

33. Gosh Madison Lawrence blows me away

34. APUSH gives me a sense of unity with fellow struggling high schoolers 

35. Whoever doesn't have a blog should have a blog because it's a fun thing

36. It's therepudic

37. I spelled that wrong

38. Therapeutic, there

39. Fandom jokes are the best and if you don't agree then you're lying and I'm telling your mom

40. I think I'm the only teenager who has a normal sleeping schedule but thAT DOESNT MAKE ME ANY LESS GRUNGE PUNK 

41. Why is money a thing

42. My friends and I are dressing up as bananas for Halloween and I giggle uncontrollably every time I think about it

43. I'm bored of this goodbye