Developing Boll
By Aimeé-Anali San Miguel
12 hour days, 12 cents per pound, 12 people in the house
12 is the lucky number
If only he had 12 fingers
To accompany his 12 callouses;
To aid in the 12 steps of picking, pricking, and presenting the fluff.
Which is anything but soft.
Born from the arduous labor of farm work
His lifestyle is anything but lucky
***
6 classes I hate, 6 people I love, 6 lives in the house
6 is my lucky number, accept–
With one year added, 7 is the age I learned Columbus’ name shouldn’t be capitalized
From the capitalism this nation was built upon.
The 6 times a day I spend wondering what my life would be if I was luckier.
If I had 6 more hours a day, 6 more hours of sleep, 6 more dollars, 6 more stickers to put on my wall, 6 more people to love, 6 more minutes to think, 6 more hair products, 6 more talents, 6 more brains, 6 more pens, 6 more pairs of pants, 6 more–
He wishes he had 12 less worries, and 12 more years.
The unluck splits
Un–luck
I am the half
But 6 is everything but lucky
***
12, is the years he spent unaware
12, is not lucky
Not for him
12, is the years I spent listening
12, is lucky
To me
–They say you spend 90% of the time you’ll have with your parents by the time you turn 18.–
***
His calluses were breed from the poverty line he continues to walk on
Even when a wide-paved road with my footprints left in wet concrete sits next to him
My calluses were born of middle-class wealth, self-inflicted.
(When impoverished do it, it’s trashy, when wealth does it, it’s classy.)
12 and 6 may not be lucky, but for the 18 years he and I will share,
my calluses will be trashy
Because the apple doesn’t fall
far from the tree.
Aimee-Anali San Miguel is a Sophomore in the Creative Writing Department at HSPVA in Houston, Texas. She is known for her passionate work and unique perspective of the world. Currently, her favorite song is “tolerate it” by Taylor Swift.