fool for love, full of love

as a single seventeen-year-old, i don’t know much about love

but i do know enough to

know that it hurts

help others love

but i know for a fact that

i’m going to love you so much

angel,

if you hear a ping! from your phone

it’s probably me

sending you a song that reminds me of us

expressing how proud of you i am

but most of all, it’s probably me

telling you how much i love you

(will you smile when you hear your phone go off?

roll your eyes in faux exasperation?)

baby,

if you feel a warm weight from behind

it’s probably me

hugging onto you so tightly

resting my head on your shoulder

but most of all, it’s probably me

reminding you how much you comfort me

(will you hold me in your arms?

let me bury my heard in the crook of your neck?)

darling,

if you taste something sweet in your mouth

it’s probably me

gifting you a box of your favorite chocolates

shoving a freshly baked cookie into your mouth

but most of all, it’s probably me

kissing you after i swipe some cookie dough from the bowl

(will you surprise me with a gift of your own?

fret about getting sick from the raw eggs?)

honey,

if you smell something familiar from the kitchen

it’s probably me

brewing you a cup of coffee with two sugar cubes and a dollop of cream

(just how you like it)

fixing both of us a boxed lunch for the long day ahead

but most of all, it’s probably me

bustling about the kitchen with the scent of your shampoo and body wash

(will you take the knife from me oh so gently to cut the carrots?

have picked up my dry cleaned suit that i forgot to yesterday?)

sweetheart,

if you see nothing but darkness enveloping you

it’s probably me

blindfolding you to take you out on a surprise date

showing you the tiny stars up in the night sky

but most of all, it’s probably me

sleeping softly next to you

(will you enjoy the tranquility of the night?

say something cheesy, like how “there’s light when i’m with you”?)

as a single seventeen-year-old, the present seems so bleak

i often feel empty as the days drag longer

but i’m constantly reminded by the prospect of you

oh, i’m going to love you so much, love

– kaylan so

03.04.2021

decorated decorum

when you ask

my palms are empty but bleeding

i have absolutely nothing to show

but no matter how many drops of

blood from my cracked skin

sweat from my overheating hairline

tears from my swollen eyes

slip through my fingers

it’s not enough to

intertwine to create numerous graduation cords

fold in itself to sew stoles

flatten out to type out an acceptance letter

with a bare neck and much cheaper tuition bill in hand

i walk the stage

i know i

smile because it’s decorum, not because i

believe

if you were to write a book about two people who fell out of love, what would be the last sentence?

Sometimes, she looks back and wonders if they could have done anything different to cultivate what they had into a beautiful flower, but the train had already reached its final destination where they had no choice but to softly, quietly go their respective ways.
He had hoped the bright lights that danced in his vision were fireworks, meant to signify a spectacular spark of their passion, but instead, it had been a bomb — leaving violence and corpses amongst the destruction. 

relaxing classics for driving

It’s often at the dead at night I play my playlist “여유로운 드라이브.” It translates to “a relaxing drive” in English but there’s so much lost in translation. English fails to capture the lilting L-sounds of Korean that mimic the rolling feeling of calm that washes over me as I play the eighteen tracks to sleep. English fails to capture the memories associated with these eighteen tracks, tracks I hold dear to my heart.

The spotify description for my playlist is ambiguous. “Classics from my childhood that never fail to make me fall asleep.” But oh, it’s so much more than that. The unlimited character limit is too public for me to spill what these eighteen tracks symbolize in my life. It’s less about the individual songs, but more about the constancy they had in my life.

My mother bought CDs one, two, and three from Korea when I was seven. The box set it came in was crumpled on the journey here, plastic casing cracked, but the CDs still intact. I have a special attachment with CD one. I’m not too sure if it’s because of the tracks themselves or if it’s because of the sense of tranquility the cover image gives me.

It depicts an image of an emerald green convertible Volkswagen Beetle. There’s a lone vintage suitcase propped upright on the flat sand surface. Oh, and there’s the sea. The sea is a light blue. It’s not the color you see when you go to the beach or the color you see when you see an image of a beach resort online. It’s so uniquely this CD. A color I’ll forever associate with this CD.

This cd has nothing profound for me on the surface level. The tracks don’t have lyrics that was able to influence how I lived life. But the tracks tell a story that shaped who I am today. Some helped mold my sleeping schedule, some taught me to find inner peace and patience, while others gave me rose-tinted glasses.

The first track is <Salut d’Amour>. “Greeting of love” in French. I’ve written about love (or at least what I know of it) with this song on repeat. Hell, I’ve written stories inspired by the swooping feelings of my heart whenever I hear the first strings. But I’ve been ignoring what those swooping feelings mean to me.

I want my future to encapsulate the essence of this song. If my life were a movie, a reel of my future will have this song as the backing track. The bright sound of the violin reminds me of my soul, blazing and vivid. The harmonies of the piano will be the love of my life grounding me in a comfortable manner, tethering me to reality and teaching me what home really means. (I want to float, but the snug rope around my waist is a welcome feeling.)

This song represents unconditional love. From my friends, future lover, and future family. And it also represents my unconditional love for them as well.

The fourth track is <Canon in D>. My love and appreciation for this song is rather shallow compared to <Salut d’Amour>. It’s a song I want to walk down the aisle to. The venue silent, save for the soft plucking of the bass and smooth crescendo of the other violins. I’m not particularly beautiful, and I won’t be particularly beautiful in the future either but the white gown on me will be awe-inspiring. The hush of the audience will be at the sight of my dress (and by extension, me to some extent) but I won’t mind, not when I see my future spouse waiting by the altar or linked arm in arm with me. (Will they have a pressed tuxedo? A white gown as brilliant as mine??)

Alas, that fantasy-like bubble is soon popped with a god-forsaken Spotify advert. I’m suddenly reminded of who and where I really am. (But I still imagine time and time again.)

soulmates ♡♡

there’s just something about the belief that there’s someone (or some people) out there in the vast universe that your soul is intertwined with. hence why i find the concept of soulmates absolutely electrifying.

the thing is… souls are ancient. we all have lived past lives that we don’t remember, some tragic and maybe some happy. our corporeal bodies are like a home our souls inhabit for a fleeting moment, because our lifetime is just a blip in the span of a soul. but it’s finally at rest when you choose your soulmate, like how you have time and time again.

everyone has this assumption that fate has chose one (1) person that we are meant to spend the rest of our lives with, but this couldn’t be further from the truth. i’d like to think that fate only plays a small role: a small nudge in the right direction, but no hand-holding, no direct guidance to those whose souls yours rest with.

because soulmates are still about a choice. you choose the same person in every timeline and every life because they are home to you. which is often why you don’t realize at first sight — it’s still about falling in love and still about choosing each other. (another reason why soulmates are not two halves of one soul. it’s the union of two who search for each other, always.)

and they’re not always romantic.

that’s why i think soulmates are so beautiful. the slow realization that that’s someone you want to spend the rest of your life with because every version of your soul has done so previously.

‘liberty or death’ author’s note

liberty or death

The first stanza was written while I was angry with my parents for not allowing me to go out with friends or to have privacy under the pretense that it was to “protect me.” Hence why they’re swaddling me like a baby but it’s eventually going to suffocate me, killing my soul or preventing my growth and maturity. This made me realize that there are some parallels that run with how they’ve raised me so far and the not-so-good romantic relationships my friends have been in.

The next two stanzas are pretty self explanatory.

The third one has a lot of weight for myself. A fond gaze can mean a lot of different things to me. It can mean one of exasperation but simultaneously endeared or one full of adoration or one with reverence and awe. Even just a single look can mean everything to me because I can read people through their eyes, even if they don’t wear their hearts on their sleeves.

The next stanza is about mutual respect — acknowledging each other’s strengths and working together to train those weaknesses — somewhat, but it’s also about the situations I often find myself in. I’m a bit of a people pleaser. As much as I pride myself in being able to read others well and get along with them, it’s sometimes because I have the tendency to bend myself forwards and back, trying to appear likable. That’s why having this blog is so important to me. It’s where I can be raw, scathing, and cruel if need be because this is all me and who I am.

Does this mean I’m a pushover? Maybe. The rare types, to be frank. The extrovert who has no problem saying “no” but at the same time, struggles to say “no.” A living paradox. But all of that also stems from my vision of humanity and my ability to see the good in people, give them the benefit of the doubt. My mother has said it’s a naïve way of thinking, and she may be right. (But sometimes, I think it’s because of the way she raised me in those thick blankets of bubble wrap.)

What’s also funny is that I used to be a hardass, a dictator-ish person when I was younger. But I grew too soft because that wasn’t an effective way to lead or become close to people. Two extremes and I’m in a desperate race to get into equilibrium before I go off to college so I don’t get swindled or something, haha.

I digress. The title is from Metallica’s “Don’t Tread on Me.” I wouldn’t say it’s entirely fitting, given Metallica’s genre of music but I really like their music so “liberty or death” it is!!

liberty or death

don’t wrap me in blankets with false

gentle touches, only to eventually

smother me as i thrash under you.

(but rather, embrace me in your

warmth as we lay curled like two

parentheses.)

don’t smile at me with teeth when

the light doesn’t quite reach you

usually expressive eyes.

(but rather, speak to me softly, or

don’t speak to me at all. i just want

a fond gaze in my direction.)

don’t tread on me.

(but rather, treat me like how you

treat the american flag.)

k.s.

‘state of limbo’ author’s note

state of limbo

This poem was written for day two of Escapril, where the original post can be found here. The prompt called for “the exact middle,” which I honestly had no problem writing about. I am in a stage of my own life where I am in the “exact middle” but also in a “state of limbo.” The awkward halfway point between childhood and adulthood: Being treated like a child by assuming we aren’t autonomous, while simultaneously expecting the same amount of effort and responsibilities as adults, if not more.

I have been struggling with identity, even more so during quarantine as I have had more time to myself to think about everything and anything. To be frank, it’s less about my Asian-American status and more about my role in society; my hopes and dreams; my sexuality and gender; and what kind of soul I have deep down. Call it teen angst, but it does, indeed, have a body count: Myself.

Well, my younger self.

I digress: The left-aligned lines represent the happier times I spent — in hindsight — when I was younger. This includes even just sophomore year. I say “hindsight” because I revisited my diary to see that the things that felt like such a big deal to me back then is very minuscule compared to the mounting pressure I have on myself and from my family at the moment. (I’m sure in the future, I’d say the same thing now. How everything was so trivial, not worthy of the stress and worry I’m putting myself through.) With the knowledge of the regrets of what I did and didn’t do (something that deserves its own post) and the promise of better days, I find myself wishing to go back in time.

In the poem, I cut myself off before I can utter those words even in passing. For me, whenever I speak my thoughts into existence by writing or speaking them out loud, they feel so final, so binding. It solidifies how I’m feeling into a fact that will stubbornly not budge until I waste spend an entire day reconsidering how I’m feeling.

The right-aligned lines are the hopes and fears I have as I approach adulthood and eventually leaving my parents and home. Without exposing too much about myself because I’m already feeling uber vulnerable writing about my thought processes, I’m unhappy with how my parents are treating me at home (let’s just leave it at that…). I understand that all of my problems won’t be fixed as soon as I leave home but it’s the only thing that’s keeping me going — my hope. But there’s still that innate fear that I would have to crawl back home because I couldn’t handle the heat of independence and society, much like what my mother has conditioned me to think (despite knowing that I would thrive) — my fear.

Despite the anxiety that something may go terribly wrong, I would much rather see myself shrug off the childishness of childhood and awkwardness of teenhood and go straight to adulthood with all of its beautiful promises of autonomy, independence, and choice.

The last stanza repeats the first, because no matter what I beg for, I’m stuck in my seventeen-year-old body, all awkward and clumsy with the remnants of the chub from my childhood and body of a full-grown adult after puberty. And the best thing I can do is live in the moment so I don’t have any more regrets, work towards making those hopes a reality, and nip those fears right at the bud.

In the exact middle. Yup, that’s where I, Kae S., am in.

I hope this poem was somewhat relatable (for my teenage readers) or reminded of the teenage awkwardness you left behind (to my adult readers). Thank you for reading, and I’ll see you at the next poem!

state of limbo

in this exact moment,

i am breathing the recycled air of my cage

but i also find myself

in the exact middle

i often catch myself

reminiscing over

the student of the week poster

from second grade,

the special edition books i

collected as i grew up;

missing

the little girl who giggled about

everything the sun touched,

the young student who enjoyed

living

(i often wish i can go back in t—)

i often catch myself

anticipating

the independence that comes

with leaving my home cage,

the metamorphic change

i will experience;

fearing that

i’m not competent

enough by myself,

i’m just not enough

(i often wish i can go leap forward into the f—)

in this exact moment,

i am breathing the recycled air of my cage

but i am also living in the moment

in the exact middle

k.s.

‘(to be) freed’ author’s note

(to be) freed

I posted this piece on Instagram for Escapril 2021. Like the caption says, I debated on whether or not to participate because I’m not much of a poet. I think that was the first time in about three years I wrote a poem and the first time I wrote a poem that wasn’t for a school assignment ever. After this piece, however, I took a liking to poetry because of how I can create a narrative with even the structure alone.

The Instagram post does a better job of showing how I tried to visually tell the story of the speaker but WordPress ultimately failed me, haha. I’ll probably go back to the original post and try to edit the code to show up the way I want it to. (Pain.)

I dedicate this poem to my tenth grade English teacher. She’s probably my favorite English teacher that I’ve had so far. She didn’t know my love for creative writing because I still had a fat writers’ block back then but she always gave constructive criticism that encouraged me to do better on all my essays. We’re extremely close, and I’m always thankful that I have a trusted adult at school I can talk to.

She had such creative lesson plans that made my first 7 AM class in the morning so interesting (when otherwise I would slowly nod to sleep). One project that really stuck out to me was the Creative Lens project we had to do. We take well-known fairy tales and analyze them using different narrative lens she gave lectures on. Some of them had to do with political theory, some with history. That made me develop my love for analyzing text.

A lens that I used in this poem that I first learned about then was the Freudian lens. They include the id, superego, and ego. I’ll try to keep this psychology lesson short but from what I remember and understand, id represents our primal desires and impulses that are actively squashed by our superego, which is the epitome of morals and ethical values. As these two fight to manifest outwardly, your ego determines which side to give into slightly. Thus your ego is what you present to society and keeps these other identities in check with rationality.

As quarantine starts to drag longer and longer, I found myself expressing my anger and grief more often in my writing and thoughts. This is my id, not to mention the seething reactions to my parents’ behaviors (something I’m a bit uncomfortable sharing as of now).

This poem was written as a reminder to my future self of what I had to go through during COVID. The stir-craziness of constantly staying indoors, the mounting frustration as my parents start to influence and control my actions, and the self-doubt that plagued my mind due to various reasons and began to negatively influence my work.

Id and superego are silent at the end because they’re ruminating the confident declaration ego made. It’s a pregnant pause where both id and superego, two polar opposite, makes a silent agreement not to burst ego’s disillusioned beliefs. I’m grateful to say that id and superego are silent now, not because of the weight of ego’s seemingly empty words, but because of my changed lifestyle.

I think that’s all I have for this poem! The rest is up for your interpretation :)) Thank you always for reading my work and for reading this author’s note!