Orbiting April – Day 52

Prompt – Your Earliest Crush

April was her name. I was twelve. She was beautiful, or at least the memory of her is, softened by distance and the way time edits what it can no longer hold. Her father was a TSgt, and they lived a few houses down from us on Plattsburgh Air Force Base, close enough that it was easy to accidentally run into her when I wanted. Her mother looked like an older echo of April, same features but worn thinner, as if life had pressed its thumb into her for too long. Years of folding a life into cardboard boxes every eighteen months had settled into the lines of her face. Some military wives learned how to pack without leaving bruises behind. She never quite did.

April and I went to the same junior high school but did not have any of the same classes together. I had to see her around the neighborhood if I wanted to see her. I saw her at the bus stop. I saw her when I went to her house to collect payment for the newspaper that month. I saw her when I was walking to the South Side Trails to hang out with the boys. I saw her often; she never saw me.

My crush on April looked like an orbit. I circled her life quietly, measuring my day by the chance of passing through her gravity. I practiced conversations in my head that never left my mouth. I changed the speed of my bike when I thought she might be outside. I learned the dance of pretending not to care while caring so much it felt like a fifty pound secret I carried in my chest.

I do not remember a single real conversation between us. What I remember is the anticipation of a conversation, the sharp awareness of my own body whenever she was near, and the sudden self-awareness about my red hair, about weight, about how to stand or where to put my hands. But, alas, nothing. It was not like she was not cruel. She was simply living her own best twelve-year-old life, and I was learning the quiet math of a one way conversation.

My crush on April never really began or ended; it just faded the way base housing always did, quietly replaced by the next season of trying to belong somewhere. The invisibility was not new. I had been practicing it long before her. She just gave it a face I could not ignore. Looking back now, I laugh a little at that twelve-year-old version of me pedaling past her house like it meant something cosmic. Jesus Almighty. I thought one girl noticing me might repair everything that felt unfinished inside my chest. It was never about April. It was about a boy who wanted proof that he existed outside his own head. The truth is harsher and cleaner now. Nobody arrived to make me whole. I learned to stand there, unseen, and open anyway.

February 2026
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Transactional Reflections – Day 47

Prompt – The Mirror Years

Mirrors. Another world reflected back, distorted in ways that felt both familiar and foreign. I was never obsessed with the mirror during the mirror years because the distortion was too great to trust. The mirror did not lie exactly, but it never told the whole truth either. It caught my outline but fully missed my context. It held my image still while everything inside me kept shifting.

It is not that I did not care about what I looked like. I cared deeply. I already knew what I looked like because others made sure to tell me. Classmates narrated my appearance while adults tried to soften it with other words, and like the mirror, neither kids nor adults told the whole story.

During those years, I learned to approach the mirror like my family approached houses; transactional in nature. A quick glance to adjust my shirt and then move on. Staying too long invited comparison, and comparison always felt rigged from the start. Red hair, pale skin, and a spare tire around my waist was a hard hand to win with. I stood there sometimes wondering if the person looking back was fixed or temporary, just like the house I lived in for that year.

I guess there was a strange relief in not being obsessed because obsession requires belief. I did not fully believe in the real me or the reflection. However, there were still moments when I lingered longer than planned. Not to admire or to criticize, but to study my real smile versus the one I performed to keep the peace. Those moments felt like secret conversations that no one else could interrupt. The mirror was less about appearance and more about listening.

Of course, the mirror did not give answers and as I mentioned, it was never really about how I looked. It became a quiet witness instead. I learned that my reflection was not asking to be corrected. It was asking to be seen without the noise of everyone else’s language layered on top of it. Through the distortion and my doubt, if I stood there long enough to feel the weight of my own presence, something steadier began to surface. Not confidence. Not certainty. Just recognition.

Eventually I stopped asking the mirror to tell me anything at all. I stood there less often, and when I did, I looked without searching for meaning. The reflection remained incomplete, and maybe it always will be. What changed was not the image, but my willingness to leave it unfinished. I learned that understanding does not always arrive with resolution. Sometimes it arrives as a quiet acceptance that the person in the glass is only one version of the story, and that the rest of me exists somewhere just beyond its frame, moving forward even when the reflection stays behind.

February 2026
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A Different Brand of Baggage – Day 45

Prompt – Learning what “cool” meant.

Cool, according to younger me, was all about visibility. As someone who had created an entire science and creed around being invisible, confidence and cool had everything to do with being perceived or seen as cool, with the key being seen. I was not cool, or so I thought at the time. I was the kid who followed the rules not just to follow them, but so others would leave me alone long enough for me to be by myself. Later, quietly and often in private, I bucked the system in smaller ways by reading, writing, and thinking – so cool, I know! Somewhere inside all of that, I was cool; however, I did not believe it then and neither did the crowd that measured such things.

As a military kid moving every time the base commander sneezed or shifted the wind, I watched cool from the sidelines before I ever tried to step into it. Each new school carried its own language, its own hierarchy, its own unwritten rules about who mattered and why. There were a few universals about sports and money, but every place crowned a different tribe, and the traits that defined them did not always match the last place. Still, that tribe always seemed untouchable. They walked into a room as though the room had been waiting for them all along. I walked in hoping to pass unnoticed. Red hair, my weight, and my own doubts made invisibility nearly impossible, so I studied cool long before I allowed myself to imagine becoming it.

At first, I believed cool meant rebellion and risk. The kid who talked back. The group that laughed too loudly in the cafeteria. They looked fearless, and fearlessness felt like the opposite of everything I carried. I stayed small, stayed agreeable, stayed quiet enough to avoid friction. Inside, though, something restless kept pressing forward. Every time I watched someone question an adult or challenge a rule that did not make sense, I felt admiration tangled with envy. They looked free, even though many of them were simply bound to a different kind of baggage.

It took years to understand that what I had been seeing was not freedom; it was performance. And sometimes it was armor. The loudest rebellion rarely held the deepest courage. I began to notice “real cool” in quieter acts. The student who asked a thoughtful question when everyone else stayed silent. The friend who told the truth even when it complicated things. The teacher who admitted uncertainty and invited the class into the work of figuring it out together. Those moments did not look cinematic or dramatic, yet they felt grounded in something honest…something cool.

Cool stopped being about defiance and became more about authenticity. It became the willingness to show up fully, even when that meant standing alone for a moment. The people I came to respect as cool were not trying to be different; they were simply refusing to disappear because of their difference.

Looking back, I see that my definition of cool was always tangled up with belonging. I thought cool meant breaking rules because I believed that was the only way to be noticed. What I know now is quieter and more complicated. Cool is not the volume of rebellion; it is the clarity of self. It is the slow decision to speak when silence would be easier. It is the courage to ask questions, not to disrupt for attention, but to understand more deeply.

Somewhere along the way, watching from the edges, I began to ask my own questions. Not loudly. Not in ways that made a scene. Just enough to feel the ground shift under my own feet. Cool stopped looking like rebellion and started feeling like recognition. The loudest people in the room were not always the freest; many of them were just better at hiding their fear in plain sight. What I had once called invisible was never absence. It was observation. It was patience. It was a boy learning how to belong to himself before belonging to any crowd. And maybe that is what cool finally became; not a performance to be witnessed, but a quiet agreement between who I was and who I no longer needed to pretend to be.

February 2026
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Finders Keepers – Day 16

Prompt – What role did you play in your family?

I was the baby in my family. My brother and sister were older than me by several years, old enough that by the time I reached preteen age, they were already gone. My brother went into the military. My sister married into the military. Apparently, the military was the family business. The house grew quieter. The orbit shifted.

As the baby, I watched. Silence felt safe. Observation felt necessary. While others reacted, I absorbed. While the room moved, I stayed still long enough to understand what was actually happening. Being the youngest meant I was present without authority. Decisions were made above my pay grade and explanations were optional at best. I learned to read tone before words and posture before intention. I noticed how laughter sometimes arrived too quickly, how stories and jokes could function like smoke, how playfulness could smooth over things no one wanted to face directly. I understood the role of distraction even when I refused to perform it. Instead of entertaining, I studied the moment the room needed to be entertained.

I became the observer because no one asked me to be anything else. I was small enough to disappear and quiet enough to be underestimated. That invisibility became access. I watched tension build and release. I watched who needed to be soothed and who needed to stay unaware. I noticed who carried the emotional weight and who benefited from keeping it unnamed. I learned that some roles exist to protect the system rather than the people inside it. Those patterns mattered to me even when naming them made others uncomfortable.

Somewhere in all that watching, I became the storyteller. Not the loud one. Not the funny one. Just the keeper of the stories. I held the version of events that existed before they were softened. I remembered what came before the joke and what never made it into the retelling. I learned that stories shift depending on who is listening and that truth is often traded for comfort without anyone admitting the exchange.

The storyteller role was lonely. It meant holding meaning without a place to set it down. It meant knowing things too early or too clearly. It meant understanding that telling the truth outright could destabilize a balance everyone depended on, even if that balance was fragile and false. So I learned patience. I learned restraint. I learned to let stories mature until they could be told without blowing the room apart. I learned that timing matters as much as honesty.

I did not soothe my family through story. I soothed myself by understanding the stories. I organized chaos into narrative, or at least I tried to. I tracked cause and effect. I stitched moments together into something coherent so I could survive them. That instinct followed me into adulthood, into classrooms, into leadership, into writing. I still sit quietly at first. I still watch how people move when they think no one is paying attention. I still tell stories not to entertain, but to reveal.

February 2026
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