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Whadda
8 year old me yearned for a
Whadda gum pack
of the most erupting soda flavor
after a tedious school day.
Five tickets to the room full
of sweet and bursting,
azure tinted gum harmoniously
mingled with bits of
soda-flavored rock candy.
randomly stuck in.
All this fantasy, so distant from
my wonted school-life lasted
a whopping one-hour journey.
But you didn’t hear the best part yet:
It’s only 50 cents…!
I remember leaving 50 cents
on top of the counter
when the cashier was vacant
maybe for a bathroom break,
maybe for a quick call to his mom.
Then, I swiftly exited the store until
that b*stard caught me with his
steaming eyes, charging me with
all the guilt in the world, ready to
admonish...no, ready to chastise me.
But that soon vanished like a kitty in the dark
when I silently pointed my fingers to the gleaming
silver coin, probably fresh out of the mint,
ready to free me from blame.
18 year old me, until this day,
feels sorry and somewhat odd.
But somewhere I still hear
8 year old me telling me
not to feel guilty.
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A bubble gum famous to many Korean students, Whadda is something that has always elated my banal school life when I was young. The sweet and bursting flavor of the gum still resonates within my tongue every time I reminisce about what it tasted like. This poem takes the reader on a venture of thrifty delight.
The “kitty” is a reference to Korean culture where many black kitties appear from time to time out of nowhere and disappear in the dark.