Playing “Your Graduation” by Modern Baseball a Year Before Our Graduation

by Madison Whatley

 

I discovered the music video at home alone and you guys, 
having been in Driftwood, surprised me at my door. 
I offered you plates of spaghetti, 

showed you this new song I liked, 
but you told me the song sucked and so did my spaghetti. 
I told my boyfriendwho knows nothing 

about youthis story recently, and he sarcastically told me, 
They sound like great friends. And, really, you kind of were, 
I think. I don’t know what to make of the fragments 

of relationships that are left, since half of this friend group has blocked me 
and the other half occasionally send me weird shit, 
like Zach, who texted, I love my girlfriend and I know you love your boyfriend,

but I can’t be around you without thinking about fucking you.
I had to laugh when I found out his girlfriend left his skeevy ass 
in Indiana. That shit ain’t cute at 21. 

Disney stuck it out longer than anyone but even she is drifting 
away. She texted me on Christmas after missing each other 
once again, I have so much to tell you, but why wouldn’t she just 

call like she used to? Freshman year, she kept me on the phone 
for hours talking about guys from all her dating apps, 
and at night, she would call again, drunk: 

I miss you; You’re my best friend. And I got a lot 
of calls like that freshman year, like when Max and Kyreil 
called me at midnight to ask, How are you?

clearly stoned, a week after Ky’s brother died. I wonder 
why I stopped getting these calls. Someone at college suggested, 
You seem very real, and I think you were too real for them,
which, I think, means I’m an asshole. It’s hard 
to let go of these people who taught me how to longboard,  
recite a sonnet, build a sturdy fort in the woods,  

main Yoshi on Super Smash Bros, drive 
on I-95, smoke a joint, drink a beer, skip class, flirt 
with boys, and swim in the ocean at night in my underwear.  

I used to think of myself as the guy staring blankly 
into the camera in the “Your Graduation” video, but maybe I am 
also the girl talking passionately to a deaf audience. 

The ex who I think of when I hear the song now is not 
the same ex I first connected to the song. I called this ex, 
you-know-who, freshman year to explain why I broke up with him and couldn’t 

be friends. He told me, Your voice is the same, but you are a
completely different person. He said this  
like it was a bad thing.

 

 

 

About the Author:

Madison Whatley is a 21-year-old junior in the English-Literary Studies program at Saint Leo University in the Tampa Bay area. She is from Dania Beach and Hollywood, Florida. 

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