"One of Us" by Joyce Sidman | Facing History & Ourselves
Reading

"One of Us" by Joyce Sidman

This reading contains a poem by Joyce Sidman.
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At a Glance

reading copy
Reading

Language

English — US
Also available in:
Spanish

Subject

  • English & Language Arts
  • Culture & Identity

“That kid is weird,” says
the teacher, flipping her shining hair.
“I don’t know where he’s at.”
Indeed, he is quiet
in the way of a giraffe:
ears tuned to something we can’t hear.
He turns his sleepy eyes on me—
chocolate brown
with long, extraordinary lashes—
as I hand him a seashell:
something to write about, you know,
something to focus on.

Suddenly, silently,
in the mysterious way of  poetry,
he is at
that shell,
he is in it,
his heart fills up with it.
O Shell, he writes,
you make lizards dance
in the sky with birds.
Never leave me, Shell.

During sharing time,
he reads his poem aloud—
reverently,
almost to himself.
Half the class is stunned,
half embarrassed.
The teacher shakes her head.

I am barely breathing.
One of  us, I sing, one of  us! 1

  • 1“Poem by Joyce Sidman “One of Us””, Poetry Foundation, accessed September 3, 2022.
Most teachers are willing to tackle the difficult topics, but we need the tools.
— Gabriela Calderon-Espinal, Bay Shore, NY