I remembered that once, as a child, I was filled with wonder, that I had marveled at trifled science projects, encyclopedias, and road atlases. I left much of that wonder somewhere between Mrs. Wheeler's class and Mandarin Mall, somewhere between the schools and the streets. Now I had the privilege of welcoming it back like a long-lost friend, though our reunion was laced with grief; I mourned over all the years that were lost. The mourning continues. Even today, from time to time, I find myself on beaches watching six-year-olds learn to surf, or at colleges listening to sophomores slip from English to Italian, or at cafés seeing young poets flip though 'The Waste Land,' or listening to the radio where economists explain economic things that I could've explored in my lost years, mourning, hoping that I and all my wonder, my long-lost friend, had not yet run out of time, though I know that we all run out of time, and some of us run out of it faster.
— Ta-Nehisi Coates
We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy
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