Somebody Should Have Taught Him
I went to a birthday party
but I remembered
what you said.
You told me not to drink at all,
so I had a Sprite
instead.
I felt proud of myself,

the way you said I would,
that I didn't choose to drink and
drive,
though some friends said I should.
I knew I made a healthy
choice and
your advice to me was right
as the kids drove out of sight.
I got into my own car,

sure to get home in one piece,
never knowing what was coming,
something I expected least.
Now, I'm lying on the pavement.
I can hear
the policeman say,
"The kid that caused this wreck was drunk."
His
voice seems far away.
My own blood is all around me,

as I try hard not to cry.
I can hear the paramedic say,
"This girl is
going to die."
I'm sure the guy had no idea,
while he was flying high,
because he chose to drink and drive
that I would have to die.
So
why do people do it,

knowing that it ruins lives?
But now the pain is cutting me
like a
hundred stabbing knives.
Tell my sister not to be afraid,
tell Daddy
to be brave,
and when I go to heaven to
put "Daddy's Girl" on my grave.
Someone should have taught him

that it's wrong to drink and drive.
Maybe if his mom and dad had,
I'd
still be alive.
My breath is getting shorter,
I'm getting really
scared.
These are my final moments,
and I'm so unprepared.
I wish
that you could hold me, Mom,

as I lie here and die.
I wish that I could say
I love you and good-bye.
This poem was retold by Jane Watkins and submitted in to the Chichen Soup For The
Teenage Soul Book I, published in 1997.
This poem is so touching to me because I had a friend who lost her mother in
a drinking and driving accedent. Also I have a strong disagreement with
people who choose to drink and drive costing innocent people their lives.
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