About the Young Writers Project

YWP only green-webYWP, an independent nonprofit based in Burlington, Vermont, engages young people to write and use digital media to express themselves with clarity and power and to gain confidence and skills for the workplace and life. YWP publishes about 1,000 studentsโ€™ work each year here, in newspapers across Vermont, on Vermont Public Radio and in YWP’s monthly digital magazine, The Voice. Since 2006, it has offered young people a place to write, explore and connect online at youngwritersproject.org, which has only one rule: Be respectful. For more information, please contact YWP executive director Geoffrey Gevalt at ggevalt@youngwritersproject.org.

Wren Forbes, 12, of Fayston, was inspired to write this story by an incident she witnessed between a mother and child โ€“ and by a quote by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. that we must โ€œnever lose infinite hope.โ€

Wren Forbes YWP
Wren Forbes is a 12-year-old from Fayston. Photo courtesy RETN (Regional Educational Television Network)

The Little Climber

By Wren Forbes

Click below to hear Wren read her work.

“We must accept finite disappointment but never lose infinite hope.”
โ€“ Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

[I] rub my sore hands before clipping myself back into the rope. I have one foot on the wall when a little boy and his mom catch my eye. They pull on their rented gear โ€“ sticky shoes and harnesses.

The little boyโ€™s huge brown eyes sparkle as he stares at the multi-colored holds on the wall. He runs over and starts touching every hold. Itโ€™s like he hasnโ€™t eaten for days and heโ€™s standing in front of all his favorite foods. โ€œMom, Mom! I want to climb this one!โ€

She looks up at the tall wall. โ€œNo, that oneโ€™s too hard.โ€

His eyes grow a little narrower as he walks over to another climb. โ€œMom, can I do this one?โ€

โ€œNo, thatโ€™s too hard.โ€

They walk around the whole gym this way until the little boyโ€™s eyes are so narrow that he can hardly see through them. They are so dull that I am sure stones have replaced his eyes.

They stand in the middle of the gym. His head hangs low as he stares at the floor. His mom stands beside him watching two other little boys scramble up the dyno wall. “I’ll race you to the banana- shaped hold!” one yells down. “No, I’ll race you to the frog-shaped hold at the very top,” yells his friend.

The mother looks up and says, “Wow, you guys are so brave.”

She turns to her little boy who could make her proud if only she would be brave enough to let him try. โ€œWhat do you want to do?โ€ she says.

โ€œI want to go home,โ€ he says in a whisper.

As I stand there, I feel my heart break. The little climber inside him is gone.

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