Trash Vietnam Sea
Sophia Shan
I was standing on a cliff overlooking the sea
There was a steep decline to propped-up tents
and overpriced grilled seafood and fierce hagglers
just armed with just a few key words of English
for any tourist that came their way
If you followed the curved (or was it steep? I can’t remember)
rock-studded wall down on the left
it came to both a shore choked with trash
That gripped me with how ugly it was, how immovable
I didn’t know where the trash came from, this shore or another?
And if you cleaned it all up,
how long would it
take for more pieces and pieces to float back?
The act of being complicit in creating waste can’t be criminalized, either
Someone is buying food to feed his family and
brings it back in plastic bags bagged in plastic bags
Someone else is simply thirsty and comes up to the massive fridges
stacked with glowing bottles of water
My father said there needed to be some
large-scale community organization
Maybe rallied together for the sake of
bringing about tourism
And I cried,
because we were so helpless
Helpless, in the sense that our pollution will one day conquer
The depthless ocean,
90% of our surface cover that would meet us
on every side if we paced the small worlds
we live in, believing they are everything,
nothing, all-consuming
But not that we couldn’t have helped ourselves
The big problems will sink beneath the waves
Who will be held responsible when the floods come,
swallowing first the islands and places that have been silenced
by the “developed” world,
bringing up all of our filth?
As a kid in this world, I was taught
that we can do anything
that we need to be the heroes
Even when my parents or other adults
turned away from glaring injustices in the world
Even when my peers called me a “tree-hugger” like
it’s a bad thing
I held on
But no matter how hard
I do my part
Refuse straws, take public transportation,
adopt a plant-based diet
No matter if all of us middle-class consumers
cut our carbon emissions in half
Could we make more than a dent?
I made myself turn away
from the plastic landmass
after a moment
Because my emotion startled my dad,
I could tell
And we walked away with the whisper of
oil, coal, plastic tycoons laughing in the wind
Date: December 31, 2025



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