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dani
I’m thankful that I don’t know what it is to love you secretly. Instead I know your kiss in the dark room that red wine blurred, the heat radiating off your skin in the middle of a below-freezing night. I know what my name looks like in your handwriting, how it sounds on your lips from across the room. I know your arms wrapped around my trembling shoulders in the moment before I cry. I know the curve of your lips before you know you’re smiling. I know that I won’t know how to forget if you ask me to, but I’ll try.
0
Jan 19, 2013
Jan 19, 2013 at 4:57 AM UTC
January 19th
We were moths racing towards light bulbs- reaching out every time it got too dark where we were floating. We were lost masochists who spent too much time together before learning that some of our impulses might be better off left in silent worries, and drunken stupors, and reoccurring dreams. The pits of our stomachs and the holes in our hearts started feeling too empty so we tried to fill up by swallowing each other’s carbon dioxide.
0
Nov 19, 2012
Nov 19, 2012 at 4:13 AM UTC
such young love
I’m always buzzing. Sometimes everything is so radiant that I vibrate almost ‘til it aches. I boil over; grateful, salty tears. Sometimes all I want to do is walk into the forest with someone who knows me well enough to stay quiet but no one is around and lightening-bolt loneliness hits me for one painful second until I go back to a dull humming.
0
Nov 19, 2012
Nov 19, 2012 at 4:12 AM UTC
new places
I miss the way the clouds call to the sea through the horizon, and the depths of the ocean send secrets to the shore, waves whispering to the sand, foam telling tide-pools, “Don’t worry. I’ll be back. Just wait here.”
0
Nov 19, 2012
Nov 19, 2012 at 4:11 AM UTC
heading north
She’s falling in love with a boy named after a star. I say, “How poetic.” She says, “I’m not sure how to love a star. I’ve never done this before.” I don’t tell her about the star I spent all of last summer staring at. The star that glowed so brilliantly that I forgot about the pain in my neck from gazing upwards for a whole season. I forgot that I was in a land of meteor showers. I convinced myself of a rearranged solar system. I don’t tell the girl about to jump about the fall. The Fall when I fell and fell and kept wondering when I would hit the ground. The winter when I had nowhere else to go and my heart felt like it was constantly hitting rock bottom and bouncing back up, only to crash down again with greater force. People who listen closely enough say they can still hear echoes of my heart breaking every time I look up to the night sky. Natalie, she’s always had her head in the clouds. She swallows zodiac signs without any salt. She feels safest on the outer edges of the Milky Way. I don’t want her to think I am afraid of the sky. I almost show her my scars- Deep blue nebulae on the bottoms of my feet from when I tried to run her out of me; Black holes eclipsing missing memories from when I tried to smoke her out of me; Constellations of twisted veins in my hands from when I tried to write her out of me. It still isn’t quite working. But I promise, I’m not afraid of the sky. I’m just afraid of leaping into an atmosphere with too little oxygen or too much gravity. Everything in moderation, I think to myself. Stop searching for telescopes that will kiss your eyelids. They measure success in how far away they can get. Even some of the most intimate cosmic embraces can start to feel like long-distance light-years before you ever thought possible. The best way to see a star is to look right beside it and let it soak into your peripheral vision. Do not let your pupils become too attached to the darkness. Finally, I sigh and tell her, “I have no map of the galaxy. I might have, at one point, been able to draw you one, but I always leave too soon. I still can’t sleep since realizing that stars burn out long before we ever see their light.”
0
Nov 19, 2012
Nov 19, 2012 at 4:10 AM UTC
natalie
She’s falling in love with a boy named after a star. I say, “How poetic.” She says, “I’m not sure how to love a star. I’ve never done this before.” I don’t tell her about the star I spent all of last summer staring at. The star that glowed so brilliantly that I forgot about the pain in my neck from gazing upwards for a whole season. I forgot that I was in a land of meteor showers. I convinced myself of a rearranged solar system. I don’t tell the girl about to jump about the fall. The Fall when I fell and fell and kept wondering when I would hit the ground. The winter when I had nowhere else to go and my heart felt like it was constantly hitting rock bottom and bouncing back up, only to crash down again with greater force. People who listen closely enough say they can still hear echoes of my heart breaking every time I look up to the night sky. Natalie, she’s always had her head in the clouds. She swallows zodiac signs without any salt. She feels safest on the outer edges of the Milky Way. I don’t want her to think I am afraid of the sky. I almost show her my scars- Deep blue nebulae on the bottoms of my feet from when I tried to run her out of me; Black holes eclipsing missing memories from when I tried to smoke her out of me; Constellations of twisted veins in my hands from when I tried to write her out of me. It still isn’t quite working. But I promise, I’m not afraid of the sky. I’m just afraid of leaping into an atmosphere with too little oxygen or too much gravity. Everything in moderation, I think to myself. Stop searching for telescopes that will kiss your eyelids. They measure success in how far away they can get. Even some of the most intimate cosmic embraces can start to feel like long-distance light-years before you ever thought possible. The best way to see a star is to look right beside it and let it soak into your peripheral vision. Do not let your pupils become too attached to the darkness. Finally, I sigh and tell her, “I have no map of the galaxy. I might have, at one point, been able to draw you one, but I always leave too soon. I still can’t sleep since realizing that stars burn out long before we ever see their light.”
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52
Something about being scared to put words to this. Something about magnets. Something about biology and philosophy and all of the reasons I pull you closer. Something about proximity and fingertips. Something about ambiguity that doesn’t feel very ambiguous at all. Something about feeling full to the brim. Something about writing about you as soon as you leave to keep you here longer. Something about doing everything in the wrong order and being okay with it. Something about crying and bed-sheets and taking off my socks. Something about trying new things, like rain and speaking my mind and being on a level playing field. Something about power dynamics. Something about holding my own and holding my breath and holding your hand. Something about languages and words and meaning. Something about your voice on the phone for the first time. Something about stairwells and sidewalks. Something about risk and reward and leaps of faith and losing faith and gaining trust. Something about your hometown.
0
Nov 19, 2012
Nov 19, 2012 at 4:09 AM UTC
the first words i ever gave to you
I thought they were supposed to be big. The clothes I have left over from him— given when we were in love, kept when he left —they were never quite my style. I always thought I would grow into them. Now when I slip into your clothing I feel like myself. It fits me so well. You fit me so well.
0
Nov 19, 2012
Nov 19, 2012 at 4:09 AM UTC
november
No matter what happens in the future, this will always be true of right now. Today, I woke up smiling because you were holding me. Yesterday, in the low light of your bedroom it felt like we were playing house. Outside cars drove by on rain-slicked streets, mugs of hot tea sat on the windowsill, and I’ve never felt safer than under that blanket. With you and within you, I am finding the Home I’ve never had before as the person I’ve never been until now.
0
Nov 19, 2012
Nov 19, 2012 at 4:08 AM UTC
right now
Your scars are reminders carved into every inch: notes on the backs of your hands, tied strings crawling between fingers, following alongside veins. They recede into dark space under sleeves not long enough to hide what you’d rather forget. Why do you trace your bones on the outside in red scabs? Are you afraid of losing them, your bones deserting you while you sleep? You’d wake up melted into your bed sheets while your bones enjoy the sunlight. You always look downwards anyways. Do you forget where they are, your delicate bones? Is that why you paint them on? They lie right under the surface waiting for you to notice them protecting your vital organs. Your heart still beats and you have a pair of lungs. They work hard for you even when you forget about them. But that’s all you are, skin and bones. If you tear yourself apart all that’s left is your skeleton, roaming the Earth with that same distant gaze that I’ve seen so many times before. Save yourself.
0
Feb 27, 2011
Feb 27, 2011 at 7:06 PM UTC
Scars
Lay me down on your fragile chest. I’ll sleep softly, rising and falling, swimming in the tides of your mind. But sometimes it feels like your heart will burst open far past your ribs and into the sky, sending me flying out into orbit to float on and watch life go by.
0
Feb 2, 2011
Feb 2, 2011 at 6:42 PM UTC
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