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“be safe, get some rest, text me when you get home.” i used to love a boy who never lived to be a man. i was fourteen years old, in a psychiatric hospital after swallowing so many of my mother's pills that i couldn't remember her name. he told me i'd been crying and rocking back and forth for two days. i told him i was cold. he gave me his sweater. “be safe, get some rest, text me when you get home.” things i say so often they have become more incantation than conversation, a protective spell rubbed river-rock smooth by worried hands. i say, “you look cold, take my jacket.” i say, “have you eaten today?” i say, “here, drink some water.” i do not say what i am thinking, which is, “baby, the sharks are circling again, where is the blood coming from this time?” because when i said, “i love you, stop dying,” he said, “go home.” i said, “i already am,” so he killed a fifth of tequila, cut us both with the bottle, and passed out in the bathtub. so when i see the dark fingers that tug at your bones, i will not ask you any questions i don't think you can answer. tonight, we will only talk about things we have words for, and if that means all we talk about is stars, then i will spend a lifetime of tuesday nights talking to you about stars. and if staying alive means going away, then i will buy you a bus ticket and tell you to never look back. dragons were not meant to live pinned under glass and i would never ask you to be anything else to fit comfortably. and the last day i see you, i will not say goodbye. i will not tell you i'm afraid, i will tell you i love you, crank up the stereo, punk rock screaming at a purple sky, and i will drive you home one last time.
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Apr 23, 2018
Apr 23, 2018 at 10:11 PM UTC
dragons
“be safe, get some rest, text me when you get home.” i used to love a boy who never lived to be a man. i was fourteen years old, in a psychiatric hospital after swallowing so many of my mother's pills that i couldn't remember her name. he told me i'd been crying and rocking back and forth for two days. i told him i was cold. he gave me his sweater. “be safe, get some rest, text me when you get home.” things i say so often they have become more incantation than conversation, a protective spell rubbed river-rock smooth by worried hands. i say, “you look cold, take my jacket.” i say, “have you eaten today?” i say, “here, drink some water.” i do not say what i am thinking, which is, “baby, the sharks are circling again, where is the blood coming from this time?” because when i said, “i love you, stop dying,” he said, “go home.” i said, “i already am,” so he killed a fifth of tequila, cut us both with the bottle, and passed out in the bathtub. so when i see the dark fingers that tug at your bones, i will not ask you any questions i don't think you can answer. tonight, we will only talk about things we have words for, and if that means all we talk about is stars, then i will spend a lifetime of tuesday nights talking to you about stars. and if staying alive means going away, then i will buy you a bus ticket and tell you to never look back. dragons were not meant to live pinned under glass and i would never ask you to be anything else to fit comfortably. and the last day i see you, i will not say goodbye. i will not tell you i'm afraid, i will tell you i love you, crank up the stereo, punk rock screaming at a purple sky, and i will drive you home one last time.
maddie-fay
Written by
Apr 23, 2018
Apr 23, 2018 at 10:11 PM UTC
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