I’ve got Nike shoe-boxes filled with newspaper confetti basketball highlights, a Lucky Charms cereal prize, a hair clip from the Homecoming dance, picture after picture of little month-long memories. I’ve got a dozen temporary candy box boyfriends who faded just as quickly as they sparked. I’ll reopen them occasionally, remind myself why my middle school mind found it so important to save stale Valentine’s Day lollipops and balance that with the tender, childish idea that baby love is the realest love and maybe one day all those text message breakups would come back to me. I sort through each dent my heart has suffered that I stowed away in compartments, but you, who’ve seen me through the longest, have no place under my bed. I’ve got nothing visible to hold of you because truth be told you’re only my friend if the lights are out and the door is shut. I have no pop song sweatshirt that still smells like you, no cliché letters I’ve soaked with tears, no movie tickets, no dinner matches or menus or pictures that I could cut if I hated you enough. I’d have to collect your sweat in a vile and brew it into a perfume just so the smell could give me something disgusting enough to feel when I remember you. If only I could capture my nightmares, remake the images, mold your body out of actual clay and light you up without having to kiss your pelvis. We’ve made a mess of this. You’re just a flame I forgot to blow out. You're just a name I left hanging on my mouth.