You are my personal taste of sorbet, sun-tan lotion, botched slices of the sun that sit on my tongue like pills before I swallow. I hate necessity, and crave your entity in ice cream scoop sizes. I want to pull the batteries out of your back, **** the juice onto my palette and spit it back into your eyes so maybe you can feel the sting you left me with when you pushed my heart off the side of the bed while pulling your pelvis closer to my head. I hate when we’re cooking and you slide ice cubes down my shirt, but did you know that’s the only time I ever felt anything from you that wasn’t warm and bitter and bruised? I think that sometimes your nightmares even scare me. I can feel them when you sleep, your arm flinching beneath my neck, how you curl your toes against my calves and grind your teeth like you’re trying to fit your square memories into the oval-shaped hole of my spine. I get that that’s why you’re a little crooked, but you used me to straighten yourself like the post a tomato plant wraps its stem around. You took all the nutrients from my center and fed yourself. You are the palm tree in my snow globe, but no matter many times I shake you the snow still falls on my shoulders.