I often think about how and why our lives intersected and how strange it was that we used to be nothing more than two bright-eyed five-year-old kids in the same kindergarten class over a decade ago and how now we were lying down side-by-side listening to Hozier through his beat-up headphones and stargazing in the back of someone’s pickup truck
and it’s strange how neither of us had the courage to point out the fact that there were no visible stars in the cloudy sky that night because that didn’t matter
all that mattered was the fact that for an eternity and a half, I had felt more like a glass left half-empty and yet now I wished that this moment would never end, that we could just lie here in the freezing cold that burned my bones to the core just because my head rested fine on his chest and that was enough
and I wonder why it’s so hard for me to open up to him even though he unfolds himself for me, opens up doors to his beautiful soul just so I am able to peek through the cabinets where he stores all of his reasons to live, and where he hides the parts of him that he would get rid of, if he had a choice
I want to tell him about the poetry I have found in the way he walks, he talks, he breathes, and how staring into those ocean eyes makes me feel like I’ve suddenly hit the bottom, permanently gasping for air, but I love it, I love it, I love it,
and as we stare up at the sky in the back of an old pickup truck by an old crumbling church,
my God, his voice matches the silent hum of the street lights, burning in sync with our imaginary stars and at this moment, I am no longer an almost-empty glass, I am alive