I want to see you sleeping after tick-tocking like a wind-up clock all day, falling like a taut of rope to the bottom of a canyon to thud down into a pensive pile, spreading your energy out as a silent spirit across the dry river bed, the wind of you whipping up sediments in the vast valleys beneath.
I want to bear witness to you catching my eye from across the room cautiously, covering the communion in cadmium lemonade tape, tasty and afraid of being caught at the crime scene. I'll throw you a line and you can come up gasping, glorious and shining in the adolescent sun, pulling in air where water should come.
I want to watch you write that paper you're working on.
I want to spot you screaming into oblivion, washing over wonder with waxy fingers, grabbing at the truth like five year olds ****** fireflies out of a fleshy, dusk-dipped night with mothers calling out "Come inside!" in loving, eager fright.
I want your eyes to glimmer something back at me, meeting me in the cosmos to make the moon, Mercury slinging stardust over his shoulder, flirting with Venus and fighting her smolder, meteorites crashing into each other, creating solar systems in their wake.
I want to contemplate you on a flat plane, feeling a frenzy of agitated hands and fluctuating heart rate, fault lines moving crazy, crashing through geologic time to make earthquakes feel human.
I want to stare at you saying things that would color me crimson in broad daylight as we breathe out heavy to the ancient incantations of an early umber evening.
I want to see you without a pocket mirror attached to my wrist, cutting into my skin, blood purple like lavender iced tea in the summer and veins an undulating blue.