I'm 'sophisticatedly' sticking a pen in my mouth, pretending to smoke a cigarette. I don't have the courage to hurt myself, but I do. In 'subtle and implied' ways, he says.
I make watery coffee and convince myself, my happiness lies in there, floating. And I pretend I'm in a Parisian cafe. But these are pipe-dream dregs, nothing else. I guess they can't substitute the vividness of being, living. Of sharp technicolour experience that can be smelt. Dregs, indeed.
Today, I borrowed Birthday Letters by Ted Hughes from the library. I'm wondering if salvias were his favourite flower. His favourite. I can't figure it out. For his words are only stricken, messy with the rawness of too-technicolour experience. Beautiful. But sharp enough to pierce and poison, like Paris. My Paris, your Paris, our little Paris. So startlingly, breathlessly red.
I suddenly know why I have written this. The colour of salvias, of Paris, of me and you, is my soul's favourite. His favourite. And salvias, their fragrance, it douses the fire that's threatening to suffocate, swallow my life whole, incomplete.