The only thing I’ve ever been able to see without squinting through bad eyes has been ugly and stupid and worthless each adjective another bullet to the body of someone who is already dead. I left the bullets where I thought they ought to be—right where they were—lodged between vital arteries and anything dangerous; they were equally acidic beings occupying the same profane space. I allowed my skin to grow over them as much as it rioted. I wanted to remind myself that they were a part of me now that the least I could do was let them be the way I had never been.
I have always been a non-believer, naturally a very-much-believer slipped into my line of fire the same way the sun peeps its shy face out of grey. But it took more than prying me out of my pad-locked shell to make me a believer too. It took swimming the length of the ocean to find me in my shell first then slaying the eight-legged monsters that shielded me from all things good and every time I unwound the bandages in front of you that encased my wounds inflicted from the sour tentacles of the beast you had to fight away I expected the sting of your fingers fresh with sea salt to sting like hell but you would remind me of how often you wash your hands only not after touching me-- never after touching me. I wasn’t familiar with the smell of flesh without it being doused in sanitizer; The mess of my pain was just more dirt on their skin.
You were my savior the only hero ever willing to carry a dead body with the same caution as someone who could still thank you with their lips—not cold. You were red wine and I was holy Sunday gnawing at the body of Christ but you learned how to consume me still without just swallowing me whole instead savoring even the most overbearing bites of me that reeked of its expiration date. You taught me how to let myself be consumed by something other than ugly and stupid and worthless. You taught me how to let myself melt in the warm safety of your tongue that vowed to speak of only sweet things. But trying to recall that lesson was quieter in my ears each time I urged myself to complete the daily routine of supplying you with a special pair of scissors expectant that you would dig deep into my body like everyone else always had knowing that the gashes you created would heal slower and leave scars uglier than scars inflicted by the hands of anyone else. I pushed my already-open cuts in your face shut eyes and gritted teeth awaiting the familiar feeling of the people you love making their marks in the center of your back. But I watched your mouth form something that I didn't know could sound soft, something like "n-o", the first no that ever sounded as sweet as a yes. No new stab wounds, no tearing of tight flesh. All you did was re-stitch me. You caught my blood in its vanishing act.
With every stitch I watched as past words lost their dictionary meanings ugly: beautiful stupid: smart worthless: worth it. You drug me out of my grave and took the time to dust me off the way no one else had hushed the knives in my own hands dripping in my own blood to fall to the ground spoke the magic words that opened the gates of my chest so that you could squeeze the life into my heart again. You took the eyes from your own skull for the sake of making a better scenery out of myself.
I don't have to squint anymore. I can see "worth it" taking form of "worthless" miles across the street and as you place your petal hands on my head and tilt one last time I am watching myself do the same.