We spent our youths sleeping in empty bathtups because we like the way it makes his memory echo through the silence, the way syllables got trapped beneath the taps. And we only paid attention to abandoned buildings when we became one. But we never had someone around to tell us that the objects in the mirror are less depressed than they appear. So we keep reciting bedtime stories and dryheaving scattered sensations because saying his name feels like chocking down bleach but it hurts less than knowing no amount of time spent staring passed empty doorways will bring him back. No one told us that goodbyes taste like the back of a postage stamp and no one told us that coming home feels a lot like drowning. Every year for Halloween we dress up as the versions of ourselves that were in love with the way their skin looked in the day time and we sit outside upon the porch hoping we'll walk out and leave our heartless archetypes behind. No one told us that loving would be like playing the piano for someone who can't hear, or that it would remind us of the way we felt the first time we dropped our ice creams as a kid. So we're trapped finding colours in the shadows on the ceiling and we keep storing secrets in our cigarettes. Because we just can't seem to find our place in this world and we swopped a one bedroom apartment for a bloodless bag of dark hair and dislocated words. We curled our spines into shapes that resemble hurricanes because all we see between our bones is substance for natural disaster. We lost hope the moment she hurled from our van and we've been searching inside drug stores ever since. So excuse us, for we smell of death and cheap wine. And our clothes are stained from loss and citric acid, but if you let us limp our way passed, you may learn the lesson your mother never had the nerve to teach you