He took off his glasses to mutter away the world To make sure that everything, not just his mind, was blurry, out of focus. Because that’s how he felt. He felt like he couldn’t wait anymore. It was agony, to be always waiting. Patience only mattered when he knew what he was being patient for. But now. Now, he didn’t know. Or, he didn’t want to know. He wanted so badly to feel what he did in the past, that he’s not willing to imagine anything else being the same or better. He’s addicted to the taste of sadness. It tasted like the back of your throat after you’ve just thrown up. It tasted like stale air. But for some reason, that comforted him. Maybe a part of him was right, and he took solace in that. He wants to cry he knows it. And he’s always been on the verge of tears, ever since that day. He’s not sure, that’s what he keeps telling himself. One day he will be, he hopes. But right now, maybe he’s okay with crying for another night. Maybe it’s okay to be sad for another week. But maybe it’s not. It’s been four months now and he’s back to writing at night, hoping that one day someone will see these and say, “I understand his feelings.” Because he feels like the only person that really understood him, isn’t there anymore. That being forgotten is just another possibility. Because that’s what he’s always been afraid of. Being forgotten. He remembers how hard he cried when he lost his mom at the mall. He was only five years old, and the mall was so big. He cried for what he thought was hours. Why is he so scared of being forgotten? Maybe because even if people promise you that they won’t forget you, there’s no way you can ever be sure, and that uncertain feeling is what makes you afraid. Maybe because if people remembered him, maybe if they did, then maybe he truly existed, and it mattered. Why does living really matter? Why is it that he’s crying? Why is he crying? Why can’t he see the screen anymore and why can’t he stop crying? He can hear the rain outside. It’s loud and broken.