We sleep in beds that aren’t ours and use pillows formed to the shapes of other people’s necks.
The curve of their bodies leave shadows and memories. I feel them seep into my skin as I sleep and I wash them clean in the lake in the dewy morning.
We make beds that aren’t ours and rest in a sun that feels borrowed. Blankets and linens smell clean, but not like us. They are soft and worn and cradle easily against our bodies.
We notice frames full of photographs of people who aren’t our family. Notes left on the fridge and drinking glasses with fingerprints different from our own kept in cabinets within our reach.
I eat fruit out of a bowl and wonder how many others have tasted the iron of an old spoon on their tongue.
At night, before the sun goes down we ride bikes with broken seats that sit too low and use a canoe that is dusty with another family’s story.