I can see the world around fuzzy lines and I can breathe almost Normally and I can hear Every whisper like a scream.
But when I try to Talk the words get Stuck somewhere between My throat and my lips.
My tongue is scratching The fabric.
I'm finally used to It all So used to it that when I Wake up in the morning I don't even fight The cloth wrapped around me.
I just roll over against The wall and look far and wide To all the things I can't see around The corners of my eyes.
I can't capture The things I can't see.
I used to want a Polaroid camera To pocket every little grain of World around me and now All I want to see is the Subtle darkness of my own Eyelids.
That darkness used to be Navy blue but now It's pure black and when I stare at it Long enough my mind Superimposes a white filigree Outline onto it.
Have you ever listened to Sad music just to give you The right to feel sad Even if it was for the wrong reasons?
Four years ago this week I found myself staring out Plate glass windows at Parked cars The cold air trickling Up my hoodie sleeves.
Now I'm staring at Invisible black lace and A lot of life lived between The two vistas Improvement? Debatable Maturity? Non-negotiable.
My great-grandmother's shawl Is still hanging in the Back of my closet but I swear It's wrapped around my face sometimes And my old hoodie is Lying on the floor at The foot of my bed but I swear I feel it creeping down my arms sometimes.
I never knew my great-grandmother But I doubt she was a terribly pleasant person Judging from the rest Of my family.
Yet I doubt that any of my long-lost Relatives ever held as tight a Chokehold on someone as her Black lace has on me.
I'm slowly dying inside And when death catches up With my physiology I hope they send my body to the Funeral home and clear out the Weeds around the pond Then have a bonfire Of my notebooks and clothes in the Back field some unreasonably Lovely summer evening.
And I hope they burn that ******* black lace with it.