I don’t know why she was so easily frustrated or why she spent hours on end, at the end, on the floor compulsively cutting butterflies out of book pages. I don’t know why she grew to hate her birthday so much or why she seemed to become increasingly more and more indecisive. I don’t know why she began to write those letters, that jumbled, nonsensical prose that tumbled, then rose again only to fall again, end and begin again. What begins only just ends again. And again.
I don’t know why I write in third person or why I write these letters or why I can’t make decisions or why I hate my birthday so much or why I’m burning these butterflies, watching the flames feast on their wings. And I don’t know why I think these things, the things they say not to think. But I think that the thoughts I think can’t just be unthought, that thinking these things can’t be untaught, like I can’t be untaught to love you. And that’s where things get really confusing because you’re not the you that I knew anymore. And I suppose I’m not the you that you knew anymore either, but in my heart and somewhere in the attics of my brain we’re together, alive again.