A lot has changed in the last year and a half since the day God decided to scoop you up from our ember-warm hometown and swallow you whole about sixty years earlier than any of us would have ever prayed for. We would have all given up our one gold-embellished chance to write the center-spread ecstatically collected our own blood and sweat and knuckles met with writers-cramps if that meant watching wrinkles sprout permanently across your forehead roots of trees burying themselves into the grooves of your smile lines. We would have sacrificed all that hard-earned pain that stain issues one through four and that old putrid-beige colored couch that we hated so much but clandestinely found comfort in leaning our heavy heads on still in the crook of its homely, familiar shoulder thinking that we were Shakespeare's apprentices through fluttering eyelids creating clusters of words that had to have been New York Times worthy—we were sure although we knew the furthest we could really go is the furthest your laugh could carry across a room and that's still pretty far—we could all spit shake and swear— because I can still hear it sometimes all the way down here where each tendon in my body is capable of feeling solidity where I am haunted by uhtceare, wondering if you're too cold where halos don't exist outside of dreams not even when the sun is a cracked egg and dripping onto tables, the roofs of cars not even then is anything brighter than the whites of your lively eyes and I think you'd like to know that we're still thinking about you that I can't think about white anymore without thinking about the vulgarity of bathtubs and your hate for poems that include contractions—I'm sorry I've let you down but I think you'd like to know that I've finally stopped having nightmares and even the thinnest-skinned of us all, you know which one, has been able to convince himself that the embrace of the Earth just isn't the place for you anymore that you've already outgrown all of us at fifteen-years-old and we're sorry for not believing sooner that poetry can save the world.