what happens when you’re missing her? through the blush of the petal of the casablanca lily, there, you see? where the light gets fractured by the veins? she dances on the other side, shadow swaying in time with her short-lived petal sister.
loving her was like lying on my back in a thirsty, lifeless wheat field, watching fervently as clouds of dust roll their way towards me.
while eventually my lungs are itching and, with every breath, i feel the sting of sand and dirt against the softness at the back of my throat; in front of me, there, as darkness swallows us whole….
my casablanca lily, she blooms.
in the moments of the modest unraveling of her petals, she dances through her good-byes with an ineffable ease.
if you can hear any last words from me, nightbloomer, let me write them here. you always did love my poetry; what better way to eulogize my love for you?
loving you was like walking into quicksand wearing shoes of gold, or lead. like coming back to the places our souls touched to remind myself of you.
like taking a picture of every lily i pass, being sure to get the veins and creases in focus.
what happens when you miss me? does your chest ache when you hear those first few beats of the songs we sang together? do you skip the painful ones, or do you put them on repeat?
i hope you do. i hope food loses its taste. i hope you find yourself cold without me, i hope you become inconsolable, beside yourself with grief.
finally, i want to be the veins that fracture the light.