i often feel like hollow light. If you were to touch me, there would be nothing but a hand passing through a few swirling luminescent particles— i am a ghost pretending to be human. i admit that this is hard for me to say– writing without wrapping words in warmth is unsafe, risk-laden; my fingers freeze up, unmoving, suddenly unknowing. there are a few moments each day when i lose all my speech, and five, ten, fifteen years of learning how to hold myself together with shaky hands vanish, swallowed like lifeboats sinking. i would like to tell the truths buried in my stomach—like cutting open the sky and watching all the stars fall through torn fabric—but each time my words fail me, and so I will never call myself a poet. perhaps one of the most difficult things is writing without metaphors—i can’t make fear or pain or the shaky breaths that happen after you’ve cried for too long sound soft or lovely or like deep ocean tremors, and now i am no longer an artist, i am just the raw, bare soul of a person who never quite got the hang of stability. still i am attempting to decipher how all these people keep their feet on the ground, so if you find anything for me to saw the wings growing from my ankles off with, let me know.