Numb. I cannot feel the sunburn on my back. I cannot feel pain as I glide the blade against my skin. I no longer feel the spark in my heart.
My head is constantly crowded with nonsense. All I can see is a little red-headed boy. He plays with blocks in a sepia-toned room. I know he is not real. I have never seen him before, but I know this imagery all too well. He comes from a photograph from long ago. He is my reality now.
He lays on the carpet tinted a light green. He is stacking blocks with different letters on them. I feel as if I should pay attention to their order. Is he trying to tell me something? The letters are blurry, as if I am reading without my glasses. What could this boy be trying to tell me? I lean in closer when his image ripples away as if this photograph was dipped into a chemical bath. Reaching out my hand, I cannot touch him. I remember he is just a hallucination. Reality hits me aggressively.
I'm sitting on my bedroom floor, blade in my hand when my phone lights up. Grabbing my phone, I let the blade fall. I can feel my heart pound for the first time in months. I am hoping to hear from a friend. Instead, a game is inviting me to come back and play. I know it now.
I am alone.
I am alone with my thoughts and with this boy who isn't real. I crave human interaction. I look at the blade on the floor. I look at my skin tinted red. I crave being in the same sepia photograph as that boy. I wouldn't be alone. I wouldn't be red. But I only know one way to travel back to him. I pick up the blade once more and press it hard into my skin.
Numb. I cannot feel the sunburn on my back. I cannot feel pain as I glide the blade against my skin. I no longer feel the spark in my heart.
I cannot stand to be alone anymore.
A few months ago I started having terrible hallucinations from PTSD. This is one of the many ones I had in the 6 months they haunted me.