I. I thought you were the one. I imagined us flying to Manila, meeting the entire family, you proposing on the pristine sands of Boracay or in the small village where you used to play with spiders. I thought of possible baby names pronounced beautifully in both of our families' native tongues.
II. We grew together, abandoned defenses until you were my only confidant. I still haven’t recovered from the way you used that against me: Sealing my confessions into bullets in a magazine and making sure I was centered in the crosshairs of the scope, a different kind of target practice.
III. You were my special kind of poison, the kind that slipped through my veins unnoticed until it corrupted my cardiac muscle and collapsed my lungs. I ate away at myself until I was small enough not to threaten you, and even that wasn’t enough. I finally got the courage to leave you, but I formed a thick cocoon around my chrysalis of secrets to protect myself from you and the next.
IV. It’s been two years and I still have you, your mother, and every Carlsbad or Mira Mesa area code blocked. You realized you could invade my voicemail so you rang in 2019, screaming whiskey-soaked wishes for a better year for us both. I honestly believe you want that, in your own way. I wish you the best too, but I have outgrown you.