I live in a glass house built up on polite smiles and forced laughter.
A house that I want everyone to look into. But one I never look out of, to see you walking home alone, on these dark empty streets with lonely branches and street lamps as company.
If I could see you I would love you.
Because then I would understand that love is
listening to you sing in the shower to an audience of watered down shampoo bottles and gray bars of soap.
It is seeing you stare out your solitary window looking for stars in a city whose lights are too bright.
It is feeling your heart beat under thin cotton sheets, while your mother and father are fighting in the hallway and you feel like these 17 years have been a waste because you are just a child holding a blanket again.
I’ve kept my shades down and my doors locked but the foundations of my house are cracking like thin ice on a January morning.
I have learned that obligatory hugs in the hallways, at dances, and at train stations do not substitute for love.
Love lives beyond borders, and fences, and walls, and barriers.
Ones that I’ve been to frightened to jump over.
But if I knew what it felt like to hold you under the covers to keep you as warm as these cold hands could.
To hear you in your silence screaming in whispers, just like I am.
If I could look at your almond eyes and your gawky arms, and your spongy fingers, and your silky hair.
And let the colors wash away, and the noises fade out, and let the scratchy feeling of reality become soft like your fingertips grazing my skin.
I would realize that the two different houses we live in, share common ground.
Help me leave this house that I’ve built on fear of honesty and hold your hand, because in between the spaces our fingers intertwine is your heart and mine.
Building a new home, with cement made of vulnerability, and bricks made of acceptance.