paint me the way i used to be before your vermilion dried in my veins and clotted in my heart. paint me the way i was when my arms were lined with yellow lace and my very existence was a symbol. once upon a time, in a far-away motel, you painted my chest with green. it looks like the forest floor, i said, green moss and leaves, life and growth. you laughed soft, dipping your brush in olive, and told me it was gangrene. the good only die young, you said, tragic brushstrokes blooming on my chest. i whispered words to you in the night, and you tried to do the same but all you managed was to mumble colors and techniques, waiting until daybreak to show me what you meant colors and shapes in the cold light of dawn. february choked you and you were a study in blue: “cerulean figure with palette,” “cerulean figure at window,” “cerulean figure trying to find words that mean the right thing, but coming up empty again.” you loved to hear me speak but hated to respond so you’d draw for me instead. on a bus running from the city you drew a picture of me, face like christ upturned to heaven halo of refuse ‘round my head. the savior of abandoned things the messiah of rot, who would die for the soul of every landfill - you drew me bleeding by a dumpster, holy bruises on my arms. paint me the way i used to be, before you taught me of cangiante and notan before i spent all my words on you, ripped the pages from the dictionary to explain your thoughts to you. paint me the way i used to be when my heart was yellow lace and every word was alive. paint me the way i used to be and i’ll drown myself in your watercolors.