This is an apology to my younger self for letting her forget the ixora bracelets tucked in her tattered notebooks; for letting her blur the outline of Artemis’ body resting the edges of a waxing moon. This is an apology for the poetry and the songs she tuned out that could’ve saved her life. This is an apology for allowing her to stop hearing the midnight stories of the souls who get lost in unknown towns concealed beyond the gaps in their ribs; for allowing her to stray too far from mountain-and-sea sunsets that she can no longer smell the salty air and remember the color of the twilight skies.
This is an apology for allowing her to fall out of love with the things she wanted to stay in love with — for allowing her to fall out of love with the things that kept her alive.
This is an apology — for peeling the tattoo scabs between the drags on a cigarette, for sleeping drunk on a pile of ***** laundry, for wanting to keep the dreamers in the rye, and yet falling off the cliff two pages before the ending. This is an apology for writing her dreams in a bottle and throwing it out into the open ocean; now those dreams are nautical miles away, lost in the domes of a sunken city.
This is an apology to my younger self for all the things she wanted to be that I never became — and an apology for all the things I am that she never wanted to be.
And yet, this too is a promise to her that it’s okay: it’s okay to lose yourself in places you don’t like. It’s okay to wake up and find yourself confined in a body you no longer seem to know. It’s okay, darling; someday, you’ll find your way back.
I’ll find my way back.
We’ll find our way back to who we’re supposed to be.