My mother’s addiction is a shapeshifter— It takes on so many forms it’s rumoured that nobody knows its true face It’s a master of disguise it hides itself behind thin lipped smiles and tired eyes— It changes so often it’s hard to tell if it ever recycles old forms I frequently ask myself if I would recognize her if I did not have her eyes If we didn’t share a body for 7 months would I know the sound of her heartbeat even when she’s disguised as a dragon —sober is the shape she fails to hold the longest the edges between make believe and reality blur almost as quickly as they form It’s easier to be a flame than still water so she burns down everything in her path
At home we don’t dare say the word addiction we walk on eggshells like her cover will crumble at the slightest vibration from the floorboards —we glide through the hallways like spirits there’s no need for a haunting here ghosts already roam in the walls you hear wailing more often than silence— I’m beginning to think Halloween is my favourite holiday because it’s the one day of the year people can look into this haunted home and they don’t judge me for what they see behind closed doors —I’ve never been one for haunted houses but maybe it’s because I’ve been living in one for 22 years without a break I wish to escape from my own house of horrors so why would I pay to enter somebody else’s Instead I put on devil horns and watch movies where there’s always a final girl wondering if it would be worth my soul to make a deal with the devil so my mom can stop shapeshifting so my brother can sleep at night so I can finally breathe, even just for a moment
—my mother’s addiction is a shapeshifter I hope someday soon I can see what she truly looks like I have been living with a stranger for so long I’ve forgotten what it feels like to recognize the people you love