even as a kid, I knew that forever didn’t exist. I pulled tulips from the earth and brought them home with me, but I wasn’t looking at the petals. I was looking at the tiny hole left behind in the soil after the roots were ripped out.
it wasn’t about the beautiful thing I had taken; it was about taking something from the planet that had taken everything from me.
the tulips went into a vase and I kept them, like any other kid. but I wasn’t the kid who marched in and proudly showed them to their parents. I didn’t show them to anyone. I sat by the vase and watched them rot.
they were my physical proof that death is real, evidence that my friend’s dog did not run away to a butterfly farm, and the old man down the road did not mysteriously go to a better place. they died, and they rotted.
I think about this often now. I killed flowers not to admire them, but to prove to myself that even beautiful things can die.
I know how morbid that sounds, but what you have to understand is that my whole life had revolved around death.
my childhood memories were a sickening collection of wilted flowers, of worms burned into the concrete after a storm, of rotting fruit and swarms of flies.
my young mind showed me the same images on repeat. dead friends, dead relatives, people who left me, people who left this earth.
for my entire childhood, I never got to stop seeing lives that weren’t fully lived.
even as a kid, death didn’t faze me. violence was nothing to me. pain wasn’t fun, but it was tolerable. even back then, I was numb.
I remember how being so numb at such a young age terrified my teachers and scared my friends’ parents.
I didn’t know how to explain that I was numb because no matter what horrors I was shown, I had already seen worse.