Take four and make mistakes, wake in the morning to check that your fingers are attached to the undeniable spot where your hands end. Watch the clock in case it stops; Dislodge the plaque behind your gums and scream in silence at reflection-you. Tick tock. Script the helix and watch it spiral, dipped in mothers’ milk, everyone, gather round for the epiphany T-minus twelve days. Creation calls. Victor Frankenstein here? Making something other than history, constriction in the surgical instruments. The fate you are going to meet is going to be so beautiful for everyone else. You are going to scream. You know, a lot of this is about birth. Through these broken walls I hope you realise that everything here is supposed to create life. Even the mistakes. Someday I’ll write a love letter to Rosalind Elsie Franklin, like the ones strewn about my bedroom, where I tell her about my day and ask if she would like to stir sugar into tea with me and call it a case study into romantics. Now, pick your metaphor and run with it, show me how exactly you’re supposed to be reading this. And when you find the answer, let me know. Welcome to the beginning.
From a collection of poetry I wrote for a creative writing portfolio in second year of university, titled 'Spiral'.