We've found my pressure point it seems, it's every inch of my paper skin. I'm sorry I look like this, my red cheeks slick with tears that freeze before I can follow them upstream and dam the corners of my eyes. I'm sorry I crumple and can't stop apologizing. They'll tell you love is hard work, but nothing of the weight of fear hanging over the time we spend apart and woven into words I want you to say but you don't. I'm sorry, sweetheart, I'm a writer and a pessimist reflexively narrating everything unspoken between us and I don't know if it's your fault or my fault or neither or both that I flinch at uncertainty, expecting it to strike me in the most painful way: when the fear is as bad as the thing itself, it can't really get any worse, can it? The scariest part is the maybe. Maybe there is no such thing as enough no such thing as certainty that it will be okay, that you love me, when I've lost what it feels like to love myself.