sometimes it feels as if I have too many milk teeth, too many parts of me that belong to a time when I climbed trees to touch the sky and I swam in sunflowers and fireflies - to a time I have long since painted in sepia tones, long since pushed to the back of my mind with hands so tired of being filled with splinters - too many seeds and not enough light.
there are too many parts of me that I have placed underneath pillows, that I have kept behind closed lashes, that I have slept upon, waiting for the morning to arrive and them to be g o n e , replaced with coins that I could place underneath the tongues of the dreams that I could not ferry to my frail realities. but in the morning, they return - one by one into my mouth, daring me to speak them, daring me to sing, daring me to find someone who will listen. listen.
it feels as if I have too many stories, too many secrets, too many sins and not enough space for the words to fly out of my mouth and into the world - I have too many milk teeth that I cannot remove.
and sometimes I think maybe that's why I don't understand permanence. I don't understand change. I don't understand growing up, growing out, growing apart - I don't know what it means to stare at the sun while your feet are moving forward, only forward, never back. because I have spent all my life climbing on the shoulders of mountaintops and moonstones, and standing tall was never an option.
sometimes climbing is tough when my mouth gets too heavy with overgrown memories and I can almost feel myself cry out "save me," can hear myself whisper "listen." but pride and false bravery sew me shut and I'm left to watch my bones taken over by page-pressed petals and old phosphorescence - and it's in moments like these that I stop climbing and think maybe it's time for me to grow now, on my own: hands and legs and lungs and heart, spine and ribs and collarbones, cranium, and with baby teeth bared I am blooming fire and gold and facing the sun -