In my first sighting of you, I painted a picture I could not erase, a canvas of disdain—your dress, your gait, the way your laughter danced like light, your long hair, a glowing shroud, your bronze skin, kissed by the sun, and the flowers you nurtured, while I, a ghost of my own mind, waged war against my garden, killing blooms for the weight I carry, the burden of looking at lives not my own.
Yet, in the depths of my heart, I found admiration where hatred once thrived. I never craved your light; I like my eggs with edges burnt, my garden a desolate expanse, but in this solitude, I am not alone. What I know is a quiet truth, that to admit my feelings is to drown into the depths of my own despair, but I write this, inspired by the long shadows of your existence, a reflection of my own tangled soul.