I reconstructed all of it-- Our past conversations, The exchange made Merely minutes ago— I meant none of it, What I really meant was. . . . . .I know . . . Because. . .
Analogging a new answer In my head, convincing myself That I had said it all along— Why do you still act As if I did wrong?
Or, perhaps, you brushed it off. It was not strange to you. It did not even stick out-- Because you couldn’t see All the things I could have said And wished that I had.
I agonize over the words That never leave my mouth, Planning the past meticulously Until it numbs the weight That hangs over my chest From the fumbled encounter I remember so vividly.
I said sorry in my head, Were my lips saying Something different? I said sorry in my mind. But even then, nothing is right, nor organized, did I even say sorry? Or was it a fractured thought, Underneath the pile, Grown so high, Of admonitions and guilt, Screaming, yet never Reaching the light?