To be loved by me is like being held underwater and expected to learn how to breathe.
I don’t feel like I’m from here— from this planet. To love me is inhuman.
I’m a creature of the night. Don’t get too close, or you might cause me a fright. But if you get just close enough, we can have conversations that last all night.
To be loved by me is like being drowned…
You lose yourself in me. I lose myself in you. It’s not just a pattern— it’s painted in the stars above, the ground below. You know we’ve all seen this show.
I either make landfall like a hurricane, or like the rain that was supposed to come today but never bothered to show its face.
To be loved by me is like being drowned…
It’s not that I’m unlovable… It’s that I might be intoxicating. And you know how it goes with toxic things: you either can’t put them down, or you know better than to ever pick them up.
To be loved by me is like being drowned…
But what if I’ve never been those extremes? What if that’s just how you’ve chosen to see me? What if loving me is not like drowning? What if I’ve just been watering your seeds? What if we look between the stars and the ground?
To be loved by me Is like being drowned?
Is there a different story to be found— waiting to be painted by someone who can see both the stars above and the roots beneath the tree?
This poem started as a statement—an absolute belief about how I love and am loved. But as I wrote, I found myself questioning: is love with me truly like drowning, or is it something else? Something deeper, something misunderstood? Maybe it depends on who’s looking. Maybe it depends on who’s willing to see the roots beneath the tree.