I left my phone in the fridge again. Texted my dead friend by mistake. The dream said turn left at the red door but every door was mauve and melting. I wore the wrong shoes to the right breakdown.
God, I’m tired of being the lesson in someone else’s flashback. Of saying 'I’m fine' like it’s a good thing.
Sometimes I bite a fingernail off and flick it to the ground, just to prove I was here, just to pretend my DNA is not a walking lie.
Sometimes I talk to the dogs with TikTok accounts like they’re holding something back.
Sometimes I rehearse my disappearances in liminal spaces: parking garages, abandoned malls, group chats I left on read. Now I RSVP to nothing and they still say “you’ll be missed.”
I keep meaning to heal, but the plot keeps thickening— And my name— God, my name— it echoes like a spoiler in a house that isn’t mine anymore. A trivia fact no one got right.
My memories keep getting auto-corrected to get over it. I don’t. I alphabetize the wreckage. I romanticize the ruin. The rot is getting readable.
Anyway, I’m late again. Time got weird in the hallway. I swear the mirror was trying to warn me— but I was too busy checking if my under-eye bags made me look exquisitely exhausted, or just ordinary and old.
I wanted to scream but the hallway was practicing silence.
I wanted to run, but the rug said stay and the mirror said be still and beautiful and unavailable.
The mirror said: this is what longing looks like when it runs out of places to go.
So I stood there— a half-wreck, half-reflection— trying to decide if disappearing quietly still counts as survival.
Somewhere, my phone is defrosting. Somewhere, the red door is waiting.
Somewhere, my dead friend is laughing his ghost-laugh, mouthing: same.