I was supposed to be somewhere holy by now. Twenty-eight, maybe. Soft-eyed, loose-shouldered, eating cherries on a porch that faces west, “I trust the sky not to drop me.” “I haven’t wished on a coin in months.” Instead, I’m awake at 3:47 a.m. Googling “What does it mean to feel inside-out?”
I keep finding pieces of myself in weird places— a sandal from eighth grade in my mom’s basement— a song I skipped for years until it wrecked me— now it’s the only sound I can breathe to. A fourth grade diary entry that ends with: “I think something’s wrong with the air.”
I think something’s wrong with the air.
I was so sure by now I’d quit making altars out of absence, retire from bleeding for the line break, know how to hold still when people love me.
I thought I’d hear God more clearly and panic less when I don’t. I thought I’d be done being undone by a read receipt.
/ Then the break. /
And yet.
I flinch at compliments like they’re coming from behind me.
Sometimes I still check if my name’s spelled right on things. I still rehearse what I’ll say in case I’m asked, “So, what do you do?”
(I become. I break and unbreak. I drink soda in bed and call that healing. I make it to morning and call that enough.) I keep living like the soft things won’t leave.
There’s a version of me who doesn’t bend into a wishbone for every boy with a god complex— and a version who flosses because she thinks she’ll live long enough for it to matter.
There’s a version who never had to explain the scars on her thigh. A version who didn’t stay just to see how bad it could get.
I keep dreaming of her. Not to compete— just to confess. Not to ask forgiveness— to give it.
She sleeps through the night and means it. She makes plans and keeps them. She doesn’t exist.
So I just keep writing toward something I’m not sure I’ll survive. There’s a version of me who didn’t touch the red button. Didn’t ask. Didn’t hope. Didn’t write any of this down.
This one’s for the versions of us that didn’t make it, and the softest parts of us that somehow still do. Swipe gently. Speak softly. The ghosts are listening.