I hate pools, oceans, lakes, rivers. I hate the feeling of the current against my body. The fight to stay in one spot when the water wants me to go with it.
I hate how it whispers let go, Like surrender is serenity As if I haven’t fought too long to be here, On my own terms
The chill that wraps around my limbs Not gentle, not kind But insistent — Pulling me into depths I never chose
I hate the weightlessness, Not the freedom, but the absence of ground, The loss of edges, Of lines I can hold onto
And I remember the diving board — Toes curled over the edge, The sky too big The drop too deep
The water below dares me to jump, Like it knows I don’t belong in the air, Like it can’t wait To swallow me whole.
I hate the silence before the splash, That breathless second of doubt, When the world holds still And I almost believe I can be free, Free to fall.
But I never am. I step back. The plunge is not worth the drowning.
In water, I am always unrooted, Always drifting, Always one breath away From vanishing