It is on my tongue— a feeling palatable, aerodynamic transition, palpable.
Redesigning for flight, for movement through resistance, for letting go of drag.
Whereas my muscles would tense up, a few inches from the ground— now I’ve learned that to clip one’s wings is to stay anchored, be shackled down.
Not that being grounded isn’t a form of comfort, safety, or security— but there’s a shift that comes from renegotiating the terms you’ve set with your own mind.
It’s a daunting challenge, yet a necessary one.
Because I want to see the world, not from behind a pane of glass, but with wind in my lungs and wonder in my chest.
And I want to fall in love— falling into bed with you, multiple strings attached, and still feel like the luckiest person alive.
To do that, I am taking flight in ways I could not have foreseen as a child.
Written in chorus with the poets of HelloPoetry—this flight is ours.