I have not injected myself, felt the pulse of illegal things under the bonnet of my skin or swallowed a pill and let the room swirl in colours from the mid-sixties.
I have not guzzled ugly orange drinks until my liver aches to talk and I erupt pints and shots against ***-coated cubicle walls.
I have not had the awkward first with one of my teeth knocking on hers or a line of saliva in my stubble that I perhaps should have trimmed.
Instead I drink tea with two sugars and whizz through each channel rather than absorbing stories for class as best I can like a square of kitchen roll.
Instead I see streams of people from 20-whatever take pictures with berries and apples to remind themselves who they are and remind me they still breathe.
And instead I write what I don't know for if not every word burns black then dies and so I continue to fight the other me who will not turn, walk back the way I just came.
Written: December 2013. Explanation: A poem written in my own time inspired by Simon Armitage's 'It Ain't What You Do It's What It Does To You.'