i bruise my knees on wintered floors. you can tell so much about a person just by being in their bathroom. now i know why your hair always smells like coconut. is there a holiday that you spend taken away by isolation? what’s it called? that’s what i want to name you, maybe. you told me to come up with a nickname for you in your last letter. i haven’t yet, though, because nicknames remind me too much of skyscrapers -- too permanent, you can’t move them, our limbs should move more from this bed.
i spend two hours in bathrooms, leafing myself open.
i spend two hours missing you, swerving from full to empty, back to full again. you’re giving my honesty back to me now. there’s too much of it, stop it, stop this, i don’t want to eat any more of it.
last year, i lied to the beard-strewn man on the subway. the subway seats were too pale. i called him my grandfather when he left. he looked the way my grandfather looks in the scarred photographs my parents keep underneath dust. my grandfather looks like a tombstone, still, but i’m waiting for that to change.
i’m being too honest with you again. i swallowed saltwater this morning. look at how elegant it looks leaving my eyelids. look at how horrid. but it leaves and i thank you for doing this to me. i thank you,
kneeling in a bathroom. kneeling in your bathroom. i think i’ve started to pray to a toilet.