Sometimes your mother will look at you like a dead language, some untranslatable character. Speak anyway.
Sometimes your burning heart’s smoke signals will make her weep and splutter, or pass over her like incense, slightly too sweet, and thick with silence.
Hand her an apple. Know she might choke before she sees the core. Feed her anyway.
Sing your hymns with windows open when the house is ablaze, do not suffocate. Gasp through carbon, remember who gave you your stardust: you are heavenly. Burning bibles purges nothing, and screaming into pillows is not a prayer, precious girl.