Please don’t call me beautiful when your hands are between my legs, and god forbid you say it as a seg-way between you’re so hot and my caution, your response you’re sure you don’t want to? I’m pretty sure the way my body looks, nineteen and stress-infused with an Oreo belly isn’t really what you pictured beneath my blouse, and I’m positive you didn’t listen to the story about my dad and the bad prom dress because you cared. It was just sentiment. You said it was beautiful, but really you wanted me to believe the act like a description in the Playbill and ride that trust all the way until the curtain dropped. Please don’t call me beautiful when the word ******* is before it or if we are ******* because making love is for married couples and you don’t even want me sticking around for the ****** sunrise that peers underneath your shade every morning.
Tell me I’m beautiful when I’m crying— crack me open and watch the colors bleed like a painting that hasn’t dried. Admire the light that peaks through the clear parts like a windowpane, no blinds. Tell me I’m beautiful when I’m laughing, when I’m reading my favorite part of a book, when I’m stuffing my face with peanut-butter pretzel bites and I haven’t washed my sheets in weeks, and I’ll know you can’t be lying because I’ve listened to the waves your heart makes when you’re sleeping and I’ve called your smile to the surface many times when you’ve tried to deflect it back inside. You’ll know that and you’ll know I’m beautiful. Call me beautiful when you’re not even trying. Call me beautiful when you’re by yourself and the smell of my hair is still on your pillow, or the memory of how dumb I sounded singing my favorite song breaks your heart back to the best little pieces.