I'm writing you from the back of a coffee shop napkin because it's the only place I know you might see it. I'm smoking cigarettes just so I remember to breathe, And filling in the blanks between them With meaningless words That sound like they might give me a reason Like "romantic" and "addiction" And sometimes Just your name Over and over and over Until I'm brushing ink off my fingers and onto my new jeans.
The earth is grasping at my fingertips. It's 2AM and I don't know how I sleep at night. (I don't)
Some nights I lie awake and think About how there's a universe inside of you. I'm shooting for the moon But I'm coming out much closer to the sun than I expected.
I lie awake and picture, In my head, All the ways that this can go wrong Will go wrong Have gone wrong I thought we were getting better But it's more like We're getting older every second. We're just pennies in pockets of good luck addicts We were born to make a change But instead I'm watching re-runs of lifetime at 3 in the morning. (Nothing ever changes)
Every night I tell myself That tomorrow I'm going to try a little harder To try. Every morning I tell myself That tomorrow Would be a better day to start. (I live by the golden plated rule.) I'm running out of room on the back of bookshop receipts, And the woman behind the desk is telling me That I'm running out of time Until they close for the night. What I hear Is that I'm running out of time To live forever.
When I was eight years old, I told my mother That I would never smoke a cigarette And I've always thought it was funny How we learn to break promises at an early age. (You are not the exception.) Now I measure daylight in smoke breaks And starlight In how many times I can be a contradiction to a former me. (Eight and counting)
I try so hard to be a poet, But the truth is I can't make any promises.