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I woke up this morning to the vibration of base board heat kicking on and off to the cadence of the wind slapping against the tan siding of my two story home. I was alone. I lifted the comforter briefly, felt around for my phone, and then pulled it back down over me like cling wrap before the cool air of a poorly heated, hardwood bedroom crept in to meet my tired skin. The screen was blank. Just the time "9:08 AM", towering over the date "Wednesday, February 10" I was alone. Really alone. It's been 26 days since we stopped sleeping next to one an other. 26 days, and today is the first day I woke up and I didn't feel like there was anything missing. The last night in our old place I drove to the Turkey Hill on Keyser at two in the morning for peppermint mocha creamer and then I came home and brewed us a *** of coffee. I wanted to sit across from you at that little glass table, as the clock hanging on the wall behind your head clicked quietly, counting the time we had left, and I wanted to smell the ever-so-nostalgic aroma of cheap coffee in a creaky apartment building, just as the sun began to creep in through the blinds. That was my last chance for a pleasant snap shot. I wanted to remember the art and the poetry and the sweetness and the light of loving you. The thought of having you sitting with your knees in your chest, on the floor at the foot of your bed, ignoring me as I lay face down crying into my pillow, as the lasting image of that little, broken place on West Market that we called "home" for two years just seemed so wrong. It seemed so unfair. So, I crafted this pathetic reenactment of mornings passed when we had nothing we had to do & nowhere else we'd rather be but sitting across from each other at that little glass table in the kitchen. It wasn't believable though. I was sitting in the same place, with the same boy, hearing the same sounds and inhaling the same scents as I'd grown so used to, and yet I knew I didn't belong here. Not anymore. I was in my own home, the home we made together & I was suddenly struck with the debilitating ache of feeling home-sick. We knew it was over three weeks before either of us said it out loud, and it took three more weeks before either of us acknowledged that we'd said it out loud, and it took three more weeks before either of us began to pack our things, or tell our families. But here we are. Nowhere. We are nowhere. "We" don't exist. Or maybe we do, stagnant in our admiration. In some alternate universe, perhaps we are counting the freckles on each other's noses, mid-August. But in this universe, I am sprawled out across a painfully uncomfortable futon with pillows stacked on either side of me for comfort, and you're probably sitting by yourself in your white SUV that rattles when it moves, smoking a bowl while the heat kicks in, and you are freezing, and you don't want to go to work, but you're going to. And I am freezing, and I don't want to move, but I'm going to. Life goes on, and on and on. And today I woke up and there was nothing missing.
0
Feb 12, 2016
Feb 12, 2016 at 9:54 AM UTC
26 Days & (No Longer) Counting
I woke up this morning to the vibration of base board heat kicking on and off to the cadence of the wind slapping against the tan siding of my two story home. I was alone. I lifted the comforter briefly, felt around for my phone, and then pulled it back down over me like cling wrap before the cool air of a poorly heated, hardwood bedroom crept in to meet my tired skin. The screen was blank. Just the time "9:08 AM", towering over the date "Wednesday, February 10" I was alone. Really alone. It's been 26 days since we stopped sleeping next to one an other. 26 days, and today is the first day I woke up and I didn't feel like there was anything missing. The last night in our old place I drove to the Turkey Hill on Keyser at two in the morning for peppermint mocha creamer and then I came home and brewed us a *** of coffee. I wanted to sit across from you at that little glass table, as the clock hanging on the wall behind your head clicked quietly, counting the time we had left, and I wanted to smell the ever-so-nostalgic aroma of cheap coffee in a creaky apartment building, just as the sun began to creep in through the blinds. That was my last chance for a pleasant snap shot. I wanted to remember the art and the poetry and the sweetness and the light of loving you. The thought of having you sitting with your knees in your chest, on the floor at the foot of your bed, ignoring me as I lay face down crying into my pillow, as the lasting image of that little, broken place on West Market that we called "home" for two years just seemed so wrong. It seemed so unfair. So, I crafted this pathetic reenactment of mornings passed when we had nothing we had to do & nowhere else we'd rather be but sitting across from each other at that little glass table in the kitchen. It wasn't believable though. I was sitting in the same place, with the same boy, hearing the same sounds and inhaling the same scents as I'd grown so used to, and yet I knew I didn't belong here. Not anymore. I was in my own home, the home we made together & I was suddenly struck with the debilitating ache of feeling home-sick. We knew it was over three weeks before either of us said it out loud, and it took three more weeks before either of us acknowledged that we'd said it out loud, and it took three more weeks before either of us began to pack our things, or tell our families. But here we are. Nowhere. We are nowhere. "We" don't exist. Or maybe we do, stagnant in our admiration. In some alternate universe, perhaps we are counting the freckles on each other's noses, mid-August. But in this universe, I am sprawled out across a painfully uncomfortable futon with pillows stacked on either side of me for comfort, and you're probably sitting by yourself in your white SUV that rattles when it moves, smoking a bowl while the heat kicks in, and you are freezing, and you don't want to go to work, but you're going to. And I am freezing, and I don't want to move, but I'm going to. Life goes on, and on and on. And today I woke up and there was nothing missing.
Unsentimental
Written by
25/F/American
Feb 12, 2016
Feb 12, 2016 at 9:54 AM UTC
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