Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
it's 2:56am, and I'm lying next to a stranger. when the sun rises, I'll already be gone. I'll have already climbed out of his bed, found my clothes, tiptoed to the front door, and vanished. the house will be left exactly as it was. his car will still be parked in the driveway. the curtains will still be drawn. the withering houseplant in his kitchen will remain unwatered. everything will be left untouched. when I leave, it will appear as if I had never been there at all. but I was. two weeks from now, he won't remember my name. he won't remember anything besides the feeling of skin on skin, of a warm body pressed up against his. in his mind, I will have been nothing more than another body. I always imagined that going home with a complete stranger would feel wrong, would be terrifying, that not knowing who is next to me when I am falling asleep would be scary. a few months ago, it was 2:56am and I was lying next to a stranger. this time, he wasn't a complete stranger. this was not my first night with him, far from it. I knew him. he knew me. I wasn't gone when the sun rose in the morning. the house was left exactly as it was the night before. the only difference was that this time, I was still there. two weeks after that night, he would remember my name. he would remember my laugh, my freckles, my eyes my voice when I was tired, how I talked too fast whenever I was excited, the way that I looked at him when I was in love. and I would remember all of those little things about him, the same way he would remember all of those little things about me. I always imagined that sleeping next to someone who I loved would feel safe, would be comforting, that knowing the person next to me when I am falling asleep would be wonderful. for the most part, my imagination wasn't incorrect. I was right when I pictured how incredible sleeping next to someone who I loved would feel. I was right when I pictured how frightening sleeping next to someone who I didn't know would feel. I was right about most of it. but I was wrong about one thing. while lying in a bed at 2:56am, I realized that the memory of sleeping with a complete stranger hurt far less than the memory of sleeping with someone who I once thought I knew.
0
Nov 9, 2020
Nov 9, 2020 at 10:26 AM UTC
sleeping with strangers
it's 2:56am, and I'm lying next to a stranger. when the sun rises, I'll already be gone. I'll have already climbed out of his bed, found my clothes, tiptoed to the front door, and vanished. the house will be left exactly as it was. his car will still be parked in the driveway. the curtains will still be drawn. the withering houseplant in his kitchen will remain unwatered. everything will be left untouched. when I leave, it will appear as if I had never been there at all. but I was. two weeks from now, he won't remember my name. he won't remember anything besides the feeling of skin on skin, of a warm body pressed up against his. in his mind, I will have been nothing more than another body. I always imagined that going home with a complete stranger would feel wrong, would be terrifying, that not knowing who is next to me when I am falling asleep would be scary. a few months ago, it was 2:56am and I was lying next to a stranger. this time, he wasn't a complete stranger. this was not my first night with him, far from it. I knew him. he knew me. I wasn't gone when the sun rose in the morning. the house was left exactly as it was the night before. the only difference was that this time, I was still there. two weeks after that night, he would remember my name. he would remember my laugh, my freckles, my eyes my voice when I was tired, how I talked too fast whenever I was excited, the way that I looked at him when I was in love. and I would remember all of those little things about him, the same way he would remember all of those little things about me. I always imagined that sleeping next to someone who I loved would feel safe, would be comforting, that knowing the person next to me when I am falling asleep would be wonderful. for the most part, my imagination wasn't incorrect. I was right when I pictured how incredible sleeping next to someone who I loved would feel. I was right when I pictured how frightening sleeping next to someone who I didn't know would feel. I was right about most of it. but I was wrong about one thing. while lying in a bed at 2:56am, I realized that the memory of sleeping with a complete stranger hurt far less than the memory of sleeping with someone who I once thought I knew.
poetry-by-sf
Written by
F/Pennsylvania, USA
Nov 9, 2020
Nov 9, 2020 at 10:26 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem