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Last night I dreamed I was holding the world again. Not the globe from elementary school, the real thing, with oceans sloshing against my collarbone and earthquakes chewing up my wrists. The therapist asked, “Does it feel heavy?” and I laughed, because no one ever asks Atlas if he’s tired. Somewhere, you were packing a suitcase with the same precision you once used on my heart. Fold, tuck, close. Disaster, neatly zipped. I told the therapist I wanted to set the world down, but I was afraid it would roll off the table and break something important. Like your posh espresso machine, my mother’s knees, the sky. So instead I balance it, smiling like it doesn’t ache, the way women carry grocery bags or families carry secrets: both arms shaking, waiting for something to finally drop, pretending they didn’t hear it shatter. Everyone insisting it’s just the weather.
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Aug 19, 2025
Aug 19, 2025 at 9:11 AM UTC
Atlas Shrugged Off
Last night I dreamed I was holding the world again. Not the globe from elementary school, the real thing, with oceans sloshing against my collarbone and earthquakes chewing up my wrists. The therapist asked, “Does it feel heavy?” and I laughed, because no one ever asks Atlas if he’s tired. Somewhere, you were packing a suitcase with the same precision you once used on my heart. Fold, tuck, close. Disaster, neatly zipped. I told the therapist I wanted to set the world down, but I was afraid it would roll off the table and break something important. Like your posh espresso machine, my mother’s knees, the sky. So instead I balance it, smiling like it doesn’t ache, the way women carry grocery bags or families carry secrets: both arms shaking, waiting for something to finally drop, pretending they didn’t hear it shatter. Everyone insisting it’s just the weather.
Kiernan515
Written by
American
Aug 19, 2025
Aug 19, 2025 at 9:11 AM UTC
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