I’m always watching myself
watch the world.
Even in love,
I’m already narrating the ending.
I turn silence into stanzas.
Affection into evidence.
Every kiss, a metaphor.
Every absence, a motif.
People think I’m honest.
But really,
I just edit well.
Half of what I write
never happened.
The other half
happened too hard.
I’ve written the same heartbreak
fourteen different ways.
Gave it a new name.
Gave it better dialogue.
Made him softer
so the betrayal feels worse.
I say I’m writing for me,
but I’m always picturing the line
someone might underline
and send to their ex
at 2:03 a.m.
I’ve performed pain
like a dress rehearsal—
highlighted the devastation,
downplayed the shame,
cut the part where I begged
and called it pacing.
There are poems
that made people cry
and replies I never opened.
Because if I read them,
it might mean
I was never alone in it.
And I don’t know
if that would feel better
or worse.
Some nights I write
like I’m searching for proof
that it happened at all.
That he said it.
That I felt it.
That I was the kind of girl
someone could ruin
on purpose.
And if the writing is good enough,
maybe I don’t have to go back.
Maybe I don’t have to forgive him.
Maybe I just have to
survive it beautifully.
So I sharpen the line.
I fix the form.
I leave the ending open.
I publish the ache.
And I tell myself
that counts
as closure.
The betrayal was real.
The good lines were mine.
And maybe closure
doesn’t come in paragraphs—
maybe it’s just a quiet night
I don’t turn into a poem.