We had some laughs,
didn’t we?
Thick as thieves,
weren’t we?
We could try again,
couldn’t we?
What am I supposed to do now?
What about me?
–S.
We had some laughs,
didn’t we?
Thick as thieves,
weren’t we?
We could try again,
couldn’t we?
What am I supposed to do now?
What about me?
–S.
My eyes haven’t let the tears fall. I am afraid that if they do – they would never stop.
It was an extraordinary day. We were high on coca-cola and all you can eat pizza. We gathered our tickets together and traded them for a whoopee cushion, three lollipops, a soldier with a parachute, a ball with Patrick’s face on it (Spongebob’s BFF), a yellow plastic man that sticks to the wall when you throw him, a Styrofoam plane, a hand fan with a butterfly design, and a metallic blue spring.
We stepped onto the landmines late in the evening, The first blow took us by surprise. Bringing us to our knees. Frantic voices, mouths moving, unheard words. The blast blew our eardrums out.
We didn’t need the ability to hear to know that more blasts were coming. Every hurried step triggered another blast.
He was dead.
And that is what it has felt like every day since we found out.
The landmines keep exploding. The shrapnel surrounds us. Cuts into the deepest parts of our hearts.
People keep talking. Smiling. Embracing us.
Life is what it has always been.
Wake up. Pee. Brush your teeth.
Shower. Dry off. Get dressed.
Eat breakfast. Walk to the car.
Start the car. Go to work.
Finish your shift. Go to school.
Life is what it always was.
Landmines keep exploding.
The earth keeps on turning.
Days will turn into weeks.
Weeks will turn into months.
A year will come.
Our hearing might return.
–S.
From 2014.
I know that we usually say I love you after we play-fight or someone brings up a topic that is still too fresh to joke about, but in every moment, serious or comical, I love you with my whole heart.
The beginning of this summer, at least for now, will be the last we will spend together.
As the days near your departure, I am full and I am hollow.
I am full of inside jokes, laughter, snippets in time, late night adventures, songs, embarrassing moments, proud moments, drives around the city, dances downtown, all-nighters pulled for assignments, the million little pieces that comprise our friendship.
I am hollow because I won’t be able to look at you across from the table at a restaurant and speak to you solely using eye contact. I am hollow because in your presence I am home. I have found shelter. I have found comfort. Life seems scarier to take on without you being a ten minute drive away.
Although we have only known each other for two years, I feel that our friendship has weathered the test of time in lives before and after this one.
I see us deep in the country at the age of five, collecting lightening bugs in mason jars and counting how long their light will last one Mississippi two. I see us at the age of eleven trying to drive an old beat-up truck and running it into a creek. I see us at the age of fifteen running away and deciding that we would live out of the bed of that same truck. I see us at the age of eighty-two at the nursing home ogling the ass of the tall, dark, and handsome nurse.
I am forever changed because of our time together. I hope in the future that we do get that apartment or house together that we always talked about, and even if fate wants us to always be separated by miles as our lives head in different directions, I want you to find comfort in the fact that I always carry your heart with me and when I feel the breeze against my face on a hot Texas day, or see the lights of the city late at night, I see two girls in a truck, laughing and speeding away.
I’ll be seeing you,
–S.
Do you ever feel like you took a step once and got stuck?
Life went on, but a part of you never moved on from that moment.
That’s me.
Where you left me, I’ll be.
The same things are all I see.
–S.
Grieving you.
Mourning you.
You are not dead.
Grieving you.
Mourning you.
We are dead.
Grieving you.
Mourning you.
You live in my head.
Grieving you.
Mourning you.
You love me in my head.
Grieving you.
Mourning you.
I’ll let you go when I’m dead.
–S.
I am hurting. I am healing.
I am grieving. I am growing.
I am crying. I am changing.
I am learning. I am living.
I am in pain. I am in power.
I am.
–S.
What if you never left?
I saw a picture of you holding me as a baby.
But I’ve never felt that.
My mom says that you talked to me as a baby.
But I’ve never heard that.
You’d have more than a little to drink every night.
But I’ve never smelled that.
Word on the street is that whatever needed fixing, you were the man.
But I’ve never seen that.
If you ever cooked,
I’ve never tasted it.
You died. I have no memories. How can I feel a connection to you?
When we visited grandma eleven years ago, I found a box of pictures in the room I was supposed to be sleeping in. As everyone slept, I lined the pictures up on the carpet. Some were of you when you were younger. Some were of grandma. Some were of you two together. They were all in black and white.
I wished that you could reach out to me. Say something. Anything.
Let me know you are here. I wonder what kind of life you imagined for me.
Life is confusing and complicated.
When grandma died, your daughters stopped speaking to one another. I wonder if my aunt even knows about the box full of pictures. I wonder if they are collecting dust underneath the bed. I wish she would have sent half of them to me. I know that I would’ve stared at them for hours. I would’ve wondered if your smile was real. I would have searched for clues. I would’ve run my fingers down every picture.
Mom sometimes tells me stories about you that she remembers.
I know what it is like to love a person you’ve never met.
I know what it is like to miss a person you’ve never known.
Grandpa.
Where are you?
–S.
You’ve been getting drunk and going out with friends to sing karaoke and dance at night clubs. In those moments – you really feel infinite. You can’t feel the heartbreak. It’s almost like nothing even happened. Almost like he’s still yours.
You’re coming home to him, only to find out that your bed is empty. I know what you’re thinking: One, what are you going to do with all of the things you know about him? All of the things in your head. Can you erase it? Can we file it away? Can we fax it to his new girlfriend? Two, it’s exhausting to keep reintroducing yourself to someone in hopes that they will fall for you.
What is he doing with all of the information that he has collected about you? You want to bet me money that he doesn’t even care about half of it.
See, the truth is that you are worth knowing. You are worth loving.
He probably never knew that your favorite color was purple, that it makes you really sad that you are allergic to lavender, that you still cry every time you watch the Notebook, and that you get jealous when your sister gets close to someone.
You were ready to commit to him. He was going to be your one, forever.
But how could he be your one if he didn’t appreciate these things about you? Your one will appreciate your quirks. They will adore all of the things that make you uniquely you. You have a story. No one on this planet could ever be you.
We are all a kaleidoscope of a million different things. Things we have picked up from school, books, music, television, movies, magazines, life, death, love, heartbreak, loss. All of those little pieces gorilla-glued together to make a collage – a you.
So stop thinking that you’re not worth it. Don’t let him ruin it for the real one. Don’t shut yourself off in the dark, and collect a string of one night stands. It’s not worth it.
You’re a lover. A romantic. Hold onto that. Don’t kill that.
More importantly, don’t allow someone who cared so little kill something that you care so much about. You have always believed in love.
Believe in love – again.
Always, again – always, one more time.
–S.
I am walking with your ghost again,
through fields filled with weeds, abandoned store parking lots, and cemeteries you now call home.
I am walking with your ghost again,
through empty playgrounds, the haunted city asylum, and the forest where you told me your first secret.
I am walking with your ghost again, through buildings where our laughter no longer echoes, on rusty train tracks, to the last place we were whole.
I am walking with your ghost again,
but you are fading as the sun is climbing the sky.
I am walking along again,
bracing myself for your millionth goodbye.
–S.
Another letter written to my dead grandmother from years ago.
Grandma,
Love is a strange thing. Love in connection with death is even stranger. It’s when you no longer inhabit the earth that the regret hits. All of the phone calls you should have made. The time you should’ve spent. The memories you should’ve made.
I have to believe that in some way this will reach you. That in some way, shape, or form – it still can.
Some days it scares me that the memory of your laugh and your voice is fading. It scares me that people immediately get caught up in the politics of it all. Where did the mourning go?
People prepare you for heartbreak. And sex. And to cook. To clean. To love. To remember to feed the dog. To take responsibility for your actions. To say sorry.
They don’t prepare you for death.
And maybe that’s why we all act so differently. For some, it’s the pain that comes with waking up every morning. For some, it’s their smile and how it will never be fully genuine again, never reach their eyes. For some, it’s burying any real emotion, six feet.
For others, it happens at random moments. The wind against their face. Blades of grass brushing against legs. The sun burning the skin. Rain hitting the window. Or it hits every few months. Or years. The darkness finds its way into your bedroom. It sleeps with you. It eats with you. It bathes with you. It breaths with you.
I won’t tell you what it is for me. Just know that life is what it always was. And then some days – I remember. And life becomes something entirely different.
I don’t understand many things. They crash into me and knock me over. And I don’t understand them.
Love is a strange thing.
Death is even stranger.
Mourning is the strangest of them all.
I’m still loving on you girl. I know that you’re still holding it down – wherever it is that you are.
–S.