I keep throwing up memories no one asked me to keep - bruises shaped like questions, the sound of my mother’s scream lodged behind my ribs.
No one tells you grief can rot when you don’t spit it out. That love, untouched, ferments into something sour. I carry it all in my throat ~ half apology, half war cry.
You say, “I want more of you.” And my body says, “Are you sure?” Because more of me means bloodstains on carpet, means fists instead of lullabies, means learning how to disappear before I ever learned to speak.
I was fed fear in childhood portions, taught to flinch before I felt. I watched my mother burn down her mind, and still tried to build homes in her ashes. I held her wrist when she begged me not to. Took the pills. Took the gun. Took the fall.
I was not built for softness but I do crave it. Every tender thing feels foreign, like wearing someone else’s skin. But you touch me like I’m not ruined. And that’s the part that makes me sick.
Because what if you mean it?
What if love doesn’t have to be a wound I pick at just to feel alive? What if you stay? And worse - what if you don’t?
This is my mourning sickness: grieving safety I never had, while choking on the possibility that I could finally be held without having to shatter first.
Some grief is ancient. Some love arrives like a question you’re afraid to answer. This is for the kind of survival that teaches you to flinch before you’re touched, and the slow, terrifying hope that maybe - just maybe - you won’t have to anymore. Mourning things I never got, and the version of me I might be if I ever do.