Turn off the lights — I’m fighting myself in the dark. My skin, a caressing sun; roses fall and kiss me with lip-shaped petals, trying to open me wide. But they’ll censor you — they’ll look away, so you don’t shine as bright as you are.
And me? I pluck myself from a group of self-doubts. At the pace of this age, I slow, though youth fast-feeds through my hands, trying to unearth green shoots of heaven’s cheer. A chosen emotion rises — as if my heart readies itself for a rapture. Earthen hands ***** out dreams from soil. To be called a ***** — or to ***** others? What a question to be.
As I’m plotting in the potting shed, where we shared hope like dew-struck grass. We watered our dreams with tears, and have felt baptized in fear. Shaking daily at the grip of then —as if winter left its bare bones in my hands. But I’m not ready to net a coy smile, not when my butterfly net carries extra holes.
As all my hopes lie on the ground, seeds waiting to be buried in the dark —waiting to grow. The lights of faith are shut. And must I wait for fireworks to explode across my sky again, like next year’s celebrations? But I won’t shut my eyes this time. Yet I’ll stay open, just in case tomorrow decides to find me first.