i poured half a grand down the sink, watched the bottles bleed their amber and ruby in the drain. a sacrifice — a promise after a thousand lies dressed in shame.
my world hears detox: lemon water, fizzy drinks. not my veins beating to break free, clawing closer to a single drop.
my husband says i’m not what i think i am — because i can stop.
as if stopping wasn’t a war every night, prayers whispered to a god i’m yet to find.
but there’s a circle where i can admit: hi. i’m an alcoholic.
in the half-light their voices don’t press me for whys, or ask when i slip. they don’t judge when i wake again struggling to hold my coffee, hands shaking.
i swore not to give it any more room. but i still speak of it, and carry its shadow to my secret crowd.
no one should be alone when entering the fight.
this one is about the fight i write about, but never speak of.