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I Don't Remember How Old I Was When It Started
when i began growing in instead of out,
 
 becoming more and more tangled in my own existence,
 
 like ivy coiling and folding over on top of itself.
  
 
 because
 
 there was a time when i gave away pieces of my life
 
 the same way i exhaled air, without fear of ever running out of breath
 
 or needing any of it back. i traded my stories
 
 without ever realizing that i could have kept them to myself.
 
 but, i wanted to give because i thought that all i needed 
 
 to survive was the response my words drew from a listener’s eyes.    
 
 until,
 
 one day, i started coming up short. i would reach down into my
 
 core and come up empty handed. before then, i hadn’t noticed all the
 
 holes in my skin where my life, my thoughts, my poems were
 
 leaking out between my pores. and so that night, as i curled up to fall asleep, 
 
 i tucked my chin in close to my knees in a last attempt to keep it all inside
 
 of me—where no one else could see my dreams as i reached out to reclaim the
 
 secrets that were long gone. 
 
 instead, i gathered my ankles, my fingers, my lips, my cheeks, and my lashes
 
 (the things that had been seen too many times to bother to try to hide)
 
 in hand and used them to start building walls around my chest
 
 and form a cage for my heart.
 
 but
 
 no one ever told me how lonely it feels on the other side—
 
 to live in a world where all anyone ever does is build and build
 
 until there are barricades miles high made of plastic so thick that
 
 it hurts to breathe, weighing us down like bricks tethered to our lungs
 
 so that every time i tried to speak out, it felt like the words were being
 
 crushed before they even have a chance to escape.
 
 then,
 
 i remembered. i remembered what it felt like to voice the truth
 
 through un-gritted teeth and i knew that the only way out was to 
 
 first let my mind free. 
 
 yet,
 
 i didn’t want to go back. i didn’t want to ever run my mind dry again by
 
 giving until i had nothing left. so i did something that i had spent 
 
 so many years terrified to do, i asked for other people to join me.
 
 it began
 
 as a whisper. as soft waves rushing in towards the shore, 
 
 running smoothly over the rocks and although no one could
 
 break apart any singular word, we all knew that we no longer stood alone.
 
 and soon,
 
 something amazing happened. the chorus of our songs
 
 changed pitch as new voices began weaving their way into the thick
 
 gauze of sound until we were in unison, transforming the gentle waves into
 
 roaring gusts of water, each with an unfathomable force.
 
 together, 
 
 we stood so strong that the bases of our cages began to
 
 erode and people felt safe enough to emerge from their shells again,
 
 cautiously at first, but eventually running towards each other at full speed
 
 with outstretched arms because by then we had all learned that nothing hurts like
 
 being alone.

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