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Tough Love
Love 
 beat me up in a parking lot the other night.
 I guess she was offended that I had been flirting, then 
 tried to drive off without her;
 she threw a fist into my gut, scratched at my eyes
 and kissed me until there wasn’t a trace of oxygen left
 for my lungs to cling on to.
 I was in pretty rough shape after that.
 She made it up to me, though.
 She drove me to my mothers basement and showed me
 where she’s been living all these years;
 I don’t know if I ever want to touch those couch cushions
 again.
 She tells me it’s a good life, and
 sometimes I believe her.
 
 Love 
 is really, really irresponsible.
 She goes out every night, and sometimes
 I hear she’ll go home with 20 different people all at once.
 She has every address, every pickup line, 
 every shaky smile
 tattooed on her bicep, but
 every name is missing.
 She’ll leave for days, and she won’t come back until
 she’s counted every broken window in New York City. 
 Sometimes, she leaves blood on the doorknob, and you can tell
 that she’s been out trying to glue families back together.
 
 We’re friends, I think.
 I write poetry for her,
 give her a home in the creases of my body,
 and she does her best to convince my shadow
 that I’m someone worth following.
 She told me she cares about me.
 And sometimes, I believe her.
 Love is beautiful in every mask she wears,
 her eyes are deeper than her scars,
 she’s messed up and spontaneous,
 she doesn’t have her life together and
 sometimes I’m afraid that she’ll 
 forget about me.
 
 But the thing about Love 
 is that you’d follow her to the end of the world
 and walk right off the edge if she promised 
 to meet you at the bottom.
 You wouldn’t be the first and you wouldn’t be the last, but
 Love is good at making you feel like you’re the only one
 who’s ever existed.
 She told me that if I were to run my finger along her edges,
 it wouldn’t come up without some dust,
 she isn’t exactly a clean slate, but
 my voice runs through her veins,
 along with the sounds of everyone 
 who came before me and after me.
 She told me, her heart pumps music and
 her veins and arteries would feel like an emptier place
 if I wasn’t there.
 
 On the days I do not feel loved, she shows up at my door
 and cuts me open.
 She asks me, if I cannot love myself,
 why does my body bother to patch itself up
 when the skin has been broken?
 Why do the bruises fade, why do the scars
 lay there so quietly?
 She tells me that there is music running in my veins too,
 and that music is beautiful.
 All I have to do is listen quietly, and trust
 that the silence won’t last.
 Love told me she loves me.
 And every time she punches me in the stomach
 or kicks my teeth in, 
 it’s a reminder that 
 I’m strong enough to take it.
 
 Love
 lives in my car now. 
 She’s a terrible driver but she knows exactly
 how to get to where she wants us to go.
 And besides, she says,
 it’s up to me to keep us moving forward.
 We’ve had our crashes and our accidents,
 but we made it through together,
 and even though Love is irresponsible,
 she’s faithful.
 I’ll never try to drive away without her again.

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