Saturday, February 14, 2026

Altitude Sickness

some people cannot breathe where i live


I. inheritance


she was never lacking.

that would have been easier to forgive.


she was simply sufficient.


sufficient in style.

sufficient in thought.

sufficient in kindness

when kindness was convenient.


she lived in careful colors.

tones designed not to linger

in anyone’s memory

longer than politeness requires.


she did not wound the air

by becoming too much.


i have never possessed that talent.


i have always been excessive

in ways that make small rooms nervous.


i have ruined perfectly acceptable lives

by insisting on something more alive.


there was no villain between us.


only a difference in altitude.


and altitude,

like truth,

is not negotiated.


II. shoreline


she was not cruel.


not really.


she was only built

for quieter weather

than the storms that made me.


she liked the predictable softness

of things that stayed

where they were placed.


i did not know how to stay.


i mistook movement for survival.

depth for safety.

intensity for love.


i think i frightened her.


not intentionally.


but oceans do that

to those who only ever meant

to wade.


we did not fail.


we simply arrived

as different elements.


and no matter how gently

water meets shore,


one of them

is always being changed

forever.


III. exposure


she wore sameness

like it was silk.


soft.

inoffensive.

easy to forget

once it slipped off the skin.


she wanted calm.

predictable heat.

a body that behaved.


i have never been well-behaved.


there is something in me

that mutates

the longer you touch it.


my mind does not stay still

long enough to be possessed.


my soul—

even less.


i was never meant

to be held.


i was meant

to be survived.


she wanted something

that would not change her.


and i have never known

how to love someone

without undoing them

completely.


IV. extinction event


i am not easy to keep.


not because i am cruel—

but because i refuse

to stop becoming.


there is no fixed version of me

you can memorize

and expect to survive beside.


i change

the way fire changes things.


quietly at first.

then all at once.


i have a mind

that does not stay in its cage.


a heart

that does not negotiate

with fear.


a soul

that would rather be alone

than be reduced.


i have tried, before,

to live smaller.


to fold myself

into acceptable shapes.


to sand down my edges

until i was safe

to touch.


but every time,


something in me

began to die.


so i stopped apologizing

for my depth.


i stopped explaining

my hunger.


i stopped asking

for permission

to evolve.


now,


if you stand beside me,

understand this:


you are standing beside

a life

that chose itself.


there is nothing

more beautiful than that.


and nothing

that leaves less behind

when it’s gone.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Meanspiritedness

it’s a hunger that learned sarcasm

a small, rattling god

living behind the teeth


it feeds on flinches

on the micro-collapse of someone else’s posture

on the thrill of making warmth evacuate a room


it’s not strength

it’s starvation with opinions


it sharpens words

because it has nothing else sharp

it throws elbows in conversation

because it has no center of gravity


it mistakes cruelty for clarity

confuses domination with presence

calls it “honesty”

to avoid the autopsy


it’s a cold craft

a little blade you keep polishing

until you forget

what it was ever for


it cannot build

only nick and retreat

nick and retreat

like a cowardly weather system


and here’s the secret it hates most:


it’s loud

because it’s terrified

of being touched without armor


it sneers because tenderness

would expose the hollow


it wounds because it cannot risk

being seen

and found wanting


it’s the sound a soul makes

when it would rather poison the well

than admit it is thirsty