You’ll regret crying in my hands— but only because you’ll miss the way they held you. Your tears slip between my fingers like quiet reminders of how far you’ve run from the person you used to be. And still— I know you remember your feet each time they find their way back to my door. Instinct. Muscle memory. Need.
You come back bare, and I wear you like a crown— delicate, dangerous, balanced at the top of my thoughts. You are the ache I prioritize. The storm I drink from. The wound I keep pressing, just to feel something again.
While my friends fold hands in prayer to Jehovah, I’m just praying my depression doesn’t **** me over. Sometimes I’d rather believe in your skin than in heaven— and sometimes, I think your mouth is the closest thing I’ll ever get to salvation. So we drink. We touch. Not because it heals anything— but because it delays the end.
Darling, we drink so this love doesn’t burn out. We drink instead of breaking up. And when your mascara smudges under my kiss, when your sighs leave trails from your stained makeup, I taste the salt of your sadness— hidden beneath powdered cheeks and perfectly drawn lips. We kiss beneath mood lighting and half-lies. We are mature enough to drink, and broken enough to make up in every way the word dares to mean.