Tags
Absence And Presence, Elegiac Lyric, Emotional Distance, Fading Photographs, Grief And Regret, Holding On, Human Vulnerability, Intimate Mourning, Irretrievable Past, Lingering Attachment, Love and Loss, Memory And Erasure, Nostalgic Longing, Romantic Ruin, Sensory Memory, Soft Erasure, Tactile Grief, Time And Decay, Unreliable Memory, Voice And Silence
The photographs I kept of you have blurred—
Not from the water damage or the years—
I handled them so often they’re interred
Beneath the sediment of touch and tears.
I used to trace the landscape of your face,
The weight of you, the scent your neck had spelled—
But touch leaves no archive, keeps no trace;
The body can’t recall what it once held.
Your voice was something I could almost hold,
A living thing that curled inside my ear,
But I’ve listened until listening went cold—
Now when I replay, I hear it disappear.
Perhaps it’s mercy, this soft erasure—
Or so I say, as if the mind were kind.
But kindness would not smile while taking pleasure
In leaving me with nothing left to find.
I should have memorized you while I could,
Read every freckle, translated your terrain,
But I took love for granted, understood
Too late. Now grief bleeds out through every vein.
And so I hold what’s left: a fading blur,
Some muscle memory of how you felt,
A static hiss where once I heard you stir.
I hold on anyway—to what I held.
