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When You Make a Writer Fall in Love
  When you make a writer fall in love,
  she falls from her brain.
  Hearts are for folding come February 14th
  and for kisses
  and for making all her organs
  seem to rise up at once
  as if commanded by a charismatic conductor.
  When she falls, she falls head first.
  What Rom Coms never told her
  was the best part of falling;
  how slow it feels.
  How memories can be replayed
  like a mixed tape that never skips.
  All the thoughts she should be having are gone.
  Her mind is no longer her own,
  and on her descent she will grab onto anything.
  The thin ridge of your smile,
  the crooked holes on your converse,
  the way her left shoulder
  and your right press together,
  like two buildings breaking down their walls.
  Even these cannot keep her from gravity.
  When a writer falls in love,
  she has so many things to say.
  So many thoughts she has without thinking,
  forgetting her safety net is gone.
  When she really loves you,
  she forgets you are an editor.
  You get sloppy 12 a.m. rough drafts,
  grammatical inconsistencies,
  sentences that never even made sense to her.
  She is nearing the ground now
  and you know even you cannot save her.
  She begins to hate the the way
  she can’t think of anything else.
  When she checks her phone
  every two minutes,
  know the only author she wants to read from
  is you.
  To own her heart is one thing,
  her mind is too much.
  Her brain is too far away,
  too far to reach a hand to break her descent
  too far to even cry for help.
  She cannot sit by that one train stop
  without the weight of your arm around her,
  pressing the nape of her neck.
  When you make a writer fall in love,
  you create a madperson.
  Think Shakespeare with an unlimited texting plan,
  all the words she has to write
  she writes for you.
  She’s almost on the ground now
  and is running out of metaphors.
  You are fire,
  you are wind,
  you are the polaroid constantly developing in her brain,
  you are everything.
  She is scared.
  Not that the concrete will break her bones,
  scared that 26 letters are not enough to tide her over,
  scared a 500 page manuscript could never ease
  the shards of syllables pressed between her ribs.
  She looks in a thesaurus,
  but cannot find one word worthy of the way
  your laugh dribbles down your chin
  like ice cream on a sweltering day.
  She’s hit the ground now.
  You call to her, hold her,
  check for any damage done.
  She is not bleeding,
  but in her eyes you find pain, longing, and hope.
  She sees you pleading for her to be alright
  but does not make a sound.
  A writer has only truly fallen in love
  when she has nothing left to say.

 
This poem is from one of the best times in my life.