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Gray Spots MAG
  I am learning to appreciate gray space:
  not every moment is definitive,
  not every person the killer or the cadaver.
  Sometimes, there is no
  villain in the story; we are
  people, trying our hardest to make sense
  of a universe intensifying and romanticizing
  our passion.
  I am not in love or in hate;
  apathy and obsession don’t exist exclusively.
  I go back to photos of you, tucked
  under floorboards
  and smile fondly. I feel the wet ache of betrayal
  thrum in puckered wrists, but I
  am not seeking out revenge. I’m not seeking out
  your hand again, either, though. I’m just
  remembering.
  I used to let your words command my day.
  I love you meant a soft smile, curled at the edges,
  a full stomach and shaking fingers, a girl
  who let affection drip into her heart
  through a pinhole.
  I was a happy summer red, clumsy feet trying
  to follow your dance.
  When you told me
  you make me sick my heart stuttered
  and shattered,
  gooey words bleeding bubblegum pink
  out of my veins.
  I wanted to stop existing. I tried to stop, but
  they brought me back, and I woke up
  to an empty hospital:
  I woke up to gray spots.
  I cried hot thick sick girl tears, snot dripping down my face:
  I loved him, I loved him, I HATE HIM,
  WHY DID HE LEAVE ME, come home
  but I’m all dried up nowadays.
  I do not hate you. I do not love you.
  Sometimes, when I’m watching television,
  I turn to tell you a joke,
  or I rest my head against the subway bar
  and yearn for your hands on my hips.
  I miss you, certainly, but I’m yellow and clean and growing every day; no longer
  are you midnight black or cotton white. You
  exist in short bursts when I come and visit the gray.

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