
I say to myself : stop. Stop undoing yourself within night’s skin.
Tell myself a promise to sort out my living habits so I don’t die prematurely like my mum.
Imagine the tenderness: like soft beige rolls of fat, like soft pink tongues languishing in wet mouths, like soft woollen blankets tickling toes.
I may no longer be the second daughter, the misfit who could conjure a soul’s reflection through colourful art.
Please night as you stretch out your skin one more time, please be tender with my damaged, twisted stars.