Goodbyes, no funerals

An overhead view of people reflected in a mirrored room with blue lighting, showcasing a visually immersive experience.

I didn’t meet myself
until I lost the first version of me.
I must’ve been thirteen,
or fourteen?

It was a summer night.
I was getting ready for bed,
staring at the mirror
in my white nightdress.

I felt a gnawing absence
before I could name it.
Like something sacred had come undone –
I was already in mourning.

I didn’t recognize myself for days.
Then fear followed —
The fear of vanishing
from my own memory.

My identity had thrived
in perfect grades, polite silences,
and the way teachers said my name.

Who was I
if not a model child?

I couldn’t answer.
So I decided:
I was worth nothing.
And then time erased her.

Fifteen years later,
I met myself again.
Not in a mirror
but in a refusal.

I had stopped pleasing.
Stopped apologizing
for needing less applause.
This time, the absence felt like a rebirth.

I felt weightless.
Only then did I realize
how long I had carried
what was never mine to bear.

This goodbye
came as a relief.
But I suspect
I’ll meet myself one last time –

when the girl I lost
knows I made it back.
And maybe then,
I’ll be whole enough
to lose it all again.

Flowers

I have seen flowers bloom in valleys, and I have seen them bloom in deserts –
One is not more beautiful than the other.

One woke up to the golden sun, cradled in the silver rain’s soft lullaby,
The other needed to snake through corpses of its predecessors to taste the breeze dancing above the soil.
But both the valley-born and the desert-forged ended up in the same bouquet a boy gave me yesterday.
And I couldn’t help but admire them equally,
though I forgot to ask who suffered more.

They say it’s the journey that matters, not the destination.
But do we truly care about anyone’s journey or healing?
To the observer, a flower is a flower; its story forgotten beneath its petals.
The assiduous journey of the desert flower, with all its setbacks, means everything to itself and nothing to the vase.

So I wonder:
Would it be such a loss if the flower never broke through the sand?
Would it be less of a tragedy if it never bloomed at all?