Death asked me to join him for dinner so I slipped into my favorite black dress that I had been saving for a special occasion and let him walk me to our candlelit tryst. He ordered a ribeye, extra rare I ordered two desserts and red wine and th…
Death asked me to join him for dinner so I slipped into my favorite black dress that I had been saving for a special occasion and let him walk me to our candlelit tryst. He ordered a ribeye, extra rare I ordered two desserts and red wine and then I sipped and wondered why he looked so familiar and smelled like earth and memory. He felt like a place both faraway and deep within my body A place that whispers to me on the crisp autumn breeze along the liminal edges of dusk and dawn somewhere between dancing and stillness. He looked at me with the endless night sky in his eyes and asked 'Did you live your life, my love?' As I swirled my wine in its glass I wondered If I understood the thread I wove into the greater fabric If I loved in a way that was deep and freeing If I let pain and grief carve me into something more grateful If I made enough space to be in awe that flowers exist and take the time to watch the honeybees drink their sweet nectar I wondered what the riddles of regret and longing had taught me and if I realized just how beautiful and insignificant and monstrous and small we are for the brief moment that we are here before we all melt back down into ancestors of the land. Death watched me lick buttercream from my fingers As he leaned in close and said 'My darling, it's time.' So I slipped my hand into his as he slowly walked me home. I took a deep breath as he leaned in close for the long kiss goodnight and I felt a soft laugh leave my lips as his mouth met mine because I never could resist a man with the lust for my soul in his eyes and a kiss that makes my heart stop.
Author's note: A playful love poem to Death, because I want to remember to relate to it as a part of life, and in ways that exist outside of violence and brutality.
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