Anxiety: a complex anagram

Elora

 

ANYTHING-ANYTHING-ANYTHING BUT 

did you turn off the stove? fuck, did i turn off the stove? 

it’s too late to go back – you have to go back  

i turned it off i know i – what if the apartment burns down? 

no. 

turn around, turn around, turn around, turn around, turn around – damn.  

NOW  

i know i know i know i should leave but  

isolation is a lover i have acquired to crave – 

its arms are so warm compared to those of others  

and it won’t ask me any questions when i  

smash my head into a pillow and scream 

XYLOPHONES – RING! RING! – IN MY HEAD 

sometimes i pretend that my hands are not hands but grass 

and that their sweat is not sweat but leftover dew from the night before 

and that my body is not my body but a star on the brink of ruin –  

oh, to eliminate my flesh in a burst of light! 

(it’s easier to romanticize this way)  

INSIDE MY CHEST – WALLS COLLAPSE 

there are rubber bands spiraled taut around my lungs  

begging to be gripped and pulled and snapped –  

but all they can manage to do is recoil tighter against my breath  

(my fingers cannot crawl deep enough to tear them away) 

so i settle for exhaustion 

EATING ME WHOLE  

nervous worms in my stomach wriggle and writhe, 

forcing me to take knees at the toilet as if groveling at the foot of a monarch’s throne – 

i wretch for relief until the taste of acid cannot be drowned by water  

and when i’m done the only thought i can think is  

at least this way i may end up skinny” 

TO THE POINT WHERE I CAN’T STOP  

everything seems like everything but feels like nothing at the same time  

3-3-3! soap, curtain, shampoo 

3-3! shower, music, heartbeat 

3! wrist, ankle, toes 

(if you understand this, i am so sorry)  

 YELLING FROM WITHIN 

p.s. the stove was not on.