catharsis
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And when life becomes the longest thing you have ever experienced;
the most difficult essay you have ever written;
the most somber song you have ever performed,
This is when you should change the burnt light bulb that you let hang from your bedroom ceiling;
This is when you should contact the number on the back of the pamphlet that your school counselor gave you that one day when the bad thing happened;
This is when you should self-identify as a person in need of help;
It is not a bad thing to need help;
This is when you should compliment your mother for how beautiful she is; she is asleep in her bedroom, and you are on the other side of the house;
This is when you should constantly revise the letter that you have finished writing; that you intend to be your last;
This is when you should read the prescription bottle for the suggested dosage and think about returning some of the contents back to their proper place;
This is when you should consider rereading that Charles Dickens book, despite the fact that you hated it the first time through;
This is when you should change the burnt light bulb that you let hang from your bedroom ceiling for far too long;
and when life becomes the longest thing you have ever experienced, think about your grandparents; the ones that you never met, and how they really don’t want to meet you, in this moment, in this mindset, in this stadium that we call existence;
When the comedy has done away with the laugh track that drowned out the silence, think about how they will call your death a tragedy rather than a symphony;
When the ceiling fan becomes far too tempting to ignore, when the pill bottle seems far more relatable when it’s empty, when you think that the bullet would send a much louder message than you ever could, do not empty the cartridge into a still beating heart;
Do not end your sentence with a comma;
If you are not being heard, then you have not spoken loud enough;
If it has become too dark to see, change the light bulb; change the light bulb; change the light bulb;
Do not be afraid to skip the chapter where the main character breaks;
Do not be afraid to burn the dead tree looming over you in your back yard;
Do not be afraid to dig up the old broken bones that you buried underneath it;
Do not be afraid;
Your father always said to you “we are the architects of our own happiness,” but you have always been lousy at math and good timing;
Remember, that architecture is not two-dimensional, nor is it single handed;
We build off of each other, banding our broken arms together;
We find ourselves driven to that same sempiternal horizon;
We create the groundwork for something marvelous, something that tapestry has not engulfed;
Something that poetry has not restricted to words;
Something the painters have not properly identified, the color scheme skewed;
You are the architect; you are the construction worker; you are the residence of this cruel and unforgiving heaven on earth;
Remember, do not end your sentence with a comma, do not end your sentence with a period,
Do not end your sentence;
There is so much beauty in life, look;
The constellations you see made out of the raindrops on your windshield;
The symmetry between the mother and daughter walking down the sidewalk to your right;
The luminosity of the streetlamp that you used to write poetry about when you were in eighth grade;
and when life seems like the longest thing you have ever experienced;
the most difficult essay you have ever written;
the most somber song you have ever sang,
let the chapter end, knowing that here is not where the main character breaks;
this is not where the main character breaks;
this is not where you break;