Formless
I wish I was still afraid of the dark.
that I didn’t know what rests in swirling cloaks of black,
that I didn’t remember where the hard hip of the kitchen counter was,
or the swinging dress in the doorway.
I wish it was a ghost again.
I wish I hadn’t named everything in the dark,
hadn’t constricted potential into language,
had taken all of the demons out of my bedroom
before I even played with them—
hadn’t had tea at their everchanging tables,
hadn’t let the darkness swallow me like water,
until I was formless, myself—
something some child somewhere
is still afraid of, waiting desperately
to turn on the light.