I was never “an open book” because I wanted to be.
The storm cracked me open.
My story doesn’t lie neatly in one place.
It’s scattered and sometimes,
a single page gets picked up
by someone who thinks:
this is too much,
too messy,
too painful,
or simply: not for me.
And yet, there are always a few
who keep reading.
Who even help you look for what’s missing.
This piece is for them.
And for anyone who ever believed
their own pages were too damaged
to still hold meaning.
I’ve always been an open book,
but not by default.
It’s more like the winds and rain in my life,
have picked up my book,
threw it around
to the point where it started losing its pages
Because it fell wide open
And even then those pages
Would independently be picked up
By even more rain and wind
And if someone were to find one of them
It wouldn’t make sense to them
As all words were bruised and faded
But I think even if those pages hadn’t been torn
And if they were still bundled in my book
They still wouldn’t have made sense
To those who never truly wanted to understand
To those who never even tried to read
And even after finding that single lost page
They’d likely think it was too worn
Too fragmented to bother making sense of
Maybe because their own book
Had started losing its pages as well
Maybe because they were doing everything in their power
To keep their book from failing apart
Or maybe they had just found their pages back
And were in the midst of glueing everything
Back together into something coherent
So another scattered book
Was simply too much for them.
Or maybe they decided my book wasn’t for them
Because their books are fairytales
And they don’t want their illusions destroyed
And then there was a small group
who gave it a try
Because they immediately recognized
Some of it from their own book
Or even from their own missing pages
Even a few sentences were enough
To make them reach out and pick one up
But they lost interest not long after
Because they were still losing pages as well
And they couldn’t make sense anymore
Of the paper chaos in front of them
And then there were maybe one of two
Who weren’t only wrong to pick up a pages
And try to make sense if it
No, they’d even begin searching
For the rest of the book
Not because they didn’t have their own
Not because theirs weren’t lost or damaged
But because they had found a way
To live with their own torn, weathered pages
And they understood how hard it is
Not only to find your missing pages
But to gather them back
And gently make them yours again

