There are days I unfold myself like old paper
and cannot find the place marked welcome.
Voices pass — glass on glass — laughing
with names that do not fit my mouth.
I practice conversation in the mirror:
how to ask, how to stay, how to keep my shoulders light.
When him arrives in memory — a quiet gravity —
my tongue becomes a locked garden gate.
I carry a pocketful of almost-words,
each one a map I’m too shy to read aloud.
So I learn to speak in other ways:
a note folded into my coat, a sigh that becomes song,
planting kindness in the small corners I own.
If loneliness is a country, I will draw roads from it —
slowly, badly, bravely — until one leads to another hand.