every breath you take is an axiom, but everything you do to me is a paradox
I wrote this piece exactly two weeks ago and posted this on my personal Instagram account. I felt it was an appropriate piece to start off this era of my blog. I had a really fun time writing this one, mostly because it came to me so easily. But I feel like that’s honestly the case with my more emotional work or stuff that has more intimacy. I really enjoy exploring what it means to love someone and yourself despite never experiencing it myself.
I don’t think my writing is glorifying or romanticizing love (which is an assumption you may reach, the more I post my work here) because there is definitely hidden pain that’s associated with love that eventually bleeds into my writing.
I didn’t have anyone in mind for this one. Most of my pieces are narratives, whether it be external or internal. Frankly, I felt like I was writing about two characters deeply in love. But I do kind of think it’s me trying to rationalize and appreciate two sides of myself because I can identify myself in both the speaker and the addressee.
Also, I’m always a bit vague in my emotional pieces and sometimes it’s deliberate. (Often, it flies over my head that you can’t read my thought processes, whoops.) But I felt like explaining the ending in the work is a bit abrupt.
Our automatic response to someone saying “I love you” is “me too” or “I love you too.” But how can you say “too” if we love each other so differently? I would want to express to my lover that my love for them is fresh and so characteristically, so undoubtedly them. So I find that adding a “too” is a bit tacky. This sort of sounded better in my head, haha.
I’m a real sucker for that mutual understanding between two lovers that they love each other through actions. It kind of reminds me of that line from Troye Sivan’s song for him: “You don’t have to say ‘I love you’ to say I love you.”
