
The world likes to insist we only live once.
That never sounded right to me.
We only die once.
Living happens every day,
again and again,
in quiet moments we hardly notice.
I remember things in pieces.
That summer I started running,
the pavement still warm
long after the sun went down
and miles of footsteps traced beneath my feet.
I am still running
towards something else now.
Sunday trips to the gas station with mom.
Her moments, now ended
but still return as memory.
Memories sweeter than bug juice,
which you hated
that I loved.
The winter of the crash,
the tires spinning
against a road
that refused to hold me.
The sun shining on the snow
so bright it turned the world white
for a moment
I thought
I might already be in heaven.
Small moments I didn’t know
I was keeping
until now,
when they return like proof
that living was happening
the whole time.
And we wake
again
and again
and again.
Not one life,
but thousands of small days
stitched together so tightly
we forget to see the seams.
Because you can’t add days to your life,
only life to your days.
But tomorrow
is still empty.
A handful of hours
still waiting.
And the strange thing is
I have no idea
what I will do with it.
No plan.
No promise.
No moment set aside for me ahead.
Just tomorrow
slowly making its way toward me.
And somehow
I am
so excited.
That uncertainty feels like breath,
like proof that life
is still happening,
again.



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