• A Thousand First Times

    If only I could tell you, how much I love you

    Falling in love with you has never felt like something I decided. It was more like something that decided me. Like my body already knew how to breathe you in before I even understood what it meant. It is my favourite thing I have ever done and the only thing I will ever want to keep doing. Again and again. Even when the weight of it feels too much. Even when I think I have given everything I have. I would still wake up with the same smile. I would still let myself fall like the first time never ended.

    If tomorrow stripped me of everything I own. If silence was all I had left. I would still choose the ruin of loving you. Because who am I without this hopelessly sensitive heart. Who am I if not the person who feels too much. Who believes too much. Who risks everything for the warmth of being close to you.

    There is nothing simple about it. It is reckless. It is heavy. It is tender enough to hurt. But in the breaking there is life. In the ache there is proof that I exist. And if I could only ever do one thing forever it would be this. To fall into you. To keep falling. To make the fall my home.

    Because without you I am only a body moving through time. With you I am a heart that remembers what it means to be alive. And that is why I will never stop. Not in this life. Not in any other. Always you. Always the fall. Always the smile that comes with it.

    -aaditya.

  • if destined, even those a thousand miles apart will meet (有缘千里来相会)

    There’s a Chinese phrase, 有缘千里来相会, yǒu yuán qiān lǐ lái xiāng huì. It means if destined, even those a thousand miles apart will meet. A quiet kind of faith. Not loud like fate with its thunder and signs, but patient, the belief that what is meant will make its way, even if it wanders. Even if it’s late. Even if it arrives laughing, out of breath, holding flowers it picked along the wrong roads.

    I think of that phrase when I look at you. Not because we were apart, but because we could have been. All it would have taken was one missed train, one earlier flight, one decision made slightly to the left and we might never have known. That thought used to scare me, but now it makes me love you more. Because despite every ordinary thing that could have kept us from meeting, we did. Not like a collision. Not like a miracle. But like a sentence that’s been waiting too long for its comma.

    You walked into my life like you had always been circling the block, just waiting for the right time to knock. And I opened the door like I had been expecting a package I never ordered but somehow already missed. We didn’t fall in love, not really. We remembered it. Like our hearts had practiced this dance before, in some life where we wore different names but held hands the exact same way. Like the laughter we share now is an echo from something we forgot to carry over, but finally found.

    And it’s funny, isn’t it, how love can be so confusing. Not in its chaos, but in its peace. I kept waiting for the twist, the storm, the unraveling. But instead, you stayed. We made tea. We talked about the shapes in clouds. You told me you once tried to write a poem and gave up halfway because it felt too raw, too much. I told you I think love is like that. Not always needing to be finished to be beautiful. And then we sat in silence, not awkward, not empty, just full.

    Maybe destiny doesn’t mean we were made for each other. Maybe it means we chose each other anyway. Even across the distances. Even across all the little elsewheres that could have been. Maybe love is the quiet miracle of reaching the same point from opposite directions. And maybe, just maybe, we are the ones who kept walking. Because something inside us knew, when it’s right, even a thousand miles isn’t far.

    -aaditya

  • koi no yokan (恋の予感 – “The premonition of love”)


    Title: Koi no Yokan
    (恋の予感 – “The premonition of love”)

    The subtle sense, upon first meeting someone, that you will inevitably fall in love with them.

    There are certain nights that don’t end.
    Not in sleep.
    Not in silence.
    Not even in forgetting.

    I met her between two seconds. Not a full moment

    no, something briefer. Something before memory, before decision. The way a drop of ink might already know it’s meant to spill into a poem. That’s when I felt it: koi no yokan, not quite love, not yet, but the certainty that it will be.
    I think my heart bowed before I did.

    She didn’t say much. But it was the way she looked at empty chairs, as if they all remembered someone. The way she picked at coffee mugs like the rim held secrets. You don’t fall for people like her.
    You remember that you already did.

    I tried to fight it with logic, measured breaths, practiced detachment. But koi no yokan is a liar. It doesn’t scream. It doesn’t ask. It settles. Like smoke in a closed room. Like light through paper walls.
    And that night, I wasn’t breathing smoke, i was inhaling her inevitability.

    I don’t know her name.
    But I know I’ll love her.
    And in some ways, maybe I already do.
    That’s the cruelty of koi no yokan
    it’s not love.
    It’s worse.
    It’s the whisper before the scream.
    It’s the outline before the absence.
    It’s knowing the fire is coming, and warming your hands anyway.

    And if you ever feel it…
    You’ll understand.
    This wasn’t a meeting.
    It was a prophecy.

    aaditya

  • If you’re out there, eyes closed, I hope they open in a world where you remember how I held the screwdriver wrong but tried anyway.

    I left the tap running again. Not for the water, not even by mistake, but because I needed to hear something constant. The sound covers the slow erosion, the way your voice echoes less and less in the furniture. It’s strange, how absence doesn’t shout but hums. Like a fridge left unplugged, still warm inside. I tried to fix it by rearranging the chairs, hoping the shape of the room would summon you back. But now the walls look confused, and so do I.

    I keep thinking if I could just find the right frequency, between apology and defiance, I could broadcast the version of us that never cracked. But radios don’t speak tree. And lately, I’ve been turning into one: rings of memory tightening around hollow bark, reaching out with broken branches that pretend to bloom. Do you remember the apricot season? I bit into one and tasted your name, rotten at the pit. I kept eating.

    They told me not to swim in the lake after dusk, but I went anyway, arms tired from holding all the “what ifs” above water. I thought maybe if I drowned in something that wasn’t metaphor, you’d see it on the news and call. But you never liked water. Said it reminded you of things slipping. Maybe that’s why you left like a tide no one noticed pulling back, taking my reflection with you. I’ve been trying to skip stones with my grief but it just sinks.

    I know, rights and wrongs are carved in wet cement, and we never agreed on when it dried. You said rules were for people who forgot how to love, and I laughed like a coward. If I could go back, I’d let your madness win more often. You were always trying to show me the other side of the page, but I kept tracing the lines that were already written. Now I fold paper cranes hoping they’ll fly toward wherever you’re not pretending.

    It’s that time again. The clocks slow, the air thickens, and I find myself lagging behind days that never looked back. I miss you in the way the mirror fogs before a face appears. In the way my hand still reaches for a switch that no longer lights anything. If you’re out there, eyes closed, I hope they open in a world where you remember how I held the screwdriver wrong but tried anyway. Maybe that’s enough. Maybe this was never about fixing. Maybe I just needed to be seen breaking.

    aaditya

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