You didn’t knock.
You never did.
You arrived the way certain memories do—
slipping in through something unfinished,
like a door I forgot to close
or maybe never meant to.
It wasn’t your voice at first.
It was the way the air changed,
how something in my chest
paused,
like it recognized a pattern
before I did.
And then—there you were.
Not in front of me, not exactly.
But close enough
that I could feel the outline of you
pressing against my thoughts,
like a shadow that remembered my shape.
I thought I buried you properly.
Folded you into late nights and long drives,
tucked between songs I don’t play anymore,
filed under lessons learned
or something that sounded like closure.
But you came back wrong.
Not the same as before—
your edges softer,
your weight uneven,
like time had handled you carelessly.
Or maybe it was me.
Because I don’t reach for you the same way now.
I don’t unravel.
I don’t mistake the ache for something holy.
I just stand there,
feeling the echo of who I was
when you still had power over me.
And it’s strange—
how something can return
and not belong anymore.
How I can recognize you instantly
but hesitate
like I’ve met you in a life
I no longer live.
You linger, of course.
Things like you always do.
But softer now.
Further.
Like a song I used to love
playing in another room
with the door almost closed.
About the Creator
shallon gregerson
I conspire, create and love making my mind think


Comments (2)
This piece really resonates with me. It’s beautiful and so true to life. I love the last lines
This is beautifully written anda realistic view of closure and how it's final but in a different way to what we expect. Well wrought