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  • chlorine tongue

    Some essays, some days, end up a choppy mess. My writing is on training wheels as I pull up ChatGPT on my phone and feed it memory after memory noticing the air starting to smell of bleach when the tears come. I use my thumbs to slide type memory after memory trying to Frankenstein the memories to make a life I’m proud of. I tell myself I’m writing it all down before I’m forgotten. I’m already forgotten.

    There’s this thing called the hedonistic treadmill that we are all on. I have spent plenty of time on a treadmill used to punish and cope trying to burn fat and burn memories at the same time. I feel especially noble when I go longer than a hour because its all good mental training but I’ve got no race upcoming. Just the race to write it all down before my lung collapse, my heart bursts, my brains stop producing electricity.

    The treadmill means that despite the private chef and mountain dinner I saw you post on Facebook looking glamorous in nighttime chateaus—happiness is elusive for you, too. No matter what happens to you, or me, or anyone really, life will always crash. A fall on the treadmill. Embarrassing, shameful, but no one really cares because they weren’t watching you run on the treadmill in the first place.

    The hedonistic treadmill was never theory to me—it was the machine in the basement gym, the one that shook a little when I hit my stride. Thud thud thud. I’d throw a towel over the screen so the miles couldn’t taunt me, let the numbers sweat in the dark while I kept going. The belt always felt a hair too fast, like it knew something I didn’t. My lungs would start their small rebellion, my calves knotting themselves into warnings, but I’d stay on until the world blurred at the edges. There was a moment—always around minute forty—when the body stopped asking for mercy and just… obeyed. That strange, bleak surrender. That quiet lie that the next footfall might finally change something.

    And then there was always the slip. Not a dramatic one—just that half-second where your heel skims wrong and the belt keeps going without you. A reminder that the machine doesn’t care about your pace, your reasons, your history. It just moves. I’d steady myself, pretend it didn’t jolt me, pull the towel tighter like a blindfold. Thud thud thud. The room humming with fluorescent indifference. There was something almost honest in that moment, the way the body startles before the mind can invent a story. A brief flash of who you really are when the belt jerks and no one’s watching.

    Meanwhile, somewhere else, you were posting those mountain dinners—the candlelit plates, the chateau windows catching the dusk like they’d been engineered for it. A private chef pouring sauce in a perfect ribbon. I saw it between miles, the glow of your life cupped in my hand like something breakable. The belt kept dragging me forward while your night sat perfectly still, staged, unbothered. Thud thud thud. Sweat in my eyes. Your fork paused mid-air. Two versions of living scrolling past each other with all the intimacy of strangers on opposite treadmills—close enough to glimpse, never close enough to touch.

    What they don’t tell you about the hedonistic treadmill is how quickly the body normalizes even the beautiful things. Lottery winners go back to baseline in months; paraplegics, too—though slower, in a different key. Joy burns off like steam; pain settles in like weather. Adaptation is ruthless, almost loyal in its simplicity. I think about that when the belt finds its rhythm under me, when minute forty becomes minute forty-one and the suffering feels strangely familiar, like something the body has been rehearsing for years. The machine never gives you credit for endurance. It treats a triumph like a Tuesday. The same way your chateau dinners become ordinary to you, just another night, while I’m still caught on the treadmill’s half-life of hope—how it spikes, then dissolves, leaving only the thud thud thud of whatever comes next.

    The bleach smell comes when I’ve been crying long enough that my head feels dipped under—chlorine-thick, pool-slick, the kind of chemical sting that somehow steadies you instead of warning you away. I usually write in bed, early morning, the Laramie light still half-asleep, and the tears do what they do: burn at first, then go quiet, leaving that faint swimming-pool aura clinging to my skin. Not unpleasant. More like a reset button the body invented. I’ve bleach-stained half my wardrobe over the years trying to chase that same feeling—over-scrubbing, over-cleaning, as if the fabric might hold the clarity longer than I could. The page knows the smell by now. It rises around me the same way sweat does on the treadmill: not a sign of effort, but a sign I’ve stopped fighting it and slipped into whatever rhythm carries me forward.

    There’s always one memory that won’t bleach out, though it hasn’t even bothered to exist yet. Some future burn, some future clarity, circling like a storm that can’t make up its mind about landfall. I keep rinsing my life anyway—scrubbing the mornings in this Laramie bed, running the same miles on the same worn belt—hoping the meaning will appear in the residue. Maybe that’s the treadmill, too: not the pursuit of pleasure, but the chase for a moment that might finally explain all the others. The page smells like chlorine because I’m prepping for a memory that refuses to arrive, wiping down the present as if it might reveal the blueprint underneath. Thud thud thud in my head even when I’m not running. The sense that something is coming, or should be, or would be, if I could just keep myself clean enough to notice it.

    This house in Laramie feels like a holding tank, a place where the version of me I keep chasing might finally drift close enough to study. The walls don’t offer wisdom, but they do echo—just enough to remind me I’m not finished yet. Mornings here stretch out like runway lights, the kind meant for takeoff but repurposed for circling. I write in the bed that sags a little in the middle, listening to the wind scrape against the siding like it’s trying to sand me down to something essential. Maybe this place isn’t home so much as a pressure chamber, the altitude forcing whatever truth I’ve buried to rise, bubble by stubborn bubble. I keep waiting to hear the click—some internal latch unlocking—but mostly it’s just the low hum of a life that hasn’t decided what shape it wants to be. A holding tank. A waiting room. A treadmill with better scenery.

    But the bleach-scent mornings here in Laramie keep me honest. The tears hit, the air sharpens, and suddenly I’m awake in a way the treadmill never managed. There’s no performance in this room, no digital readout pacing my worth. Just my bed, the wind shouldering the siding, and me trying to wrench something true out of myself before the day crowds in. It feels almost surgical sometimes—this need to cut through the noise, rinse everything down to the part that still hurts, still matters. I don’t know if that’s meaning or just survival. But it’s the only place I’ve found where the burn doesn’t feel wasted.

    The chlorine smell lingers, but the room stays still, like it’s waiting for me to confess something I don’t have words for yet. My face feels raw. My shirt is ruined. The bed looks the same as it did yesterday and the day before that, but something in the air is off—tilted, chemical, bright around the edges. I stare at the ceiling until the shapes blur, the way they used to when I’d push too hard on the treadmill and the whole world would dissolve into a single, pulsing point.

    The truth is uglier than anything I’ve written:

    I’m not trying to clean a memory.

    I’m trying to create one strong enough to hold me.

    The bleach, the sweat, the thud of the belt—none of it lifts. It only digs channels through whatever I am, as if the body keeps making room for something that refuses to arrive. The writing scorches the edges, leaves a heat you can’t point to but still feel hours later.

    There’s no lesson here.

    No revelation.

    Just the quiet, chemical fact of it:

    I keep going because stopping feels like vanishing.


  • sweet and bruised

    The Lariat always smelled like three things: fryer oil that refused to cool, bourbon poured by a hand that didn’t care where it landed, and the soft, bruised perfume of women who’d learned to keep their backs to the wall. The carpet—if it was still carpet—held the residue of every decade it had survived. Walk through in boots and you came out carrying years that weren’t your own.

    I kept near the front door, not to escape but to feel the air shift whenever someone stepped in from the lot—cold, warm, sage-heavy, diesel-thick. I craved the movement. The door swung endlessly, a hinge caught between resignation and return, ushering in miners with hands blackened by the shift, women with eyes like cracked glass, kids pretending at adulthood, drifters with whole towns stitched into their jackets.

    Adrianne never stood in that doorway.

    She couldn’t.

    Her name traveled faster than she ever could. While I drifted through the Lariat like a moth that refused to learn from its own burning, she learned the geography of stillness—corners, shadows, rooms where deputies didn’t linger.

    If the Lariat was a lung, I was one of the particles trapped inside it, pulled in and pushed out by each slammed door. Chaos that required nothing but presence.



    the hotel organism

    The bar clung to the end of a low-slung hotel that looked pieced together by someone who understood need better than architecture: a place to eat, a place to drink, a place to disappear. My room overlooked the parking lot—a slab of asphalt that breathed heat in summer and cracked like bone in winter. Neon bled under my door in thin red stripes. The ice machine outside kept its tired rhythm. Strangers rattled my handle at all hours, convinced some door in their life should have opened that night.

    Meanwhile—years earlier, miles away—my brother stepped into a courtroom I never saw. I remember only the hush in our house when his sentencing came due. My mother sat at the kitchen table turning her coffee mug in slow circles, the ceramic whispering against laminate as if she were smoothing down something frayed inside her. They showed up for the legal ritual, not the years that led to it.

    I learned the word sentencing before I learned fractions.

    When my brother eventually returned, the prison walked back with him, shadow doubling shadow. He hovered at the edges of rooms as if air itself had become conditional.

    Back at the hotel, the Lariat thumped like a mechanical heart. Regulars hunched at the bar like parishioners praying to an indifferent god. Bartenders read me by the slope of my shoulders. I belonged there the way a bruise belongs to a shin—it wasn’t asked for, but it made sense.

    Adrianne, at the same time, was learning the opposite skill: how to vanish in plain sight.

    Two girls,

    one county,

    one set of poisons—

    but different architectures of ruin.

    Mine had a parking lot.

    Hers had a case number.



    the abandoned house

    The first time I tried fentanyl, it was Adrianne who handed me the foil.

    She led me into that abandoned house—the one a grieving woman kept the way a wound is kept when you’re not ready for it to close. Two daughters gone in the kinds of tragedies small towns hold onto forever: one to a frightened horse, one to a liver that failed too soon. Their stories clung to the walls like mildew.

    The house wasn’t empty. It was collapsing while still inhabited: boxes leaning into each other, trash shifting in small drifts, cats weaving through the wreckage like smoke. The floor bowed under our weight. The air was a mixture of sweetness, rot, and something chemical that clung to the back of the throat.

    My sister had cleaned one of that woman’s houses once. She said it felt like walking into someone’s private implosion. Even then, she and I were orbiting the same scars differently: she at the perimeter, me stepping into the center as if the hole had been waiting for my shape.

    In that kitchen—the sink choked with dishes, the cabinets swollen from moisture—Adrianne pulled out the foil. No fanfare. No seduction. Just the soft competence of someone who had run out of gentler ways to live inside her own skin.

    When the smoke hit my throat, my body bucked. Not pleasure—displacement. Like being shoved out of myself. Heat, then nausea rising sharp and bright. I vomited into the sink, vision splitting at the edges.

    Adrianne steadied me with a hand on my back.

    “I know,” she whispered. “It hits wrong before it hits quiet.”

    She let me stay the night because I couldn’t walk and because neither of us wanted to be alone. Nobody was capable of desire on fentanyl. The drug erases wants. Everything becomes a single blunt edge.

    A cat hissed under the table. The house groaned in its foundations. Something shifted, as if settling into the knowledge that we would not be the last to kneel there.



    the apartment on Church Street

    People imagine descent as dramatic. It isn’t.

    We tried to move Adrianne out once—from that apartment on Church Street where the porches sagged like tired lungs and the streetlights flickered as if deciding whether to stay in the fight. The power was cut when we arrived. No warning. Just a door opening into total dark.

    I packed boxes by feel: a hairbrush, a candle stub, a stack of letters damp with something sour, a shoe without its mate. The air tasted like dust and last chances.

    Adrianne wasn’t even in the room.

    She was next door, smoking and dealing in the halo of someone else’s porch light, her silhouette wavering like a signal losing strength.

    That neighborhood lived the way someone on life support lives—not alive, not dead, just suspended.

    Fentanyl didn’t invent it.

    It simply animated what had already surrendered.

    A lighter flared outside.

    A floorboard softened under my heel.

    A cat knocked something over in the far corner.

    Survival isn’t cinematic.

    It’s ugly, practical, shaped by the smallest choices that keep a body moving.

    The only beauty came from how the objects testified:

    a softening board,

    a dull-edged foil,

    a box packed in a powerless room,

    a sink that remembered water only in theory.

    This wasn’t myth.

    It was mold.

    It was breath.

    It was the intimacy of two girls trying to outrun their own weather systems.



    the call

    The call didn’t arrive with drama. It came in the middle of an ordinary day. Angel didn’t stir. A spoon rattled in the sink. The house kept its indifference.

    The number had the geometry of custody.

    Prison calls always sound submerged, like the voice has to travel through water and concrete. Adrianne’s words reached me stretched thin by fluorescent light.

    She talked at first about something small—commissary prices, a bunkmate, something forgettable. What mattered was the echo behind her voice, the room speaking with her.

    Then she paused.

    “We’re the same,” she said.

    Not mournful.

    Not pleading.

    Just placing a truth she believed between us.

    I didn’t answer. Silence can be a more honest instrument than agreement.

    A fleck of paint drifted from the ceiling and landed on my arm. I brushed it off. She kept talking, unaware she’d opened any seam in me.

    What do you say to someone who thinks they’re standing on the same ledge as you when you can see the canyon clearly?

    You don’t.

    You let the room speak for you:

    the spoon in the sink,

    the hum of the fridge,

    the delay in the line,

    the distance built into the very technology of confinement.

    Her breath hit the receiver.

    Mine stayed in my chest.

    The call ended without ceremony—just a cut line, a quiet return to the world I was still allowed to live in.

    Her words hovered like dust unsettled.

    The strange part wasn’t that she believed us the same.

    It was how instantly I knew we weren’t.



    the cold

    I stepped outside. Wyoming air doesn’t greet; it judges. The cold slid around me with the blunt honesty of a land that expects nothing from you and offers nothing in return.

    Out there, her sentence didn’t echo.

    It just hovered—persistent, unresolved.

    Yes, we stood on the same weather-warped plank.

    No, we did not stand in the same place on it.

    She grew up on trapdoors.

    I grew up on thresholds.

    Her descent hinged on stillness.

    Mine hinged on movement.

    The difference wasn’t merit or morality.

    It was angle.

    It was timing.

    It was which part of the board cracked first.

    Somewhere east, she was being counted by a guard.

    Somewhere west, I was breathing under a sky too wide to hold anyone gently.

    Freedom doesn’t feel triumphant.

    Sometimes it feels like exposure.

    The plank held under me.

    It splintered under her.

    But both of us learned to feel the wobble.

    Cracks don’t announce themselves.

    They simply widen.



    the last image

    Later that night, after the call and the cold, I sat on the floor beside Angel. Her breathing was heavy with trust. A strip of hallway light spilled under the door. The carpet showed the worn paths of our pacing—her circling, me circling, both of us learning to survive our own restlessness.

    Somewhere beyond town, a train pulled its long body across the plains. Its horn stretched into the dark, traveling farther in one minute than we ever managed in our childhoods.

    I listened until the sound dissolved into the place where land gives way to sky.

    That’s where the truth lives—

    between motion and collapse,

    between noise and silence,

    between two girls born of the same storm

    and shaped into different kinds of weather.

    Sweet and bruised.

    Not the same.

    Close enough to rhyme.