Tissue Sample 2022-05-19 *** How do I come to terms with the fact that I will die? How do I look my mother in the eyes and say, "You won't have me for that much more time?" I look in your eyes, and I see a flame that burns so bright, that signals something arriving just over the horizon. I expected to be dying by now, strength fleeing from my limbs, lungs crushed by anxiety like the world itself was closing in. I got all my homework done early in February even though graduation was three months away, not knowing what state I would be in, six months from onset being the low end. But except for the sores that pulse in movement's fury and sleeptime's lull, I'm just as healthy as ever. I'm searching my body for every possible sign that the end is coming, that looms my demise. And I am in pain, I will admit, but not nearly enough to classify myself as sick. I'm in a science classroom, with scalpel prodding myself. Clean up the experiment, jar me up, return me to the shelf in tanager's formaldehyde, amber sleep, sanctioned suicide. You haven't really died until you've returned to the earth, I think, given back the dust in your bones to this planet that insists it be your home. You haven't really disappeared until your body has dispersed so much that nobody can point at the ground and say, "The person I love now rests here." This vessel, I hope, will not be preserved in a morgue, under a man's care, final horror. My body was never ever really mine in this life. Mother still sometimes cries that I'm not a doll anymore, won't wear dresses anymore. Will she keep me around when my body moves nevermore, preserved, plasticized, mannequin most lifelike? Deny me Velouria's embrace one last time? *** CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 (c) Vane Vander