Never
I’m not even sure what this is, so I’ll call it a prose poem.

Now I’m thinking about all the times you never saw me, when I didn’t even care. I became so me that I forgot about you, writing in my top-bound spiral notebooks on campus, on the lawn, stretched out on my blanket, barefoot, books and words and the music of the wind in the trees, friends dropping by to chat. Smoking and drinking coffee.
Dancing barefoot all night to music you hate, finding my groove and staying in it until a new rhythm caught my hips. Spinning from one dance to another, DJs and dancers and live bands in my wake, broken glass—shards of beer bottles disappearing into the soles of my feet, emerging years later, when I lived at the beach, studying English literature and living without you.
Learning myself was the hardest thing of all, so how did I expect you to do it first? You never had all of the stories or songs, just the dizzying highs of feeling me let go of everything. It must have been terrifying, being with a girl then finding yourself caught in a cosmic whirlwind of stardust so thick you can’t see, no ground beneath your feet, falling up until you’re down.
About the Creator
Harper Lewis
I'm a weirdo nerd who’s extremely subversive. I like rocks, incense, and all kinds of witchy stuff. Intrusive rhyme bothers me.
I’m known as Dena Brown to the revenuers and pollsters.
MA English literature, College of Charleston
Reader insights
Outstanding
Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!
Top insights
Compelling and original writing
Creative use of language & vocab
Easy to read and follow
Well-structured & engaging content
Excellent storytelling
Original narrative & well developed characters
Heartfelt and relatable
The story invoked strong personal emotions
Masterful proofreading
Zero grammar & spelling mistakes
On-point and relevant
Writing reflected the title & theme




Comments (4)
🤣 the subtitle Prose it is. Much like the one I wrote. I wasn't sure what to call it either. But you ran with it. Unlike me, who will wait days before I could muster the confidence. Oh I do like how this was written. Almost like it was written from the mind of the person you were then — the woman you are now.
The imagery is strong, and the sensory details make this memory feel alive. The idea of learning yourself first is a central idea. You have created a wonderful mood and rhythm here.
Such vivid, grounded reflection. The imagery is striking, and the emotional honesty lands beautifully. Really resonant piece.
I love how anecdotal and reflective this feels. Without being overly poemy but still has those beautiful evocative flourishes. So many great lines but the way you closed it off was beautifully humble and mature. With stunning imagery through out. Well wrought, Harper