My Participation In My Own Erasure

Poetry by Britt Wolfe author

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I learned early
how to take up less space
without being asked.

How to round off my edges
before they could catch
on anything sharp.

How to listen
for what was wanted
and become it
before it had to be spoken.

There was a gravity to him—
not loud,
not cruel in any obvious way—

just certain.

The kind of certainty
that rearranges a room
without moving.

To be near it
felt like warmth.

To be chosen by it
felt like proof
that I existed at all.

So I offered things.

At first, small ones—
preferences, opinions,
the harmless parts of a self
no one really notices going missing.

Then more.

Tone.
Timing.
The way I laughed.
The things I loved
that did not include him.

I called it compromise.

I called it love.

I called it understanding
until there was nothing left
that needed a name.

And still—

it was never quite right.

There was always
something to adjust,
something to soften,
something to give
that might finally make me

enough.

So I gave.

And gave.

And gave—

until I became
so easy to hold
I could no longer hold myself.

It is a strange thing
to disappear
in plain sight.

Stranger still
to be thanked for it.

In the end,
there was no moment of rupture.

No shattering.

Just a quiet opening of my hands
and the understanding
that what I had been holding
was never going to hold me back.

The wind did the rest.

And yes—

the absence is real.

The shape of him
still exists in places
I haven’t yet rebuilt.

The disappointment
sits beside me sometimes,
familiar as breath.

There are days
I still reach
for the version of him
I needed him to be.

He never becomes it.

He never will.

That grief
does not leave.

But neither do I.

Not anymore.

What remains of me
is not untouched—

there are parts
that will never return
to what they were.

But the harm
is no longer happening.

And that is its own kind
of beginning.

I am learning
how to take up space again
without apology.

How to want things
without editing them first.

How to exist
without asking permission
from a gravity
I no longer orbit.

I am not whole
in the way I once was.

But I am mine.

And that—
after everything—

feels like something
worth becoming.

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Poetry by Britt Wolfe:

Britt Wolfe

Britt Wolfe writes emotionally devastating fiction with the precision of a heart surgeon and the recklessness of someone who definitely shouldn’t be trusted with sharp objects. Her stories explore love, loss, and the complicated mess of being human. If you enjoy books that punch you in the feelings and then politely offer you a Band-Aid, you’re in the right place.

https://bio.site/brittwolfeauthor
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Annihilation