I love you’s sit on the tip of my tongue like
boiling water ready to spill over, like
barely contained preschoolers waiting for recess, like
balloons big enough to burst.
I want to say it to the man at the gas station restroom line that
lets me cut in front of him when it’s clear I can
hardly hold it in, and whisper it
across time and space to whoever invented
grilled cheese sandwiches and tomato soup.
I want to say it to the extra nice dental hygienist who’s there
the first time I get my braces, and
to the crossing guard that helps my sister get to school.
I want to yell it
through the window at the McDonald’s cashier that gives me
extra buffalo sauce without me asking, and to the
little girl in the Ross dressing room that says my dress looks pretty.
I want to.
But instead, I do like the penguins of Madagascar and wonder
at how often love hides behind things like tight-lipped smiles and waves,
at how many different kinds of love there are and ways to say it, like how
my mother seasons every enchilada with it and
my brother squeezes it into every post-volleyball game hug, and I think that
maybe
even when we’re not brave enough to say it,
we still find a way to show it.
And maybe,
even if we can’t explain it,
we still try our best to grow it.
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