top of page

summer love's a curse!

  • pebblesmoomau
  • Apr 3
  • 4 min read

Updated: Oct 23

This summer was the first summer in many, many summers

where I was free of a

        crush?

                            fling?

                                                love?


Summer someone.

Summer whomever.

                                                                 

Somewhere in me

        crammed between my guts and lungs

was an obligation

(for the sake of my self-regard)

to sit with myself alone.


Solitude bores me to death.

                                                                     

Summer flings are meant to be whimsical,

never sacred.


They

are simple.

are sweaty.

are to the point.

are nothing more.


Summer someones are in the form of —

        art museums, blue waves, country roads

        laundry rooms, La La Land, baseball games

        stars drawn in sharpie, brunch, acoustic guitars, sake,

                        redwood trees, letters by the ocean, overalls, card games,

                        badminton, tragedies, bleached bathing suits, earrings, and voice memos.


Summer whoevers write letters to me and write songs about me.

If they were a color, it would be the shade of red that beams from a hometown red light

        (with a slight astigmatism).


Summer crushes are cursed the moment I want them

in the fall, winter, or spring.

Heaven help me if it’s ever all three.


They smoke and sizzle and burn to ash by autumn.

When the leaves turn brown, I let go of the grip.

When the leaves get crunchy,

        I clasp my hands and I pray:

                                Dear Heavenly Father,

                                I show my gratitude that nothing is forever

                                and none of them stay.


Winter is tense — too serious.

Winter is for cuddling and holding on too tight.

                    Winter is for begging for sun.

Because then summer someones are no longer simple,

        they are no longer sweaty,

                    they are so much more than nothing more.


They are a summer sting turned winter sting.

        A consumption of my spirit.

They burn by autumn

        and freeze by winter,

and I’m left grasping

at ash —

                    trying to sew them back together,

                                    memorized only by fantasy and idealization.

                                                                    Dear Heavenly Father,

                                                                    maybe I repent.


(It’s autumn now so I pretend like we didn’t exist) (Do I pretend like we didn’t exist?)

(To exist is to —


AM       I       ASH       NOW?

                                                                         

This summer was the first summer

in many, many summers

where I was

free.


Summer solitude is in the form of —

        learning how to use a grill,

        a music festival in Salt Lake City,

        Indian food, stargazing, blocking people on Instagram,

        crying at my elementary school yearbook photo,

        hot dogs, fomo, a $10 green tank top from target, hair cuts, manicures,

        watching Asteroid City alone

                in my hometown mall at 2 p.m.,

        unfollowing them on Spotify.


Summer seclusion is when the sun is heavy

and sweat spills over my body.


There is little time for grieving –

I’m more consumed with

pulling at my face

stretching one side left and the other right.

Who are you? Who is this?

Pupils wide,

teeth could be whiter.


I         AM          ASH         NOW.


images provided by aaron castellanos

 
 

© 2025 by Pebbles Moomau. 

bottom of page