Author’s Note
This piece started with a playlist.
Or rather, it started with me noticing a pattern.
Song after song seemed to describe love as dependency. The lyrics were filled with desperation, pleading, promises of collapse, and declarations that life would somehow become impossible if the other person left.
And I realized I’ve never experienced love that way.
For a long time, I wondered if that meant something was wrong with me.
Because so many stories teach us that love is need. That devotion is measured by how completely another person becomes necessary to your survival. That the strongest relationships are the ones where people can’t function without each other.
But that has never been what I wanted.
I’ve never wanted to be someone’s oxygen.
I’ve never wanted to be the reason someone can stand upright, nor have I wanted another person to become the only thing keeping me standing.
What I’ve always been drawn to is something quieter and, in some ways, more difficult:
Choice.
The conscious decision to remain.
The decision to care.
The decision to keep showing up.
Not because you have to.
Because you want to.
To me, there is something profoundly beautiful about a person who can survive without you and still chooses you anyway.
Not out of fear.
Not out of dependence.
Not out of obligation.
But out of affection, admiration, trust, and love.
The title comes from the final image in the poem.
Home, for me, has never been a place. It has always been a feeling.
A sense of recognition.
A sense of peace.
A sense of arriving somewhere your heart already understands.
And perhaps that’s the difference this poem is trying to articulate:
I don’t want a love built on need.
I want a love that recognizes home when it sees it.
— Rowan Evans

Recognizes Home
Poetry by Rowan Evans
I listen to all these songs
about love and stuff—
they all talk about need,
quiet pleas, begging please,
I’ll be broken if you leave.
Used to think
something was wrong with me—
because it was never need.
Subtext: I don’t need you,
and that can hit hard.
People hear “I don’t need you”
and translate it as
“I don’t care,”
as if love only counts
when it’s a lifeline—
as if affection only matters
when it’s oxygen.
But I’ve never wanted
to be someone’s air supply.
I’ve never wanted
to collapse without a body beside me.
I’ve never wanted
a love that breaks
when the door closes
or the distance grows.
I don’t need you.
But I choose you.
And somehow
that feels louder.
So don’t mistake my steadiness
for distance.
Don’t mistake my independence
for apathy.
I don’t need you—
but I want you
with both feet planted,
with eyes open,
with a heart that stays—
because it recognizes home
when it sees it.
Journey into the Hexverse…
[Not Rebuilding You]
A poem about love as an act of presence rather than rescue. Through construction imagery, Not Rebuilding You explores trust, devotion, emotional safety, and the quiet work of building a foundation strong enough for healing to grow.
[The Language Her Soul Speaks]
What if love isn’t about being understood, but learning to understand someone else? “The Language Her Soul Speaks” is a free verse poem about intimacy, communication, curiosity, and the desire to know another person beyond the limits of language.
[Ocean Waves (1, 4, 3)]
A moonlit shoreline, a rowboat full of ducks, a piggybank with no cents, and a confession hidden in plain sight. Ocean Waves (1, 4, 3) explores how humor, wordplay, and absurdity can become a side door to vulnerability when the truth feels too difficult to say directly.
[L Words & Heart]
A playful, self-aware poem about love, longing, loyalty, and the quiet ways another person can reshape our inner world. What begins as humor slowly reveals a heartfelt confession about affection, imagination, and the faces that linger in our dreams.
[It’s You I Choose]
A poem about devotion, vulnerability, and the quiet decision to stay. Sometimes love isn’t certainty—it is choosing someone anyway.
[I’ll Be There to See Your Sunrise]
Love has never come easily to me. This poem explores the fear, vulnerability, and quiet courage required to stay emotionally present when connection begins to matter deeply. “I’ll Be There to See Your Sunrise” is about choosing love despite the risk of heartbreak—and promising to remain long enough to witness someone fully.
If you’re interested in more poetry, you can find it here → [The Library of Ashes]

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