3 minute read
JONI
To the girl I see at gigs sometimes
To the girl at backyard shows, less shy every time
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To the girls who threw the bricks that built the houses
To the girls who come through my checkout
And we get all nervous
And big beaming smiles
To see ourselves just living
To my sisters of transition, transcendence and transperth
All pink and blue and white
On hormones, on fire, on their own path
To the girl who burns punk
Whose pages blaze with irreverent gayness
Our sweat on the dong fang fish pub mosh pit floor
To the youtube girls and the instagram girls and the writer’s festival girls and the girl who fell into the night
Librarians of trans misogynistic implications in the discourse
You weave the myth and mock it
To Kurt Cobain, probably
To the girl next door and the girl next door and the friend of a friend I never heard about before
To the doctor who taught my doctor and gave hell to gatekeepers
To the girls in men’s prison, in 4chan suicide campaigns, in violent homes, in early graves
To the girl who asked to shared a smoke in my old body’s safety on her first time out in a skirt
We go all the way back to the empty page
To the girl who melted my mind with her intergalactic voice
To the girl who drums around town, who serenaded my situationship
And to the girl who fell into the night
To the really hot girl I wanted to fuck on my birthday
To the girl who was my first boy before we both knew
To the girl with the chaos tatt with the anarchist A right… there
We were trapped in an endlessly recurring sapphic poly paradox
Tequila and a freeway mattress
I broke your heart between my legs
To the girl who stormed out of my kinky national anthem
Who I’m told has a home among the veterans
To the girl who’s wife wouldn’t let her dress up to host the fundraiser
She wore a scowl all night and you wore eyeliner and pride
To the girl I fell for as we stacked the shelves
You cleaned up my shattered grieving olive jars
Backstabbed by your blood
You ranted transgender rituals and moved in only two weeks in love
We are the truth of each other
To the other poets’ daughter, I saw myself in you, then and now and between our awakenings
I dance on your grave like nobody’s watching And you scream along in hopeful nightmares
To the girls who never knew
To the girls who pass, who don’t pass, who will pass it on
To the girls targeted much harder by male hate than this white civvie
To the long list of girls we’ve lost
To the girl I see at gigs sometimes
You look stunning tonight
You are not a novelty
You are not a failed man
You are not a thief
You are stunning
Sorry I’m a bit awkward
A flower on fire
Just so stoked to see you
To see us
To see our grace and courage
Thank you
Your body will be free, I promise
Your heart will be full, I promise
Your rage will be holy, I promise
Your hope will be pure, I promise
Your life will be lived,
I promise
Unravel my DNA, unfurl each strand, go slowly, s l o w l y. Carefully, please. I feel every pull when your hand draws back. Don’t ask too much about how each particle formed I wasn’t there when it was. You use a tender hold between thumb and forefinger
I’m weeping
From deep inside my molecules Come forth the stars, Sprinkle dust on your skin
“Describe it to me”
“I can’t”
A film of tears
Coat his eyes
Do I trust you?
To see inside of you like this?
On the day I am bravest
I empty out my Sundays.
I point the knife carve a hole in each one until the calendar where they sit drains all over my carpet.
Wringing dry the worship that used to be. I shred the pages of scriptures coated in my identity. Cry a riverbed and baptise all that is old until the pages are submerged ink bleeding.
Washing away who I used to be. On the Sunday I am my lonliest, I gather with others Yearning to glorify Black womanhood on blank canvases. Preparing a holy communion around a trestle table drawing the shape of our world. Sunday service in session, gather here. Our prayer is shared laughter unearthed from our ribcages. Reciting poems on freedom conjuring new magic, imprinting their spells on my flesh. On the Sunday when I dream again, I offer a prayer in slumber.
Tangled in sheets, robed to honour my rest.
I stretch out my limbs in praise for Sundays. My Sundays.
Peeling my eyes, blinking through a film of tears coaxed by my revelation: Today, I am free.
I am no one’s woman but my own.
It is midnight. By the river. We are shivering. Goosebumps, kisses and your beautiful smile.
I am not scared of falling. But I might be scared you would not notice.
Pain will make you think about life in a totally different perspective. Are you ready?