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The first time I uttered a prayer
was in a glass-stained cathedral.
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I was kneeling long after
the congregation was on its feet,
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dip both hands into holy water,
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trace the trinity across my chest,
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my tiny body drooping
like a question mark
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all over the wooden pew.
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I asked Jesus to fix me,
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and when he did not answer
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I befriended silence in the hopes
that my sin would burn
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and salve my mouth
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would dissolve like sugar on tongue,
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but shame lingered as an aftertaste.
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And in an attempt
to reintroduce me to sanctity,
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my mother told me of the miracle I was,
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said I could grow up
to be anything I want.
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I decided to --
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be a boy.
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It was cute.
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I had snapback, toothless grin,
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used skinned knees as street cred,
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played hide and seek with
what was left of my goal
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I was it.
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The winner to a game
the other kids couldn't play,
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I was the mystery of an anatomy,
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a question asked but not answered,
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tightroping between awkward boy
and apologetic girl.
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and when I turned 12, the boy phase
wasn't deemed cute anymore.
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It was met with nostalgic aunts who missed
seeing my knees in the shadow of skirts,
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who reminded me that my kind of attitude
would never bring a husband home,
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that I exist for heterosexual marriage
and child-bearing.
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And I swallowed their insults
along with their slurs.
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Naturally, I did not
come out of the closet.
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The kids at my school opened it
without my permission.
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Called me by a name I did not recognize,
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said lesbian,
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but I was more boy than girl,
more Ken than Barbie.
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It had nothing to do with hating my body,
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I just love it enough to let it go,
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I treat it like a house,
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and when your house is falling apart,
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you do not evacuate,
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you make it comfortable enough
to house all your insides,
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you make it pretty enough
to invite guests over,
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you make the floorboards
strong enough to stand on.
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My mother fears I have named
myself after fading things.
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As she counts the echoes
left behind by Mya Hall,
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Leelah Alcorn, Blake Brockington.
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She fears that I'll die without a whisper,
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that I'll turn into "what a shame"
conversations at the bus stop.
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She claims I have turned myself
into a mausoleum,
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that I am a walking casket,
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news headlines have turned
my identity into a spectacle,
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Bruce Jenner on everyone's lips
while the brutality of living in this body
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becomes an asterisk
at the bottom of equality pages.
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No one ever thinks of us as human
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because we are more ghosts than flesh,
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because people fear that
my gender expression is a trick,
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that it exists to be perverse,
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that it ensnares them
without their consent,
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that my body is a feast
for their eyes and hands
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and once they have fed off my queer,
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they'll regurgitate all the parts
they did not like.
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They'll put me back into the closet,
hang me with all the other skeletons.
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I will be the best attraction.
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Can you see how easy it is
to talk people into coffins,
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to misspell their names on gravestones.
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And people still wonder why
there are boys rotting,
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they go away
in high school hallways
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they are afraid of becoming another
hashtag in a second
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afraid of classroom discussions
becoming like judgement day
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and now oncoming traffic is embracing
more transgender children than parents.
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I wonder how long it will be
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before the trans suicide notes
start to feel redundant,
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before we realize that our bodies
become lessons about sin
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way before we learn how to love them.
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Like God didn't save
all this breath and mercy,
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like my blood is not the wine
that washed over Jesus' feet.
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My prayers are now
getting stuck in my throat.
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Maybe I am finally fixed,
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maybe I just don't care,
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maybe God finally listened to my prayers.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)