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loveletter
Sixteenth of September, six days after my sister was born was the first time I remember it happening. Body in my bed, I knew that was strange⁠— I had always slept alone⁠— but I didn’t know if it was wrong. In school the next day I looked around at all the girls, I wanted to ask if this was normal. I was twelve and I could not be sure my body belonged to me. I read horror stories, compared myself to them and said, you have faced a fraction of the full range. I said, you were complicit, he never told you to be silent. I am seventeen still reading article after article and I think: my father is not evil, my father does not deserve to be behind bars⁠— who will feed my family?⁠— but I think I would feel safer if he was.           I think about one night when he asked, “ does it feel good” and I felt myself disintegrate. I am not sure he heard what I heard: does it feel good when I am making your body, in which you will stand for the rest of your life, unlivable? Does it feel good when I am desecrating it, when I make it unholy ground? At the trial of our sins I will ask God what my body is, and He will say “it is a trust” and I will point to you and say “then he has broken it.”
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May 25, 2020
May 25, 2020 at 4:35 PM UTC
Sixteenth of September