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Brave Girl

I was born with a heart full of blood and stars. I was born brave. When they laid me on my mother’s chest I stared into her eyes as if I’d known her always. When she gave me to my father to hold, he wouldn’t put me down. Just rocked me through that hospital night of beeping and chaos and latex gloves snapped onto capable hands, staring at me like I was something confusingly wondrous. My grandpa first met me after my mother and I trudged off an airplane into the bustle of thousands and when he got a good look at me, smiling hugely, he said my god, she’s otherworldly. No one can compare an infant to the mystical but I was round and rosy and January and furrowed-brow and decisive, determined, dauntless, and I think I kind of believe him. I was what they call a late-bloomer, a warrior of the quiet kind who picked tiny strawberries from the neighbor’s yard and ate them on the driveway amid battalions of rainbow chalk, who wore her fairy wings and flower chains long after other kids gave up make-believe for video games. I was an arrow of a child, headed perpetually for rawness of spirit and purity of truth, and when circle after circle of friends closed on me my heart ran salty scarlet rivers through my chest. When they said I was too sensitive, too odd, I bawled into my mattress with a richness of despair and yes, I wished I was not who I was. I was different, and that scared the other children. I was kind. So I grew up. Slowly. My drawers filled with poems I fought to birth, waiting in the darkness for them like an animal. I did stupid things and I did lovely things. My bones ached me to a new height. They say the day you get your period is the day you become a woman, but the day I became a woman was in the middle of August on the living room couch when my father stopped loving my mother and started loving someone else. I did bleed, but it wasn’t the right kind. It wasn’t fertility or practicing walking around with a pad between my legs, awkward, awed at myself. It wasn’t that kind at all. There are many ways to grow up. I grew up because of my dad whistling on mornings after sex with my best friends’ mom, because of him showering to go out and my mother retching into the bathroom sink, because of the mutilation of family. But I didn’t grow up dim. I grew up steely and flagrant and voluminous, unfolding in all directions because I, runner in the woods, I, poet, I, last one picked for the team, I, oddball, I, exhalation of light, I, otherworldly, am not stem, nor stamen, nor petal. I am the blossom. Blood and stars. Brave.
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Written by
claire-mcculley
20 / Cisgender Female
Published
Sep 20, 2015
Lines·Words
84·487
Tags
#love#poetry#life#sadness#hope#loss#change#bravery#growth#birth
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