I am more than my shoes, Even the brown brogues I wear Day in day out to work and which Are rubbed smooth on the soles.
I am more than the cheap-end shirts That hide my ******* and that you Frown at, openly, at the shop, the park, On the bus after a long day.
I am more than the number zero That you can see, and the underwear That you can’t, although that Doesn’t stop you asking.
I am tough or tender, depending On who we are and what you mean to say. I am hard in places you have no need of, And soft in those you don’t think I know.
I am butch, and I have blended every Ill word, and unkind glance into the step Of my swagger and the spread of my legs, And the pride I put into loving my woman.
I am butch; I wear it on my sleeves, And my calloused hands. The word is sewn Into the hem every pair of jeans I own, As it is on the inside of my thick skin.