i. i was 7 when my sister pointed at my chest covered by a loose pajama t-shirt and said “you really ARE getting ***** aren’t you?” and laughed and i ran back to my room and cried and thought about how i could saw them off without the blood attracting too much attention so until i could figure out a way i kept my shoulders hunched over to hide myself
ii. i was 8 when my mother bought me a bra she scrunched it up in a plastic shopping bag into a ball she concealed in one tight fist she came up to my room quietly carefully closed the door behind her whispering as she knelt in front of me unwrapped my new shameful secret
iii. i was 10 when my father first grabbed my shoulders and told me to stand up straight gave me a lecture about bad posture told me stories about old women nobody ever wanted because they look like turtles- can’t pick up their heads to look at you i could only tune him out because i couldn’t tell him that id much rather sink into the hardened concavity of my aching spine than be seen
iv. i was 13 when i got my period during a test in school feeling the weight of another secret on my already-bent spine only made me cry again only affirmed the stereotypes we were trying to shatter in the minds we were trying to change i begged the nurse not to call my mom but she choked the phone number out of me and that night my mother couldn’t speak to me without that pitying, distanced look in her eye that i hated so much but it burned the confidence i might have had to say something
v. i was 15 when i told my father i didn’t want to go swimming that i just didn’t feel like it let him conclude that i was self-conscious, embarrassed, too much to even say so like every other woman he had ever known in his life and he told me i had to be more adventurous that he was worried i was never going to have fun in my life never going to be outgoing enough to get by while i held back tears and the voice about to say “I’m on my period”
vi. i looked in the mirror and allowed myself for a moment to notice the body i was trying so hard to evaporate i felt so defeated that it was still there
there was pain swelling growing like a cyst pushing against the backs of my retinas pressing through my papery skin and cradling my eyes in tired bruises
my pathetic reflection told me i hated living in secret flattening my chest so no one can accuse me of being a woman shutting the door so i can pour hydrogen peroxide on stained bedsheets because i can’t put them in the family’s washing machine stealing my mother’s razor and shaving everywhere to look like the other spotless girls at school
i hate the whispering the hunching the hiding and pretending
vii. there is not much a few pretty strokes of ink can do but i am here now to write about shouting about truth-telling and openness about rebuilding and restoring and change
change for shattered girls who hate themselves like i did much more than i did whose hunched spines break under the pressure of the unseen who set torches to their Power and burn themselves to ashes