I’ve always busied my voice, painting pictures with my tongue, whether in bed, humming softly, or before those who taught me to use my speech as a shield. My voice has been a knife, bleeding pleads, raspy and swollen, as if each phrase is a sentence I use to protect the fragile things that hide within me. Sometimes I wonder if my voice is really a knife or my own reflection in the mirror, framed in silence, aching to be free. My voice has also been a palette, silent colors spilling from my lips. Soft blue studders, scarlet screams, plum laughs, lime-colored lies, staining my mouth with emotion and music. It’s seasoned with liberal acids and outspoken spices, burning through my throat, feelings wedged into vocal cords, a flicker of hope slowly stringing them out into words.