let's get poetic, baby!
To the chagrin of my parents, I'm kind of a semi-professional poet. I could probably write an essay about how invaluable the medium has been for helping me find community and discover things about myself and my identity, but instead, I'm just gonna share a bunch of my published poetry, and for FREE, at that! Some will be linked to the (ALSO free!!!) publications they first appeared in, when those publications are digitally accessible. Others will be included in drop-downs, because the works they were in are either paywalled or out of print. =) BASICALLY it's just a lot of free stuff.
full publications i've been featured in!
- water damaged paper anthology: through community, we reimagine ("the sanctuary of special interests" and "you ask an autistic person why they like puzzles")
- we were here, we were queer: on the edge of the rainbow ("lost in modern lesbos")
- the lyre: new normal ("long hauler")
- solastalgia ("my sister's children")
read these here!
The Lovers That Launched A Thousand Censorships (Included as a featured AR work in Angelic Goldsky's STEALTH CODES Exhibition)
Queer coding on coded queers
Coded concerning, coded contagious
Courtney and company tried quantifying
When the Web wants us wasted
But if you ask me, we lost
The moment we first spoke their binary
That's the root, babe
Thinking the way is to sway
These sickly silly cis systems
That this isn't bone-deep
I don't know about you
But I was always one,
Oh one, oh one
For rebuilding
And I know you are, too
So why not sculpt a script that sees
We're as natural as dew on grass
As shadows under the sun
As a smiling face unfiltered
(One of my greatest regrets
Is the self-censorship of my
Gangly teen features, emerging
Take an unfiltered picture of yourself today
If it's been a while)
We've always been makers and shapers
And I was never one, oh one
Oh one oh one
For binary
But maybe someday
I won't have to be
A Professional Dyke on Pinkwashing (included in SFU Slam Poetry's "Poetry for Peace" Zine)
who do they think they are?
donning camo i can see right through
to the rubble behind pride flag props
we are not friends, we are not family
queerness knows no geography
never truly banished from any colony
though british laws on buggery
really tried their best
these people i see suffering,
you say to look away
just because some settler-laws
haven't been replaced?
you try rewriting legislation
when you don't know of liberation
drafting bills and mending ills
when there's not a second of stillness
and youre starving
and all thats safe to sip
is the rainwater that drip, drip, drips
onto the debris of what was once a city
"they'd have your head for being queer"
innocent people are dying, if that wasn't clear
i'm not asking for a pride parade
i want children to be okay
your homonationalist tirades
are as see-through as that goddamn camo
transparent sparing the bloodstains
which you hide poorly and in vain
I will not be your pinkwashed pawn
To Hell With The Trinary, Too (Published in Wellness Beyond the Binary's first issue, Binaries are Bullshit)
i am no man
i am no woman
and i might not be an enby either
i will not be your theyby, m'theydy
gentlethem, themtleman,
or whatever other strange phrase you try to shove down my throat
i do not owe you the illusion
of a typical nonbinary body
there is no such thing
i will not be forced to sing
in stereotype
and i will not be silent, either
instead, i will sing
and sigh
and soliloquize
about femininity
my sweet, supple,
tantalizing truth
i was told,
when womanhood and i parted ways
that our meetings were forbidden
to throw aside skirts,
burn bows and barrettes,
hide away my breasts
i was told
femininity
could not come with me
but i am not binary, nor trinary
i will not be your benignly boyish
neutrally androgynous ideal
femininity is my language
my lover
my light
femininity is not bound
to names, terms,
or pronouns
femininity responds to he
she
they, xe, ve, we
the skirts i wear
and how i feel about what's beneath them
have no relation
save for that
they are mine
and mine only
(unless
you ask
nicely)
my experience is not universal
it belongs to me
and my lover, femininity
do not tell me
what curves or crevices
my dysphoria should find its home in
for that is where femininity
loves me best
and plants the gentlest kisses
do not let my pain
take the centre stage
because it is not me
my gender is not pain
my gender is pleasure
my self-made femme design
i am not your woman,
i'm my own dyke
and oh, what a phrase
it melts on my tongue
sweet
and smooth
short skirts
shorter hair
if you're confused, i don't fucking care
i will not be your third gender
i will be me
in my own brand of androgyny
i weave my own iconography
the male gaze evaporates
scopophilia only remains
in a reflection
utterly
reclaimed
i am euphoric
i am whole
i am holy
How to Hold a Nonbinary Dyke Body (published in Care Collective Zine Issue 01, Take Care)
My body's revelations came forth blazing
And from that moment on life was never the same
I had a face that grew foggy when makeup met its skin
And a chest on thin ice on the best of days
The word “girl” stuck in my heart like a thorn
So I bled, bled, bled.
The knowledge reduced it all to ash
And I emerged, a genderfucked phoenix
My Leo sun in full effect
My hair freshly chopped
And I learned the forbidden tongue
Of nonbinary dyke self-love
Radical nonbinary dyke self-love is stubbornness
Because boy, do people think they're hilarious
Calling myself a dyke is beating them to the punch
Can't poison me when I've coated my tongue with the stuff.
And when they try to deny my womanhood, I laugh,
Because it's been estranged for a while.
Radical nonbinary dyke self-love is standing tall
Head held high, moving in purposeful strides.
When I wear a skirt, it billows like sails on a summer breeze
And when I wear a skirt, I'm still a nonbinary dyke.
I can be pretty, I can be handsome, I can be gorgeous, I can be holy
Most importantly, though, I'm hot as hell.
Radical nonbinary dyke self-love is gentleness
Because beneath all this bravado, beneath the short skirts and shorter hair,
Is a body that's endured trauma. Some self-imposed, sure,
Like wrists sick of string instruments and a jaw too commonly clenched
But sometimes I run my tongue over the tooth where another's hand took a chunk out.
When you're in a queer, traumatized body, holding yourself gentle is as radical as it gets.
The body I have and the brain within
Are still relearning one another
Falling back in love all over again
Now that they speak the same language
It's one I learn as they embrace
One that makes me so glad I'm myself.
GNC Femme (featured in FORMZINE, Volume 1)
I was born a bootleg of body and brain
Fell into this world with an urge to hide my eyes
Looked up to the stars every night, wondering why they shone so shy
Spit on by the suburban streetlights
Which buzzed off-tone, a noise felt in my bones
And kept me from the warmth.
We'll be here all day if we don't skip the typical cliches:
Bright as my eyes, quick as a skip, troubled in a way no one could place.
Too loud, too soft, too strange, too much, too little, too bad
A puzzle piece crushed out of shape by a boot
I tried learning the language
but it weighed down my tongue.
I found power in presenting myself
The way I'd always yearned to.
I tore back the wrapping before it could settle, suffocate,
Sameify me.
Crushed it under my boot the way
A boot had crushed me.
The diagnosis was “not like other girls,”
An affliction amongst women who don't fit into a coffin-shaped box.
Truth is, the condition's a collage.
Pieces became clear: an inclination to the arts, brain strangeness, a pinch lesbianism.
Typical womanhood becomes a muddled memory
of floral scents and soprano sighs.
I am a message on a billboard that got painted over.
I'm an unofficial constellation, a connection unorthodox.
I'm badly-traced, I'm cobbled-together, I'm cheaply-made, I'm out of tune,
I'm a soup gone too sweet.
Fine by me.
I was never meant to be eaten anyway.
Page Credits
Got the pencil divider here!