She was the lovely child of lovely people.
A charming glass-menagerie girl;
she caught the light. You could say that about her,
she knew how to turn, and how to stand just so.
She had been taught to make a whole room sparkle.
Her laugh rang like struck crystal, and like crystal
she was cold and sharp and brittle when she fell
Author: Aspen
October 16: Wild
Every morning at the crack of dawn he shakes me awake
though he’s old enough to turn on the TV himself.
He’s always up before 6:30. Has to be,
he informs me gravely, because otherwise he will miss Wild Kratts.
He never turns on the lights. That’s my job
when I stumble downstairs in his wake.
In the blue TV glow he wiggles his shoulders, sings along under his breath.
Gonna go wild, wild Wild Kratts . . .
Sometimes by the flicker of the screen I see myself,
there and gone like a fish in water
(usually he is all his mother, long-legged,
narrow face, straight nose, and I’m there only in his cowlicks).
But on TV mornings I watch myself repeated,
soft echo of a girl who soaked up stories
like they could save her life.
October 15: Legend
My son is in love with the story. He will curl
himself up at my side and say “Tell me again.”
And so I will. I tell him how their sleek spotted pelts
shine against the rocks, how they leap from spray to shingle
as if they cannot believe the length of their own legs,
how they will sit and comb their long salt-rough hair, and sing.
I tell him how it is the greatest sin of all to take their skins,
to hide them, to trap a wild and wave-blessed thing.
I tell him men that do that meet bad ends.
He will listen to this tale a dozen times,
My bright boy, born so far from the sea,
curled like a nautilus against my side.
October 14: Overgrown
It’s not true that he likes plants more than people.
It’s just that — listen,
it’s just that plants are easier.
To grow they just need sunlight, soil, and water.
In various proportions, sure, and that takes practice,
but once you’ve got it, all plants do is grow.
A plant does not play dumb. A plant won’t ask you
where you’ve been and make it sound like knives;
a plant won’t sulk, won’t act like something’s wrong
and then spit Nothing like a poison dart.
A plant will not ask you to change your ways;
a plant just grows.
They grow. They twine across the window panes,
across the door. They grow, and they don’t care if you do.
Plants just grow. They take in poison, make it clean again,
they change dead things into air and blossoms.
All plants do is grow, and grow, and grow.
October 13: Ash
When I think of how her last year went:
how her quick body that had traveled the world became
a cargo of suffering others took turns carrying,
how her eyes dulled and her voice escaped and no one would listen,
it’s hard not to understand why she wanted what she wanted.
She is in the wind now. There is no stone to mark her.
She is in the Blue Mosque and Haystack Rock and Red Square.
Nobody in the world can stand above her, or carry her
anywhere she doesn’t want to go.
October 12: Dragon
I found her in with the chickens when she was small.
Don’t ask how she got in there, past the dog,
but there she was: pink-eyed, white as new milk,
soft as kid leather. She chirped and trilled and did not hurt the hens.
Hani said it was bad luck to keep her, that she would grow
monstrous and ravenous, devour us in our beds.
But she’s never gotten bigger than a cat, eats only eggs,
sleeps by the hearth, and drinks cream from a bowl.
Once, only once, she bit a person, one
who came in from the road, and loomed and glowered
over our bread, and did not say his thanks.
She rose up like a gust of winter wind,
took off his ear and drove him out the door.
She’s earned her eggs, her corner rug, her dish of cream.
Don’t ask me where she came from. We belong to her.
On Being a Good Queer
For years on October 11, I have been saying the same thing on social media: you don’t owe it to anybody to come out, today or any other day of the year. You don’t have to give that information to everyone in your life, even people you know would only hurt you with it. You don’t owe it to anyone to perform the labor of that conversation, or to keep existing in their life as the openly Queer person they know who makes them rethink their own biases. I have distilled this point of view as follows: We don’t owe the straights jack shit.
This year circumstances led me to having those conversations with people I knew would not receive them well. But I did it purposefully, and most importantly I did it for me and not for them.
Coming out to my parents went terribly. I knew that it was going to, which is why for years beforehand I didn’t do it. Because I didn’t owe them that. I also didn’t owe them the labor of hiding who I was; I just lived and existed and was Queer as a fucking three-dollar bill for literal years, and let the decision to recognize that or not fall on them instead of on myself.
Unsurprisingly, they elected not to do that. Perhaps also unsurprisingly, they mostly (after an initial spate of verbal abuse from my father) coped with my coming out by trying to continue to not acknowledge my Queer identity. They seemed to want to move forward by awkwardly existing around my full personhood, like my being Queer was a missing step or a hole in the floor that, if they couldn’t make it go away, they could just steer around indefinitely.
That’s not fucking okay. And I’m still hurt and I’m still mad and I probably always will be, that they failed me so spectacularly in that regard.
I don’t talk to my parents any more, and I want to be especially clear: that’s a choice from my end, not theirs. I made it clear that I would reopen communication with my father if he apologized for the way he behaved. He has not done that. I asked my mother to talk about my coming out and my wife’s coming out with me. Her response was that she wasn’t going to do that, because I already knew what they would say. And hey, you know what? She was right.
They periodically reach out to me. They express interest in maintaining contact with me, and with my child. Not with my wife, whose existence they have pointedly refused to acknowledge. And not with me as a Queer woman. The closest I’ve gotten to an acknowledgment from my mother is I’m sorry I can’t give you what you want, like treating me as a fully human person is a video game she couldn’t afford. The closest I’ve gotten to an apology from my father is I don’t know what I did to deserve being treated this way, which is . . . typical, honestly.
So I don’t talk to my parents any more. Because I was right before this year; I didn’t owe them the pain I put myself through to come out to them. And I don’t owe them the humiliation and hurt of being a Good Queer who suffers through their lack of acknowledgement and refusal to change. I don’t owe it to them to grin and bear an existence where they get to have me in their lives without thinking, for one single moment, about how their beliefs and their politics hurt me and the people like me who I love. It’s not my job to stay in their world, hurting and humiliated, until watching me suffer makes them magically decide to be better people.
I don’t owe them that. And if you’re reading this and you’re Queer, I want you to know that you don’t owe that to anyone in your life either. You can absolutely choose to remove yourself from the lives of those who don’t deserve you. You can be beautifully Queer and free and out to those who will cherish you in the beauty of your being, in the wholeness of your heart.
So. Happy Coming Out Day, my loves. You don’t owe the straights jack shit, and you don’t have to be a Good Queer. You can just be yourself.
October 11: Snow

Square your shoulders beneath the mantle of fur,
plant your feet, ignore the chill now seeping through the leather.
Breathe in, feel the point of the air’s blade against your throat.
The wind against your face and fingers burns and numbs in equal
measure, makes the weight of your weapon feel immense and ancient.
Something is coming. You must be prepared.
October 10: Pattern
Damn it. I do this every time,
find something new I want to make
a habit, and commit,
and then I ride the surge of interest
til it sags. A week, two weeks, a month before I lose momentum.
Like those toys you wind,
the ones that start to stutter as they slow.
Well. Let’s see if I can make this one
of the half a dozen things I didn’t drop.
I don’t know yet if I can break
the cycle by completion,
if poetry can be a discipline.
October 9: Swing
1010 2 0
Nobody wants to talk about it except in terms of darkness,
deep chasms, empty places, sadness, exhaustion, long stretches of sameness,
Nobody wants to talk about it unless you can also talk about how
the medication lifted you up out of the depths and now you can function and
listen
don’t get me wrong. It did. I can, now, but
I am still not well. Well is a state of permanence and I exist
in something else entirely, something nobody talks about even when
they can bring themselves to say its
clinical depression
name:
Nobody wants to hear about the swoops and dives, how your chemistry
is a liquid ribbon, an undulant serpent, how you still have days when
you do not have it grasped behind the head, days when it turns and bites you,
days when the fury burns at nothing, or the exhaustion takes you,
Nobody wants to hear about the days you stare at your cupped palm,
the
Pill with imprint 1010 2 0 is Tan, Elliptical / Oval and has been identified as
tether you can only hope will hold.