at seven years old
when a switch was thrown
and suddenly i knew that
something wasn’t quite right
i did not feel courageous
i was so scared
feeling nailed inside
this coffin of a body
that no longer felt like mine
there were no words
that my tongue could wrap around
to verbalize how wrong it felt
when i was called daughter
so i swallowed that bitterness
and felt it like a
twisting knife in my guts
and i did not feel courageous
i did not feel brave
as i clawed my way out
of that pink box i had been
involuntarily thrown into
but i have been told that
i am brave
i am courageous
i am strong
for being transgender
and i don’t know what
to do with that
and it was not bravery
that had me telling my mother
i needed her credit card number
to buy a cheap chest binder
off of amazon
because i was really a boy
i had decided i would
not be dying as a woman
and be buried in a nice dress
with the wrong name
and gender on my tombstone
i decided then
standing in the kitchen
of the little cabin we lived in
16 years old and terrified
that i would make myself
into a bright light of a boy
and i really don’t think
of that as being a courageous act
it was one of preservation
of finally deciding that
living was better than surviving
and the funny thing is
that makes people see me as brave
and i don’t know what to do with that
because i was scared then
and i have been scared since
the only difference is
i am going to live long enough
this time around
so that i just might be
able to see what people mean
when they tell me i am brave