Visible
I don’t want to be visible.
I don’t want to be teased, bullied, rejected, and
hated.
I don’t want to be vulnerable.
It’s a double edged sword.
Because I also long to be seen
as my true self,
to stop being perceived as masculine.
I want to show the world my beauty,
the glow that only a privileged few get to witness.
I’m afraid of being visible.
I won’t even wear a dress
in the privacy of my living room
for fear the neighbors will see
through the window.
Or come knocking at the door
needing something.
For a long time,
nearly every time I dressed up
in my apartment,
my family would call
requiring some urgent favor.
And I would try to hastily take off
the butterfly necklace
I had spent forever putting on.
I learned it wasn’t safe to be myself,
even alone.
Like Pavlov’s shock collar,
the experience trained me
to never feel comfortable or breathe easy,
to stop doing the simplest,
most harmless things
that bring me gender euphoria.
My wants and needs come last.
Being outed could cost me
my job,
my healthcare,
my family,
even my home.
Just like being different cost me friends
and heartache growing up.
I am working to build a new life
where I am free and safe.
But living in the in-between is hell.
There isn’t a release date
I can count down to.
I’m tired of being alone and invisible
in most rooms.
Creation is painful.
There is a folk tale
where the hero is warned,
“If you take the feather,
you will know pain
and you will know trouble.”
I want to take the feather.
I long to burn in the fire
that is being
visible.