this is who you (i) are (am) Fariha Mabud If you are not part
of the solution, then you are part of the problem. This is who you are. --- “That's so gay” She was just a girl I played with sometimes The girl who was friendly to other girls, like me. The way she waves her hands and bats her doe-y eyes like she’s on the verge of crying. What ever happened to the girl she used to be? I never thought about her in all the years she lived somewhere else. Now that she's moved back, she never lets me forget. Because I have a boyfriend, I thought things would be different. Holding hands, Now I’m a girl who kisses and secretly wishes for more. I want to say “Close your lips,” if only to divert attention away but it’s too late. Pray for release from this purgatory of so many things that never mattered before and will never matter again. She has eyes that say, “I'm the hammer and you're the nail.” I Wonder If She's Jealous --- “So, you want to go to the dance with me?” I was so clueless And I said, “Okay.” And that's the way it happened. Love makes fools of us all. At the dance, I’ve never seen such passion Oh, how I love her fire, her mind, her awesome sense of fashion. (Not that I notice what she wears, it's hardly worth the mention; with her skintight jeans and her pouty-pouty lips and the way she moves her hips With her perfect little purse and her perfect phony tan.) --- “That's so gay” is an expression I hate. Some boys laughed, and some girls, too, one even called me mental. She smiles as if she were my best and oldest and truest and forever friend “If you and I happened to be straight” I never say it, but I think it every time, but it doesn't matter who we are as much as where we are. --- The pounding on the door and the shouting of names LEZZIES! FAGGOTS! FREAKS! After a chance encounter between both her legs. Twirling her hair, dropping her voice, raising her eyebrows. “This is going to be a challenge. But you know me, I love a challenge.” “You should put on a bra.” I will, I say, and I’m out the door, and I know I'm forgetting something Where's my kiss? The thought of it almost makes me laugh --- I have a boyfriend “Shut up for once” And he leaned in before I could say “What are you doing?” I'm wishing I could disprove the words in my head I can't help myself, and now everyone is staring at me. I slip past ashamed to have been caught in the act of being normal --- Writing it down is the way I make it real, the way I find my way into what it is I feel. When I'm afraid, let me keep what I don't want to lose, Say to me: You were here. --- So I walk home alone thinking about how it used to be. I could never keep up with her, and yet somehow we'd always end up with our arms wrapped around each other's waists, kicking like the Rockettes, or swaying like a couple of drunks before we even knew what that meant. Now I walk home thinking the kinds of serious thoughts she helped me to forget. --- When I get home, she has one arm and one leg splayed, reaching for the sky, her eyes squeezed tight, her mouth open wide, crying, “Look at me, I'm flying!” I say nothing back, but run inside to throw myself on the sofa and cry. --- “I’m with you on this one. Love sucks.” She smiles, face breaking out in dimples and I know it's a look that's meant for only me, and I feel my insides flip and my brain flop, and I know I should do better, but so what? So what. I heart love. --- I have a boyfriend? Does it count as breaking up if the words are never said? Maybe we half broke up. Maybe when you half break up, you don't have to say anything. The boy who first clicked the clasp of the necklace, stepped back to check it out, and said, “You look nice.” The master of sly looks and cool moves and smiles that charm the teachers and, sometimes, me. --- I say, “I am not your girl” and he says “I am already gone.” I think we broke up. --- I looked over at her face. Her eyes were closed. She was smiling. Maybe she was thinking. Maybe she was simply glad that I was there. With her hair in a braid, in her high white boots and her short, short skirt. She was a mystery I would never solve, only glimpse in moments she chose to share. --- The flowers, the flowing hair, the flashing eyes, the sun and then the rain and the rain and the rain that never wanted to stop. No clothes at all I blushed. I thought it would go on forever. --- I do not understand this girl, don't understand what I am to her. She doesn't try to hide eyes that have been crying. She says to me simply, “You don't know everything.” And goes to wash her face. My mind is full of not knowing. Maybe that explains the sadness in the corners of your eyes. --- “Remember when we were little and would swing out here in the summer evenings, counting fireflies, pumping higher and higher, racing to the moon?” --- I am a girl that kisses. She is wearing duct tape over her mouth. --- Thinking that she's brilliant and beautiful and amazing and loving the way she dresses and how the heel of her right shoe slips off when she sits on the edge of her desk. What does that make me? --- I ask my grandma, “What were girls like when you were my age? Did they mess with your head?” Grandma's shears go snip, and she straightens herself to look me in the eye. She hands me the tulips and we turn back to the house. “Rise above it,” she says, her hand on my shoulder. The air is turning colder as I tell her, “I’ll try.” --- She lived across the street. The house was empty. The tulips, all but the one dropping in my hand, nodded goodbye as I turned away. --- I go to wash my hands. They aren't especially dirty. Perhaps it's the loneliness I want to wash away. I never even said goodbye. --- A strong, sensitive girl fighting her way out. She got some kind of mouth on her. Pretty as a picture. Now, why do you think I’ve gone and fallen for a thing like her? --- Am I strong when I do not speak, but keep silent and accept the truth? --- If you are (I am) not part of the solution, you are (I am) part of the problem. This is who you (I) are (am).
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