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Straight A Girl
Straight A girl,
 Top of the class.
 Pastor’s daughter,
 Kissing teacher’s a**.
 She’s president of the school, smiling from the front row,
 With her nose in a book, with her face all aglow.
 
 She’s a straight A girl,
 A helping hand.
 A classic beauty,
 Pianist in the band.
 She never causes trouble but she’ll always lend an ear,
 Set her work aside, spread out her arms, and tell you, “Sweetie, I’m right here.”
 
 Then straight A girl
 Wears lips blood red
 The teachers gasp;
 She’s filled with dread.
 They grab her arm, yank her aside,
 “You can’t do that—it’s trashy,” they chide.
 
 Straight A girl,
 In a sunflower dress,
 Feels confident, pretty,
 But how could she guess?
 The teachers see her bra strap and they yank her away.
 “An open-backed dress? We thought you were better!” they say.
 
 She’s a straight A girl,
 She works in the church.
 So no one understands
 When one day she gets an urge,
 Takes clippers to her hair, shaves it off, finally free
 And the frizzy locks there on the floor, well, they don’t seem to disagree
 
 As she bleaches her hair
 And stains it blue
 As she pierces her ears
 “Four studs, ma’am, thank you”,
 Still an optimistic child, thrilled that she had the guts,
 Though still knowing deep inside adults that the adults will call her nuts
 
 Straight A girl,
 Principal’s chair.
 Tear-studded eyes,
 Bright blue hair.
 She was still the same person,
 All that changed was her looks.
 She still aced her SATs,
 Still couldn’t live without her books.
 Still tutored pre-K kids and then
 Each Thursday at 6 o’clock
 Set off far downtown to
 The Old Folks’ Home to help and talk;
 Still turned her essays in on time
 Lobbied for her social causes
 Tended a garden in her backyard
 And yet somehow it gave them pause when
 
 Straight A girl
 Pierced her ears
 Painted her lips
 REFUSED her fears
 The teachers made her cover up and wipe the lipstick off
 She did so slowly—she’d wanted adventure, and see what THAT had got.
 
 Clothing! Makeup!
 The length of your hair!
 Immaterial things—
 Just things that you wear!
 Just pieces of cloth that are labeled “good” or “trash”.
 That’s exactly what it is: a made-up choice, used as a trap.
 
 We’re told to watch
 Our every reaction,
 For somehow it is OUR fault if
 Someone else gets distracted.
 Everything you may have proved about your soul inside
 Apparently is null and gone if, oh God, your HAIR is dyed!
 
 PLEASE, school, please, adults,
 People are far more than that.
 Don’t make teens choose between
 Happiness and an act.
 You mean well, that I know; you want our childhoods to be conducive—
 AND abusive, AND illusive, smarts and looks mutually exclusive,
 
 INtrusive, OBtrusive, and though ‘ive’ rhymes become elusive,
 Some final words from a straight A girl down on her luck:
 I’ll decorate me how I want.
 Don’t like it?
 I don’t give a f*ck.
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