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Sugar, Spice, And Everything Nice
Girlhood.
I'm told girlhood is
short and sweet,
Girlhood means I am
meant to be,
I want to be,
sugar, spice, and everything nice,
and that is
femininity?
Picked apart and put back together
in every wrong order.
I am a girl, I am
fragile like a bomb
that lingers in the back
of my throat, bittering my tongue
like Tanqueray,
a mind rubbed away like
carpet burn, I am
pores clogged with
the spit of a man
trying to sink into my skin
a little deeper.
I am silent
as I try so desperately to
catch each tear and
shove them back into
my eyelashes so maybe
they'll grow.
But I am as dank as my
washed up eyes
as they tell me
“you are a woman now,”
and I fear that is worse,
because the wreckage of
our worlds
looks a little prettier
when we are young,
before we can understand that
beauty is pain, and pain is the
true divine feminine
that I hate so dearly.
So society kisses my cheeks
in my final throes, lips wet
with the shame it spilt all over me
for being something as disgusting
as a woman.
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I wrote this piece intentionally for a poetry show. I go to Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts within the Creative Writing department, and each year we put on a poetry show wherein every one of us speak/preform a poem of ours. This year, we named it 'Prose Were The Days,' as in 'those were the days.' This was, in part, to commemorate our childhoods and growing up, while also to commemorate our Creative Writing director Heather C. Woodward, who is, after 26 years of teaching Creative Writing, retiring.
Given our theme, I wanted to touch base on my experience navigating girlhood, and now womanhood. In "Sugar, Spice, And Everything nice," I address the pain, suffering, and true love of said pain and suffering that is experienced within being a female, and show through my performance that I, despite what womanhood may mean for society, love, wear, and embrace
"being something as disgusting as a woman."