Up at Starlight
In my initial days of adolescence
I feared becoming a fag –
caressed between men’s fingers
lit up from out to inward by their looks
and sleight of hand, sucked in
from the bottom until I was ash.
Right around the same time
my sister admitted to our mother
that she watched the L-Word
not out of fascination but affirmation;
yet when my sister would use the g-word
as an insult, our mother thought it
Disrespectful. Ironic then
that when my lesbian sister
became my transgender brother
years later, our mother cried
why couldn’t you just stay gay?
She murmurs
Either way, I’ll pray for you.
My sister used to tease me saying
I’d grow up gay. At last I asked her: how
can you and your lover lay on the roof
of your car at a rest stop staring up
at starlight knowing full well the men there
Filling up want to turn their pumps on
you – gasoline soaking into your flesh
while sparks flutter so you blister
as any fag would? I fear too,
she answered then, but
eventually they’ll see we’re all ash.
I find myself in dreams
still begging him for his forgiveness
for my bigotry across thousands of miles
of manifest destined plains.
Mistakes are what makes us human
he answers now, but
dousing the flames makes us beloved.