• How I Learned to Tie a Tie Without My Dad

    Perhaps he would have loved me enough. I’ll never know, and my eschatology doesn’t include a heaven from which re-embodied souls watch over our earthly lives. All I have is speculation about how he might have reacted to his daughter’s bisexuality, and to his daughter not being precisely a daughter at all.

  • I Used to Break Into Houses

    “I craved that isolation, that feeling of utter aching loneliness that I found inside houses where I did not belong.”

  • Line Breaks for Resistance: How Black Poetry Lets Us Rescue Ourselves

    If Alice Walker once said “hard times require furious dancing,” then hard times call for reading poetry, particularly black poets. Follow zaynab’s journey in reconnecting with black poetry as a means of daily survival and understand why reading the work of black poets can enhance our collective understandings of what it means to cultivate and sustain resistance.

  • Fifty Shades of White

    Having the blessing – or curse – of lighter skin is a double edged sword. I never gave much thought to the idea that society needs positive cultural images of minorities until I came to embrace my Hispanic heritage and come out of the closet.

  • I Had Facial Feminization Surgery

    “I paid a dude to knock me unconscious, peel back my face, and cut out chunks of my skull and jaw.”

  • Unwritten On The Body

    As with the meaning of written text, our bodies float somewhere between the author (ourselves) and the reader (those we encounter).

  • Going Mad in New York City

    “I feel like yelling at people,” she told me. I didn’t really grasp then that she meant that. This was the very first time. This was the day after Easter.