• Desert Heartbreaker

    “I always went the extra mile for you and did so gladly because I loved being around you. You never returned these more concrete gestures, which should’ve been the first sign that things were not reciprocal between us, but I was oblivious and idealistic. I genuinely believed I had found love.”

  • The Might-Have-Been

    I was only pregnant for seven and a half weeks before my miscarriage. There was no body, no breath; there was no measurable part of a lifetime spent together. I’d only known there was life inside my body for three and half weeks, and yet the experience seems to still have a heartbeat.

  • Finding Roots Without Hiding My Rainbow

    “We don’t talk about our roots as they relate to the heaviness of humid air recycled through our generations on swampy plantations. My family has never talked about it with me, at least. It feels like a small betrayal, choosing to go south when we were given a new chance in the West.”

  • We Aren’t Failures: Naming What Was Lost as an Agender Person

    “Other people built a gender for me and trusted that I would defend what they built. But what I was handed never made sense.”

  • Butch Slut

    In the pool hall, my sweetheart and a close friend tease me one night: “unimpressive,” “pure luck,” “you aren’t that good.” They were trying to get my ire up so that an hour later when I told them to stare into each other’s eyes as I fucked my sweetheart’s body, I would mean it with a snarky competitive vengeance, I would mean it with power and control, I would be pushed to take what I want.

  • Every Trans Girl I Meet Is From the Future: Finding a Bereft Sisterhood

    I find myself preemptively mourning the transgenerational communities and cliques and cults and clubs and covens of girls like me that could be and may not be.

  • Cravings

    “Zoey and I tried to feed our cravings for simple American cuisine, but despite our clever substitutions and meticulous adjustments and innovative ingredients from the bazaar, nothing tasted quite right. Not bad, just not what we’d been looking for.”

  • Making a Home in the Closet

    I was a newly minted queer and everything I knew about queerness was rooted in coming out. I’d heard about the relief that came with coming out from everybody. If TV was to be believed, I would feel free even as my parents stopped looking me in the eye.

  • Uncharted Waters: A Trans Woman’s Journey Transitioning in the Navy

    “Presenting as male every day hurts. When the ship is in port, it’s not as bad; I grow to hate coming in to work, but once the day ends I can go home and be myself. When we’re underway, it’s worse. I’m stuck being ‘him’ all day, every day. Sometimes for days, sometimes for weeks… once, for months.”

  • Bad Religion

    “Here was a community where race apparently didn’t matter, because we were all humans, made in the image of God. Where a pacifist, sensitive, caring Jesus was the primary male role model. I finally felt at home. I was promised complete acceptance and understanding, and all I had to give was… well, everything.”

  • Wherever West Is

    “Loving women and loving the land are the two things I told myself I would never do, and somehow, they got all tangled up in each other.”

  • I Met My Sperm Donor’s Mom and It Changed Everything

    As the daughter of lesbian mothers, I always knew I had a sperm donor, and that I could meet him when I was 18. I loved my moms; I loved my queer family. Still, I had always wondered what part of me was cut from a different cloth.

  • Mastering the Art of Coming Out (and Making Lobster Bisque)

    “I decided to make lobster bisque for my mom at the same moment I decided to come out to her. Only one of those things went according to plan.”

  • Sharon Stone Crossing and Uncrossing Her Legs

    “I watched her zip up her white dress in the mirror; I watched her cross and uncross her legs; I watched her, and my friends watched her, and in the movie we were watching the other characters, men and women, watched her. I hated her so much, and so purely, with such satisfaction. I couldn’t look away.”

  • Feelings Rookie: A Tribute to Love

    When the world feels dark, we have to find the light where we can and hold onto it. This is a story about a bright, shining spot of goodness: My Granny.

  • Shoulder Pads and Short Cuts: How Grace Jones Made Me Powerful

    A love letter to the only woman that stole my heart and snatched my scalp at the same damn time.

  • Mama Outsider: No Place Like Home

    “Every day since my father died has been at least a little fucked up. There is no such thing as a non-fucked up day when you are a Daddy’s girl without a father.”

  • How Whitney Houston Taught Me the Greatest Love of All For My Queer Black Self

    My journey to self-love through the influence of Whitney Houston’s life and music.

  • I Was Trained for the Culture Wars in Home School, Awaiting Someone Like Mike Pence as a Messiah

    To take back the country for Christ, we needed to outbreed, outvote and outactivate the other side, thus saith The Lord.

  • Queer Latinx Love is Resistance: A Collection of Vignettes

    “There’s nothing more I want to remember than every moment and sensation we shared. Our grinding hips at Queer Cumbia, feeling your drunken sweat drip onto my freshly implanted tits. The way we sloppily made out and smeared our red and burgundy lips all over our mouths, noses, forehead, and neck.”