Delilah McCrea

Every Mirror A Haunted House

this is not a poem
about being trans
it’s a poem about seeing God
in one’s own flesh
and how terrifying
that truly is

in every word an echo in every echo a word

imagine something you can’t imagine

      imagine you can’t imagine something

sometimes when i have trouble breathing i tell myself a scary story to induce panicked gasps of air

sometimes when i’m scared i’ll hold my breath until it goes away

i never feel alone
is that what it means to be haunted

imsosorryimsosorryimsosorryimsosorryimsosorryimsosorryimsosorryimsosorry

when i look into mirrors
i never know what i’m seeing

when mirrors look into me
i feel unseen

this is a poem
about being trans
it’s a poem about seeing God
in one’s own flesh
and how terrifying
that truly is

re(ge)ndered 

I make myself

die///
jest///
able///

so you*

*who is you (in this poem)?

can more easily swallow me

would (n’t) want you to choke

me 

down

would (n’t) want you to think 

critically about anything that you don’t understand

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
I am a womanb ys

  e b r 

b ys   d b ys

bec  e  e 

y u

  e   t

a g rl

  d  y u’ll  ever be 

Ode to Trannies

We are the holiest creatures

If you ask me to elaborate on this
I will say

No

will say

Fix your hearts or die

There is a tiny god in my hands
who speaks in reverse

I cannot hear the words
but they are devastating and beautiful

We are the holiest creatures
You don’t get an explanation

Were you there
when we laid the foundations of the earth?

Who fathers the drops of dew?
From whose womb comes the ice?

Ee-ahd ro straw hro-ee scif

Poem In Which I Don’t Mention the Body

It’s on fire.
It’s lying in the middle of the floor
at a party and it’s on fire.
Is it literally on fire
or is it unbearably warm?
Yes.

When touched
it does not recoil
nor reach out longingly
for it is not a body.

The non-body, 
the emptiness,
is not bleeding
at the moment.

It does not
run away from itself
at every reminder
of childhood.

It cannot run,
for it does not have any
running apparatus
because it is not a body.

It is neither
hungry nor 
sated. 
It is empty.

The body
is not in this poem,
it’s buried somewhere
southwest of Tucson.

Sometimes,
you can still feel it.

God is a cunt

and I’m crawling out of him

God the mother
fucker.

God the bruised.
God the thirsty.

God the holiest hole
is the one in the back,

the one every
body has.

What I’m saying is
God is inside all of us.

What I’m saying is
God is inside all of us.

What I’m saying 
is God 

is a faggot,
and so am I.

You might call this poem
blasphemy, but believe me

no greater praise could 
drip from my lips.

Drip from my lips
like God’s seed

when I sucked
her dick in the bar bathroom

the first night we met.
Before we did anything

we both made sure 
the other was sober

because God values consent
and so do I.

God, she tasted
like God,

tasted like ambrosia,
tasted like

cunt.

Delilah McCrea is a trans-anarchist poet. She loves the NBA and knows the lyrics to every Saintseneca song. Her work can be found in Vagabond City, Gordon Square Review, Petrichor, Night Coffee Lit, Hobart After Dark and her website https://dtmccrea.wordpress.com/