think about my gravestone, what’ll the name be? Who’ll clean it? Sometimes,
I think about my bones, are my hips shifted? Will the anthropologist who discovers me tell people I was a woman? Will “woman” and “man” mean anything in the future? Sometimes,
I think about my skin, soft and decayed by fungi, possibly scrumptious, sweet fat cells filled with estrogen. I’ve become ready for love. It’s been hidden in my vial of estradiol, and now I find it in the mouth of my lover, deep inside, where I desire for her to say: “You look like a girl.”
Sappho Stanley is a transsexual woman living in East Tennessee with her cat Kevin. She will be attending an MFA Program in the fall of 2022. She has recently completed her Bachelor’s degree in English at East Tennessee State University. You can find her work in Lupercalia, The Mockingbird, Warning Lines, and forthcoming in the lickety~split. Her pronouns are she/her.