Pocket-Size Feminism - Blythe Baird

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The only other girl at the party

is ranting about feminism.

The audience: a sea of rape jokes and snapbacks

and styrofoam cups and me.

They gawk at her mouth like it is a drain

clogged with too many opinions.

I shoot her an empathetic glance

and say nothing. This house is for

wallpaper women. What good

is wallpaper that speaks?

I want to stand up, but if I do,

whose coffee table silence

will these boys rest their feet on?

These boys

I want to stand up, but if I do,

what if someone takes my spot?

I want to stand up, but if I do,

what if everyone notices I've been

sitting this whole time? I am ashamed

of keeping my feminism in my pocket

until it is convenient not to, like at poetry

slams or woman studies classes.

There are days I want people to like me

more than I want to change the world.

Once I forgave a predator because

I was afraid to start drama in our friend group

two weeks later he assaulted someone else.

I'm still carrying the guilt in my purse.

There are days I forget we had to invent

nail polish to change color in drugged

drinks and apps to virtually walk us home

and lipstick shaped mace and underwear designed to prevent rape.

Once a man behind me at an escalator

shoved his hand up my skirt

from behind and no one around me

said anything,

so I didn't say anything.

Because I didn't wanna make a scene.

Once an adult man made a necklace

out of his hands for me and

I still wake up in hot sweats

haunted with images of the hurt

of girls, he assaulted after I didn't report,

all younger than me.

How am I to forgive myself for doing

nothing in the mouth of trauma?

Is silence not an act of violence too?

Once, I told a boy I was powerful

and he told me to mind my own business.

Once, a boy accused me of practicing

misandry. You think you can take

over the world? And I said No,

I just want to see it. I just need

to know it is there for someone.

Once, my dad informed me sexism

is dead and reminded me to always

carry pepper spray in the same breath.

We accept this state of constant fear

as just another component of being a girl.

We text each other when we get home

safe and it does not occur to us that

not all of our guy friends have to do the same.

You could literally saw a woman in half

and it would still be called a magic trick.

Wouldn't it?

That's why you invited us here,

isn't it? Because there is no show

without a beautiful assistant?

We are surrounded by boys who hang up

our naked posters and fantasize

about choking us and watch movies that

we get murdered in. We are the daughters

of men who warned us about the news

and the missing girls on the milk carton

and the sharp edge of the world.

They begged us to be careful. To be safe.

Then told our brothers to go out and play.

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