Hatred
by Calen Firedancing
the password to grandma’s computer
is hatred and her year of birth
hatred of the way sweat glimmers
on large black foreheads
a reminder of cotton and the way blood runs
from thorns to the flat hair on arms
of dehydration settled on the skin
white as ash
of men and marriage and men and marriage
fleeing West from Oklahoma
of hair knotted and breaking like ships in storm
carrying men to be slaves
of that same hair receding up the head
making the sweat shine higher
of women where men and marriage were not
and of beatings from women
and of men and silence
of the violations that do not speak
of old age
her scars becoming her skin
of still being marked
by it all
Calen Firedancing is a black queer poet, filmmaker, and undergraduate student at Williams College, majoring in English and Africana Studies. Originally born in Los Angeles, Calen now calls Phoenix home when he is not in Massachusetts. Calen is also a Mellon Mays Fellow, currently researching queer possibility in trap music. In his free time, he watches too much film, reminisces of days when he could hoop better, and enjoys the loud and quiet company of loved ones. The following poems appear in our spring/summer 2018 issue.