Shane Reid
The Word of the Loved
When they come for us, it isn’t gentle.
It isn’t careful nor soft—
Perhaps because they know that the world already thinks it can break us.
But they know: we aren’t so easily pried open.
They stand over us,
Smoke pouring from their lips,
Fire emblazoned in their chests—
Emanating a gospel different from the ones I hear in school assemblies and religion class.
When they come for us, it is kind,
It is reverence,
It is understanding.
It is the chorus, of people like me, of people like us,
And they say: “stand up. Be loud. Don’t apologise, for who could say sorry for being born when
it was out of our own hands? We do what we can with this lot life gives us. For now:
Stand up.
Be loud.
Don’t apologise.”
They don’t give me a weapon because my existence is enough to hurt,
According to the words written in headlines,
My—our—entire existence a threat enough.
But they give a hand: to help up on weakened legs.
We are not breakable but the world has done a number on us, on me.
Together,
We stand,
We are loud,
We never apologise.
Shane Reid is a Liverpool writer, dabbling in both poetry and fiction. As a trans man, he strives to write what reflects him and hopes to inspire others through his words. When he’s not writing, he’s definitely scouring Twitter for his next excited read, trying to find more trans books to add to his TBR. He also has a short story being published in the upcoming BEST SERVED COLD zine, titled THE BOUDOIR CLUB