Eight Years Old
I think of her now, the
way she moves,
slight on tip toes,
carefully balanced,
her hair like liquid down
her shoulders.
The way she leaps onto
the couch,
the way she still climbs
into my arms
curls up, the way her
hair smells
so familiar
the way family is a
person, yes
but, also a place
a home.
I think of the way she
owns her body
with reckless abandon.
The way she is so present
and alive and real.
How she dances and spins
tight as a coil and then
unleashes
all gangly and springing
abandon.
This girl.
This smart amazing girl.
As I hug her goodbye
she whispers secrets in
my ear
her breath a tickle.
She writes me stories.
She gives me things she
has made.
She tells me ideas she
has.
She plans and schemes and
dreams
each day unfurling before
her
as if they were endless.
Every time I say goodbye
I know that next time I
see her
she will have grown,
stretched,
her limbs strong and long
her laugh loud and
unstoppable.
This is what happens.
It is supposed to be
good.
Girls grow up. It is what
they do.
But I also know as she
grows, time shrinks,
I worry about the years
she has left.
How many?
Maybe five, tops.
Will it end at age
thirteen or before then?
I worry about the day,
the first time a boy
or a man remarks on her
body.
The first time a stranger
touches her.
I remember middle school
boys snapping my bra as
we passed in the hall
that knowledge that I was
a thing being seen
appraised
touched
without permission.
She will have it too, as
we have all had it.
That moment when she’ll
see herself
as they see her,
as a commodity,
as property.
As something that can be
owned.
The moment those perfect
limbs
will start to feel like
they do not belong to her anymore.
That moment when she will
realize that beautiful body
will be dissected and judged
and taken by others.
I want to dig my fingers
into the ground
and stop the world from
turning.
I want to scream back
time
I want to keep her here
where she is young and
full of hope.
I want to tear the stars
from the sky
I want her body to only
be hers
I want to lock her away
somewhere she will always be safe.
Where no one can ever
make her feel small or less or diminished.
I want to keep her
somewhere she’ll always be this vivid.
Instead,
I hug her hard
too hard
and she wiggles away,
dancing on those light
toes.
and when I leave I do the
only thing I can do.
I beg the universe for more
days.
As many as it can spare.
--Ally Malinenko
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