“I know I shouldn’t ask you this…”
These words
A preface
allies say before they
Transfigure my trans joy
into dysphoria and doubt
Consciously biased people
Speak loud
The words typically whispered behind my back
“I know I shouldn’t ask you this…”
a pastor’s wife stated as she grabbed by breasts
As she squeezed she proclaimed
“it’s a shame you don’t like these,
they are amazing.”
“I know I shouldn’t ask you this…”
Said the voice in the line for coffee
after church
“What was it like,
having a penis growing up?”
“I don’t know,” I replied
In an exhausted sigh
The words I wished I could say
Were held in my throat
Behind a thin piece of plastic
That reminded me
bible thumping causes unholy sacred scars
“I know I shouldn’t ask you this…”
They ask my wife after church
“We know Megan is transgender,
but which way?”
“Megan is transgender” she responds
Refusing to make private parts
public talking points
“Yes, but which way,” they ask again.
“I know I shouldn’t ask you this…”
These words lead trans people
down a rabbit hole of shame
Once you wander in
the exit is sealed
With over 340 anti-trans laws
and vile legislation
that trades fertility for proper identification
I no longer fill the silence
Of your awkward words
Because my oversharing
makes the harm deeper
And I was told
I should not be killed
by a thousand papercuts
It is unsafe in this trans body
To close my eyes when I pray
To wince in pain
To name hate as hate
To be visible
Doing unto others is a privilege I do not have
So, most days I silence the words
I know I should not ask.
So, in a sacred act
of claiming my own name
“I know I shouldn’t ask you this…”
But has anyone ever lied to you
and told you that God does not love you?
If the bible must be thumped
Let us thump it in ways that prioritize
the poor, the lost, the lonely and the forgotten
Let me here in this holiest of holy
This sacred room
that for decades has proclaimed unconditional love
Here in this building
where the first trans organization met
In the corporation
where pastors testified in court
paving a legal path for trans rights
Let me poetically ponder
A few liberatingly biased questions.
“I know I shouldn’t ask you this…”
But how can God be present in water, wine and bread
But not in the heart of trans people?
On the day
we remember Jesus’ journey from the graves
Into the political arena,
Shashaying publicly
Unafraid
On a donkey
Let us also remember that the very next day
A gender non-conforming man carrying water
Owned the house where the last supper took place
Let us preside
In the fabulous, bejeweled vestments of our trans ancestors
the only ones allowed to lead ancient Easter gatherings
Let us be bold like the Ethiopian Eunuch
the first person after Jesus’ death
to be brave enough to ask to be baptized
“I know I shouldn’t ask you this…”
But are you ready to celebrate trans theology
without apology
Then speak up
Guard our bathroom stalls
Assume we pray
Celebrate our lives
Learn our names before our deaths
Love your scars
Embody the holy
And the next time
you know you shouldn’t ask,
Don’t.