A Love Poem to the Girls We Used to Be by Emma Hansen (she/her)

We spent spring after spring

years stacked on years

biting our cheeks 

and staining our mouths red

in bittersweet anticipation of 

Summer.

Proper noun. 

Our personal god who we hoped would finally,

given enough prayers

in the form of sunburn

and hair stained chlorine green,

provide us with that perfect warmth, 

the ever idolized freedom

we always craved. 

Ravenous for any ounce of Special 

we could squeeze out of ourselves

like our swimsuits dripping on the concrete,

I’m certain we were convinced 

that one too many days

drowned in the bottom of the deep end

would reward us with 

the glimpse of scales formerly under skin

of gills previously hidden. 

We wanted proof

that we were different. 

Good enough to be magic

that had simply been biding its time. 

Though our circumstances never changed

between the last day of school

and Memorial day, 

we always believed that beautiful, 

mythicalgolden,

most perfect of summers, 

would come along and take us

somewhere new, 

somewhere better,

and maybe it did,

or maybe we just grew up.

not out of magic, 

but into it.