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I can’t f***ing breathe and I can’t get this f***ing tie off. Pulling at it, it just grips my throat tighter and I’m convinced I might die here. Die surrounded by my papers. My pathetic attempts at being known. Letting myself be known. The pathetic little attempts that left that word ringing in my ears.
F*ggot.
That’s what she’d called me.
It was a sardonic twist on her nuclear family. Rita had always wanted that from me. All those years ago, yelling in my pitchy voice “Lovely Rita” in the diner, I’d known we’d marry. How could we not?
I don’t know what she saw in my scrawny frame. I think she thought she could fix me. Fix us. Fix her sh*t dad and her cracked mother and her dirty life. Or maybe I was just for fun. We’d met at that time in life where you feel apt to marry the first person you find interesting. Well, interesting isn’t a promise. It isn’t love. It isn’t in sickness and in health. Folding a cold towel across my head when I’ve come home too late from a party again, stuck on a bad trip or perhaps too aware of my own being, she’d been a perfect saint. But it wasn’t love.
And it certainly isn’t when your husband turns out to be that sticking slur pressing on my throat.
But I sit there still, gasping for breath. I just can’t get the damn tie off.
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I am a black trans male author and artist located currently in Akron, Ohio. I make art and write stories about men struggling with their identity and the mortifying ordeal of being known.