(Hi. I’m Justin Martin. Throughout history, in religions both pagan and Abrahamic, there’s a huge value placed on naming things. Knowing something’s true name is a way of either binding it, in the case of demons, or loving it better, in the case of angels. I thought that, as a disabled person, it’d be helpful for me to name some things before I transition to adulthood.)
NAMING MY ANGELS AND DEMONS
By Justin Martin
To the nights when I’m still up at 3 AM wondering what will happen if my child wants to learn how to throw a football, I name you Ambrose.
To the realization, at an early age, that I would have to learn to open even the heaviest of doors, because nobody would ever bother to turn the buttons on, I name you Andronikos.
To the people who, earnestly and without malice, ask me if I have a penis as casually as old ladies ask to borrow cups of sugar, I name you Arcadius.
To the thankfulness that my penis, unlike the vast majority of my body, is still on speaking terms with me, I name you Aristocles.
To the feeling when you see a little girl playing Dance Dance Revolution at an arcade, simultaneously hating her for not realizing the miracle and loving her for never having to, I name you Arsenios
To the moment when a small cousin is climbing on my wheelchair like a jungle gym and I understand that fear, pity, and shame are all adult inventions, I name you Basilious .
To all of the birthday cakes I’ve barely eaten at the parties I’ve barely been invited to, I name you Cassander.
To all of the mothers who forced their children to invite me anyway, but never forced themselves to consider why their children and their society put me on an island, I name you Cyrus.
To the glorious chocolate drop contained within the three second pause after I make a cripple joke, when the audience considered if their laughter would tan them in the afterlife, I name you Demetrius
To the people who decided to call it “The Special Olympics” instead of “The Olympics That Even NBC Won’t Air”, I name you Draco.
To the Center For Disease Control, who all too often seems to have placed a quarantine on any table I sit at, I name you Euclid.
To the people just insane enough to break the quarantine, I name you Eutropius.
To the years where there was mulch around the swings and slides of the playground, where I learned the value of the people who were more comfortable outside of it, I name you Georgios.
To the six seconds before I drift under a surgical knife, exhaling to draw the border between the times when things happen through me and the time when things happen to me, I name you Herodotus.
To comic books, where it is more likely for someone to be bitten by multiple radioactive spiders than it is for them to live happily while disabled, I name you Homer.
To the little battles for dignity, whose cannon-shots are seen in the eyes of people who hear me sing a stave of music or help me set up a decent spare in bowling, I name you Isidore.
To my doctor, who still asks me if I’m having unprotected sex every time we have an appointment, proving that even medical school can’t kill one’s optimism, I name you Kleopatra.
To the constant dread that takes hold when people ask me what I did this weekend and I remember that most people can fit into their cars, I name you Leonidas.
To the realization that my parents felt worse hearing that than I did writing it, I name you Linus.
To all of the energy I subconsciously devote to not looking spastic, I name you Myron .
To whatever force blessed me with the ability to, when told that God will heal my legs, not respond with “is that before or after he fixes your brain?”, I name you Nikon .
To the fear that I’ll want to go around one more time, less limited, I name you Olympos.
To the peace in knowing that if I don’t live to see a just world, I can make sure that my children do, I name you Philon.
Ambrose, Andronikos, Arcadius, Aristocles, Arsenios, Basilious, Cassander, Cyrus, Demetrius, Draco, Euclid, Eutropius, Georgios, Herodotus, Homer, Isidore, Kleopatra, Leonidas, Linus, Myron, Nikon, Olympos and Philon, I cast you into the arms of my great-grandfathers for the sake of the fathers to come.
Will you
tell me what is happening to me?
Why
can’t I listen to music or poetry or your sleeping sounds without the tear of two riptides pulling me in opposite directions?
Why
do my eyes adjust more easily to the unfiltered sun than that casual look on your face?
Is it normal to
feel flames on the inside of my skull at the sound of your name?
Why,
when I forgot what I ate for breakfast, can I remember your exact inflection, the lilt in your voice, the way that you rubbed the back of your neck and tilted your head to the side when you told me, three weeks ago, that the color of that t-shirt “isn’t the best” on me?
What do you make of
the spinning thoughts that dominate my mind but are only spoken in my morning daze between sleep and consciousness?
Have you ever
spent hours rereading my text messages, wondering what I meant by “please be safe?”
How long does it take you to
fall asleep at night when I’m not beside you?
Will I ever forget
what it’s like to wake up with your arms around me?
Is
this love?
And if it is
can I please have the cure?
Three years later, a new girl sits cross-legged on your bed.
She tastes like a different flavor of bubblegum than you are used to.
She opens up a book that you had to read in high school, and a folded picture of us falls out of chapter three.
Now there are two unfinished stories resting in her lap.
Inevitably, she asks, and you tell her.
You say: I dated her a while back.
You don’t say: Sometimes, when I’m holding you, I imagine the smell of her vanilla perfume.
You say: She was younger than me.
You don’t say: The sixteen summers in her bones warmed the eighteen winters my skin had weathered.
You say: It’s nothing now.
You don’t say: But it was everything then.
“collarbone heart” -x.v (things i would write on your skin if i could pt.2) // poetry from before
.
i had a dream that
you held me against
the gray bathroom tiles
and kissed me in my school uniform
while your thumbs slipped under my
sweater and i remember
when our tongues could dance no more
i wrote this up and down
on the inside of your right hand:
“i am black ink and mismatched metaphors
flowing in my veins and
you are full of life and red blood
underneath your skin and
for the longest time i thought
i would keep this dead poetry inside of me
but when you touch me
i feel like i am breaking
in the most beautiful of ways
and my skin is on fire
with your love and
i am shattering completely
so much all at once that
i do not want this feeling to end
because i cannot contain
all my black ink words
inside me anymore
and i am sorry they
are spilling onto your skin
but that is where they
they have found life ”
“I hope this ink sinks
into my bloodstream
because at least
then I’ll have an essence
of you running through me.”I woke up with this written on my hand