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Sweaty Copper
Sweat glues my thighs tight
like a proper lady.
It is early and my body is drenched in sepia.
But somewhere I am iridescent –
if I only look at things that fly,
and nothing on the stairs.
If I trust my gravity instead of wishing
I had none.
If I never notice my glass legs,
maybe I will not crack.
Still, there is no air for my nose to feed on,
no breath where my chin can perch,
lay eggs of salty moisture in my pores.
This skirt will coax me
to pinch myself.
This feminine tank top,
the way it squishes me like a slut of a bug
will rip my eyes into scabs.
I need to leave the house in ten minutes.
If I remove my clothing
(instead of my skin)
I can change in time.
My timer has seen my rusting breasts
and I pretend I’m not ashamed –
The ticking slaps me with cold heat,
rushing me
as I condense into landfill.
My chest is flat now.
Time to sacrifice my ribs to the Gods.
I’ll throw my bones dipped in blood
at whoever sculpted this body,
whoever lumped on extra flesh
and made me someone I have to compress.
I’ll wrap my body in a pink bow
and send it back to the factory.
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Hazel is a sophomore in creative writing at a school in San Francisco. They have work published in Synchronized Chaos, The Weight Journal, and Tiny Day, the smallest ever newspaper, and have performed their poetry at the Youth Art Summit in San Francisco. When Hazel is not writing, they can be spotted cuddling their three cats, holding their python, feeding their tarantula, or rescuing insects from being squashed.