Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Poem: "The Changeling's Return"

This poem came out of the May 3, 2011 Poetry Fishbowl.  It was selected in the generally sponsored poetry poll.  It was inspired by a prompt from haikujaguar who related an anecdote about a transgender person using the changeling myth to retell their own story.  This is the heart of all storytelling, the power inherent in myths and folk tales -- it lets us turn our own experiences into stories, making them easier to remember, to deal with, to incorporate into our lives.  Think about the stories you tell of your own life, and the family stories you pass down.  Then read this one, with its dual levels of meaning, the faerie and the transgender...


The Changeling's Return


Father, I know
you raised a daughter,
but she was never me.
She was a changeling child
that the fairies left in my place.

I'm sorry it took so long
for me to find a way
to banish her back Underhill
with the magic of steel knives
and a brewing far more complex
than any eggshells.

Father, I am here now,
the son you always wanted.
Let me sit at your knee
and learn the things
that men teach to boys.

If my face is still halfway
between handsome and beautiful,
if my voice sounds a bit fey,
if I seem not quite real --
it is only because I was raised on
fairy wine and clover honey
and the silver apples of the moon.
Give it time.  The mortal world
will remember how to hold me.

Father, I only want
to belong, to find the place
that should have been mine from birth.
Only give me the key to your heart
and I will be content.
Let the Fair Folk have their daughter back,
who dances in her pink dress
and laughs behind her lily hand.
Let me have the axe and the woodpile
and a shirt of good blue flannel.

I've made the long journey home.
It's up to you now to open the door
on our happily ever after.

Tags: cyberfunded creativity, fantasy, fishbowl, gender studies, poem, poetry, reading, writing
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  • 59 comments
Yeah, indifference is a good word for it. My biological sex doesn't feel wrong...just not terribly significant.
*nod* For me it is less significant than for most people, though not insignificant. I really orient based on souls, not bodies. Having a body that doesn't fit is like being stuck in an ill-fitting, itchy outfit all day: it may be uncomfortable, be misleading, drive me up a wall, and somewhat impair my function, but it's not going to change who I am nor is it going to kill me. And those last two things aren't true for most people. Usually sex/gender identity is a huge big deal.

For me, this is a direct consequence of being a shapeshifter and having farmemory of other lives. When you've been there, done that, and made a king-sized quilt out of the worn-out t-shirts ... it just stops seeming as important.

For you it's probably an effect of neurovariance; I'll keep an eye out for more examples in other asperfolk I know. I've read enough to know that that variant tends to create a very different emotional matrix than human-standard. *ponder* Which kinda makes me want to riffle the genderqueer community to see if it has a higher-than-statistical-norm representation of people who are not neurotypical.

This is fascinating.

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