I’ve never had anyone to love my body
I’ve never had anyone to love my body
So I’ve learned to love it myself
to count the freckles scattered across my skin
more like a night sky on the edge
of the city than in the wilderness,
trace them into constellations.
The two spots like snake bites on my forearm
where I used to twist my skin
until it felt like it would rip.
Most kids did them to each other,
called them snake bites,
but I had no friends or bullies,
so I did it to myself.
My skin has produced a permanent reminder.
Sometimes I wish I could go
back to before puberty
hit me like a bullet train.
Back to the smallest in everything.
I left sophomore year under five feet,
under one hundred pounds,
under an “A” cup.
I entered junior year with six more inches,
sixty more pounds,
four more cups.
Give someone who’s been short their entire life height
and they will have an instant god complex.
But the god complex has worn off
I keep asking for a new dose,
begging like the mouse for the cookie.
I chase the feeling of being comfortable in my body again,
shedding it everyday in search of new skin.
I count the freckles one by one,
give them names like the stars.
Odi Welter
Odi Welter (they/she/he) is a queer, neurodivergent author currently studying Film and Creative Writing at the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee. When not writing, they are indulging in their borderline unhealthy obsessions with fairy tales, marine life, superheroes, and botany. Their creative work has been published in many journals, including The Taborian, Crest Letters, and Wild Greens Magazine. Find them on Instagram.
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So I’ve learned to love it myself
to count the freckles scattered across my skin
more like a night sky on the edge
of the city than in the wilderness,
trace them into constellations.
The two spots like snake bites on my forearm
where I used to twist my skin
until it felt like it would rip.
Most kids did them to each other,
called them snake bites,
but I had no friends or bullies,
so I did it to myself.
My skin has produced a permanent reminder.
Sometimes I wish I could go
back to before puberty
hit me like a bullet train.
Back to the smallest in everything.
I left sophomore year under five feet,
under one hundred pounds,
under an “A” cup.
I entered junior year with six more inches,
sixty more pounds,
four more cups.
Give someone who’s been short their entire life height
and they will have an instant god complex.
But the god complex has worn off
I keep asking for a new dose,
begging like the mouse for the cookie.
I chase the feeling of being comfortable in my body again,
shedding it everyday in search of new skin.
I count the freckles one by one,
give them names like the stars.
Odi Welter
Odi Welter (they/she/he) is a queer, neurodivergent author currently studying Film and Creative Writing at the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee. When not writing, they are indulging in their borderline unhealthy obsessions with fairy tales, marine life, superheroes, and botany. Their creative work has been published in many journals, including The Taborian, Crest Letters, and Wild Greens Magazine. Find them on Instagram.
Enjoyed the writing? Share it and support the writer.