NANDAD
This poem by James McDermott explores how families teach us gender, sexuality and shame. Illustration by Meital Shushan.
I lie on the floor of the living room
in my family home to play with my
two year old niece who calls my father nan
dad my sixty year old father calls her
princess i’m five when father calls me sis
sy for wearing wellies on the wrong feet
father puts her in a pink dress the hu
man eye can distinguish ten million dif
ferent colours father teaches her not
to colour outside the lines humans are
the only animals who can draw straight
lines father taught me how to draw stick men
in black and blue their heads empty white space
three point five billion different men are
alive suicide race hate their biggest
killers father reads my niece a fairy
story which ends happy when the boy gets
the passive girl I’m ten when father calls me
a fairy for wanting to be snow white
there are 450 species
of animal that show signs of queerness
only 1 species is homophobic
I read my phone in the UK women
make up 22% of the boys
in blue I was stopped searched for being dressed
as a woman 86% have
been assaulted I was punched for being
my niece rips off her dress tears up the book
leaves her dressing up box for my father’s
tool box takes his hammer to redraw him
This poem appeared in The Family Issue of Popshot Quarterly. On sale now.
To ensure that you never miss a future issue of the print magazine, subscribe from just £24 for 4 issues.