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Don't Ask Don't Tell
He keeps the pulpy image lying in his back pocket
Torn apart from derelict and friction
for we don’t love
Love the country
Love the duty
but you can’t love him
because there isn’t enough to go around
You can watch as fellow cadets kiss and grip their girls
enveloped with warm devotion and
pre-emptive goodbyes
but you have to save it
to tuck in your pocket
When others ask who has your eye
He becomes a blonde with a crooked smile
a girl that laughs like the the air is breaking out from her maw
It's a lie so poorly stitched together
that attention is turned back towards the crafter
and not the question
Because a gay soldier is a paradox
Soldiers learn to fight
while the queer kid taught himself at nine
Face wet and arms bruised
He learned to run in worse conditions
*
*
*
They can’t have you in the military
because recognition accompanies every booted step
A recognition of the hidden agony a mother exhibits at a border wall
after being told to walk back a hundred miles
she just traces her steps in the hot sand
You can’t give a glance of reassurance for the tiny boy
sitting on
American rubble
The scattered bricks
not American born
but American left
because you Love the country
Love the duty
You just can’t tell them who’s waiting for you back home
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Brook Wellington is a Boulder-raised youth poet and artist. They have written about social justice causes such as reproductive rights, feminism, mental health awareness, and LGBTQ+ issues. Their inspirations range all the way from Emily Dickinson to Amy Winehouse.