Pictures of You: Jennifer Pieroni

“Jump,” by Jennifer Pieroni

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 Here I am at the age of four training a kitten.

If I could, I’d invite five kittens like this in today, just to watch what they do. I can’t. It’s unfortunate that in my late thirties, I’m suddenly allergic and also the responsibility of the litter box is a constant back and forth between my husband me, neither one of us eager to own the job of cleaning it. So we have just one cat.

 I have never thought about the earliest circumstances that led me to understand how little control I have of others. My current opinion is: I have none. It’s like if I could have all of the kittens in the world, I wouldn’t condescend to them. I wouldn’t expect them to oblige me, not in any way, because I know they probably won’t. I know they might not ever. Continue reading

Pictures of You: Deborah Jiang-Stein

“The Fuel of Rejection,” by Deborah Jiang-Stein

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I love to roller-skate. It’s one of my favorite things to do, a place where risk is safe, most of the time, and where the smooth surface in the roller rink and good wheels and bearings make all the difference in the ride. A few derby leagues have invited me to guest skate, that’s how much I love it.

Skating feeds my appetite for risk, especially since I’ve removed the rubber toe stops. I skate without brakes because it’s also how I’ve lived in most ways. I’m still learning how to “brake” in life.

Writing Prison Baby, took my guts as a skater and the same threshold for risk. And, I had to learn what to filter, where to “brake.” Continue reading

Pictures of You: Nadine Darling

” Haircut,” by Nadine Darling

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I got the classic Mia Farrow “Rosemary’s Baby” haircut for my 35th birthday, at Vidal Sassoon in Boston. It was planned meticulously; I called the salon and asked for my hair to be cut by the director, a man named named Jacques. He had the most experience, they said, but he was also the most expensive. I assured them that that was fine. My mother was paying.

After donning my silky robe and having my hair washed by a tiny woman with several facial piercings and stomping Doc Martens, Jacques stood behind my chair and brushed my wet hair out with his fingers. His age seemed impossible to know. He had some kind of accent- not really French, but something. Chains that hung from his leather pants clinked like silverware with the slightest movement. We looked at me in the mirror. He asked me what I wanted and I told him. He was not surprised, but he smiled, his hands still in my hair. Continue reading

Pictures of You: Susan Henderson

“Patrol Camp,” by Susan Henderson

I carry a very particular picture of myself in my head, the identity that stuck, or perhaps the identity that feels most true. Someone will tell me I’m pretty or sweet, and I’ll look in the mirror and see this kid:susan henderson.jpg

This is me having a big old time at patrol camp. This is back in the days when my dad still cut my hair on the kitchen stool, and obviously I did not bother to dry my hair for the photo. Maybe you can tell by the Billy Idol sneer how I take to dressing up in paper headbands and feathers.

I went to patrol camp the summer before sixth grade to become “an officer.” This selection means I was misunderstood to be a child who would not light her patrol post on fire or try to send the kids across the street when they were most likely to get run over. Continue reading

Pictures of You: Myfanwy Collins

I remember the adults at the after-wake playing a tape recording of my dead father as he told stories. All the drunk people listening to the tape were laughing. I didn’t understand then that they were laughing because they were sad. It was right there. His voice. If I try really hard, I can catch bits of it at the tops of my ears, but then they blink away.

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After my mother died, I kept a voicemail from her on my phone for a long time. My husband tried to save it for me but now it’s long gone, too. Then I saw her in a video from years and years before, walking, alive, and there was her voice. Her voice. I never wanted to let go but the tape began unraveling and was lost.

The smell lingers on clothing, in bedding. This is probably what you first knew of the people who cared for you when you were newly born, their smell. Their voices were more muffled to your new ears. You were used to listening through fluid, through skin. Your eyes unfocused. You knew them by the scent that is so unmistakably their own. That scent that you only notice in their absence. A puff of smoke, like magic. My mother has been dead for fourteen years and I still have a scarf of hers that I take out and smell every once in a while if I am feeling like I must. It is a small torture. I am that baby again, reaching up to her. Continue reading