Voyeurism

Mar 1, 2025 | 2025 Spring - Pieces of the Puzzle, Poetry

By K. Olivia Overton

Channel 62 at 2:00 a.m.
features naked ladies
and a man’s voice that guarantees
the second DVD free
sent in discreet packaging
if you call now.

Their shiny skin and soft cries
made her tummy tickle
like when she would rub her scraped palms
against that secret place
Mommy said not to show anyone.

“Why do I feel bad now?”
She asked. Mommy promised,
“Because the Holy Spirit knows.”

Guilt was a sticky sadness
like leftover cotton candy
staining her tiny fingertips,
rotting her tiny teeth.
Shame penetrated the shallow cavity
of her flat chest where the Holy Spirit was
supposed to be.

Shedding wet remnants makes it difficult
to ignore that secret place now
shrouded in damp curls.
But at 2:00 a.m.
she would remember
their shiny skin and soft cries.
She would embrace
that sticky sadness
in a boneless
keening prayer
that brought her closer
to God than any man ever would.

She would stare at the crucifix
in elated devastation,
touch her own shining skin,
crying softly:

let Him see, let Him see.

 

K. Olivia Overton, an Indiana-born Floridian in the U.S., struggled not with being gay but with being “gay enough” when she was a little girl. Her poem “Voyeurism” challenges the internalized anti-queer ideology of her religious upbringing. When she isn’t filling out grad school applications, Olivia crochets, belly dances, and bakes bread.

Related Articles

I’ll survive

Meredith Dunn is a political organizer in the Nashville area in the U.S. She works with local democratic and nonpartisan activist groups in hopes of making Tennessee a safer space for everyone in the LGBTQIA2S+ community. Quote is from the song “I Will Survive,”...

read more

Imbalances

By Sara Collie I am 10 or 11, navigating some pre-teen cusp of selfhood when the question rises up, engulfs me, troubling that long sunstroked lunch outside the Cornish pub under the looming cliffs where I watch the waitress tuck her hair neatly behind her ears,...

read more