A Good Little Girls Zine

What You Don’t See

What you don’t see is that one inch needle I inject into the skin of my belly every Saturday: the counting to three, the self-talks of “you got this bitch” and “just do it’s”; all so I can live a life you call normal and take for granted. What you don’t see is the athletic front-load squats these thick-muscled legs can perform. What you don’t see is how I show up for the people I love because it takes a village is the truth I live by. What you don’t see is how I advocate for those kids who need me, us to show up even when we are scared. What you don’t see is the way I powerfully plunge into unknown waters with absolute faith that I will learn to swim through every mistake. What you don’t see is the way I share—truth, my truth, even when it’s ugly and dirty and contaminated, so that we can use it to band together and change this world for your children.

What

you

don’t

see

Is my absolute courage, intelligence, love, and power—

Picture of Sonia Chintha

Sonia Chintha

Sonia Chintha is an Indian American writer who lives in the Washington DC area. She blogs, writes poetry, and fiction. She is also an English teacher who believes that our experiences teach us more than any test. She is the founder and co-editor of Good Little Girls.

You Might Also Like...

Mother, Daughter

a single tear glides down her cheek like a snail out for a walk down the driveway slow, slow, slow It’s time, her body knows

Read More

Dial Home

i look for you in my dreams, peering behind shower curtains and checking coat closets like childhood hide and seek i wish it were that

Read More

Semi-Sweet, Bitter-Sweet?

Guest Blog Posted by: M. Wilson-Alexander Everyone loves a chocolate chip cookie.  What is it about the combination: that sweet white sugar, delectable brown sugar,

Read More