Squatting With My Earth Sisters by Carson Wolfe
Editorial intern Jay Gootjes on today’s poem: In her poem, “Squatting with my Earth Sisters,” Carson Wolfe takes readers on a journey exploring womanhood and nature. Her beautiful language delves into the spidery, intricate path of Wolfe’s evolving environmental and spiritual bonds with nature and her fellow women. The poem expands its scope by incorporating whimsical, vulnerable images that probe the multi-faceted relationship between humans and earth.
Squatting with my earth sisters
Around a tree seedling,
panties at ankles, we release
our pelvic floors, harmonize
to the sound of us earning
degrees in sustainable
permaculture. Thea reaches
inside of herself, pulls out
a silicone harvest. Sips it
like cranberry echinacea.
On my first day here, the girls
took me down to the river
to bathe, where are your pubes?
they’d asked, outraged
by wax and deodorant.
I look like them now,
my nipple piercing
healed as I sit in lotus
at the meditation circle,
labia flowering on woven rugs.
I am still growing
into the woman who can
crawl on all fours
and press my face
into each salted sauna,
to flick like a wing
in a rusted birdbath.
At dusk, the feral dogs
come sniffing.
Carson Wolfe (they/she) is a Mancunian poet and winner of New Writing North’s Debut Poetry Prize (2023). Their work has appeared or is forthcoming with Rattle, The Rumpus, The North, New Welsh Review, and Evergreen Review. They are an MFA student of Creative Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University and currently serve as a teaching assistant on the online writing course Poems That Don’t Suck. Carson lives in Manchester with their wife and three daughters. You can find them at www.carsonwolfe.co.uk and on Instagram @vincentvanbutch
If you would like to show your appreciation for the writer’s work, you can send them a tip through paypal @carsoncrane91