Assigned
- Hashtag Kalakar
- Nov 10
- 3 min read
By Kasey Rodriguez-Vizcarrondo
They call me “she”—
like it’s a compliment.
Like the word doesn’t land
like a blade
between my ribs.
Like it hasn’t been
branded into my bones
with every careless echo.
Like it hasn’t burned itself
into the marrow of me.
They smile when they say it—
as if their soft tone
can soften the damage.
As if a gentler lie
hurts less.
As if a girl’s name
isn’t a noose I’ve learned to tie in silence.
Assigned.
Without asking.
Without pausing.
Without seeing.
One glance—
and the world decided.
I’ve been paying for that glance
ever since.
The mirror tells their story,
not mine.
A curve where I should be flat,
a voice I don’t recognize,
a face I perform
but never belong to.
I shower
with the lights off.
Not for atmosphere—
but because I can’t stand
to look down
at a body
that feels like a crime scene.
I dry off in silence,
without looking up.
as if the quiet might dull the scream
behind my eyes
I walk into the world
in a costume they praise,
while mourning the self
they’ll never see.
They call me “she”,
but they don’t hear the flinch
in my lungs.
Don’t see the panic
behind my stillness.
Every “ma’am”
every “girl,”
every wrong syllable
that feels like being branded
again and again and again.
Two of me.
One they see.
One I fight to keep alive.
Inside—
he breathes.
Steady.
Constant.
Waiting.
Not confusion—
But clarity in a cage.
And some days?
I bleed.
Not to die—
but to feel real.
Pain I can control,
wounds I give myself
when the world refuses to see me.
I carve he
into my thighs,
Into my chest,
Into my arms,
just to see it
written somewhere.
To make it real
because no one else
will write it for me.
I rehearse my name
in notebooks,
in fogged mirrors,
re-lettering my life
as if one day
it might stick.
Might matter.
Might be heard.
They say I’m strong—
but strength shouldn’t feel like this.
Like hiding.
Like whispering your truth
and fearing it might echo
into violence.
They call me “she”—
but they don’t know
how many nights
I’ve cried over photos
of a smiling stranger
who shares my face
but not my name.
The ghost of someone I never was.
A stranger’s body
I’ve had to rent
just to survive.
They don’t know
what it’s like
to feel like a traitor
for not becoming
what your family hoped you’d be.
To carry guilt
for simply…
existing
as you are.
And yet—I’ve learned to smile,
to nod,to perform a girlhood
that never fit,
never felt like home.
They call me “she”—
but I live in the moments between—
between mirrors,
between pronouns,
between breaths.
They don’t know
how dangerous it feels
just to be seen.
To walk out the doorwearing
truth on your sleeveand risk never coming back.
How I layer hoodies like armor.
How I mouth “I’m fine”
through gritted teeth.
How I fold into myself
every time
someone uses the wrong word
like a weapon.
They don’t know
what it’s like
to mourn a body
you’ve never had.
One that exists
only in dreams—
broader shoulders,
sharper jaw,
a voice that doesn’t betray you.
They call me “she”—
but I carry a name
like a secret.
Like a prayer.
Like a rebellion
pressed beneath my tongue.
Assigned.
like a prison sentence
written in ink
they swore was permanent.
But I am rewriting myself
in blood and fire and truth.
As if that word
can contain
my fire.
As if a doctor’s glance
knows more
than my own heartbeat.
I am not your daughter.
I am not a mistake.
I am not a phase
to be waited out
or shamed into silence.
I am a boy—
in a world that tries to erase him
with every pronoun,
every law,
every bathroom door.
But I breathe.
I speak.
I write my truth
in light,
in shadow,
in scars.
They call me “she.”
But I call me
“he”.
And one day—
one day—
the world will too.
By Kasey Rodriguez-Vizcarrondo

Moved me to tears. You deserve to exist 🫂
Moved me to tears. You deserve to exist.