Sitti’s Scars

[Image description: a Palestinian woman in red hijab plants an olive tree.]

Sitti’s food is delicious, but her hands pay the price. My father complains that he suffers too. “Mama, stop cooking,” he whines. “I don’t have time to drive you to the hospital.”

Sitti laughs. “I have my hospital right here,” she says, shaking the box of band-aids she keeps by the stove.

The rest of Sitti’s Scars, a flash fiction piece, is available at the Baltimore Review.  I’m thrilled to be included among some incredible writers.

 

Please Stand Clear of the Doors

 

The subway. The el. The train. Chicagoans have so many words for our public transportation system. Most of those words are four letters long and hurled at bus drivers pulling away from the curb a moment too soon. Complaining about the Chicago Transit Authority is the city’s favorite pastime—surpassing our love of back porch cookouts, more constant than the corruption of our politicians, deeper than our sports rivalries. I don’t complain, though. For me, the crush of people, the delays, and the stench are a low price to pay for being able to go anywhere. I don’t drive. I never have and I have a seizure condition which ensures that I never will, so I moved to Chicago, where you can live like a person even without a car. When I arrived, the train doors opened for me.     

I wrote Please Stand Clear of the Doors, published by Slag Glass City, and I’ll be reading it out loud on at Essay Fiesta Puts On Metaphorical Fireworks Show on July 17th! You’ll want to come and listen to me subtly change things while I read, because I always do.

This story is my love letter to Chicago.  I wrote it on a damp day in Columbus, Ohio. It’s also about how painful and awkward it is to be gender nonconforming on public transportation.  I hope you enjoy it.

[Image description: View of the train tracks in the Chicago Loop.  Photo by Tony Webster from Portland, Oregon, United States (Chicago El) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons]

Granger Watch Episode 2: Harry Potter and the Pop Culture Conference Panel Recording

Oh yes, it’s Granger Watch!  This second episode is very special.  It was recorded live at DePaul University’s “Harry Potter and the Pop Culture Conference” during our panel “From Representation to Resistance – Re-imagining Harry Potter to Reflect our Struggles.”  Contents include:

Cynthia Medrano providing a brown girl reading of Hermione and S.P.E.W. [text here].
– Kennedy Healy drawing connections between “the boy who lived” and the radical potential of disability politics [text here].
– Joy Ellison (that’s me!) claiming Neville Longbottom as learning disabled [text here].
– Amazing insights from audience members on inter-generational organizing and using Harry Potter to inspire our resistance.
– Very critical commentary on wizard poop and the Hogwarts-to-Azkaban pipeline.
You can see the slides from our presentation right here.  It’s almost as good as being there.
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snape approves

[Image description: Snape claps.  Text reads “SNAPE APPROVES.”]

Getting ready for Ohio State University’s Queer Places, Practices, and Lives III conference!

Too Cute to be Binary

I’m pumped to present my paper “I May Be Crazy but that Don’t Make Me Wrong: Marsha P. Johnson’s Life and Activism through the Lens of Ableist Trans-misogynoir” at Ohio State University’s Queer Places, Practices, and Lives III conference. I’m also excited to be rocking my new “too cute to be binary t-shirt” and beyond thrilled to get to listen to a keynote from Miss Major Griffin-Gracie. [Image description: me, a white person with a goofy grin in a grey t-shirt with the text “too cute to be binary” and a blue and green sports coat.]

Granger Watch 1 – Howlers for Health Care

I’m excited to release my first episode of my new podcast Granger Watch!

Granger Watch is the real live 2017 vrs of the Potter Watch radio broadcast depicted in the 7th book of the Harry Potter series.  Naturally, it is named after Hermione Granger, the girl who saved everyone. It is the companion podcast for my Defense Against the Orange Arts video series.  While those videos focus on activist skills and how-tos, Granger Watch covers news about our resistance movements against the Butterbeer Bigot Donald Trump.

In this episode, I’m very excited to introduce my first guest, badass witch Amy Knickrehm.  Amy shares about her health care activism, including her ACA story project.   Listen for details about the #medicare4all bill, my theory that Mike Pence is a horocrux, and a very special Star Trek reference.

If you want to get involved in Amy’s ACA story project, send an electronic owl to tellmeyouracastory@gmail.com.  I also urge you to get involved with #medicare4all by sending a howler for health care to your elected officials.  A script that will make it easy is here.  If you want to learn more about how to contact your elected officials, then join me in the room of requirement for a Defense Against the Orange Arts lesson.

For members of the wizarding world who prefer to a text version, a partial transcript is available here.