Monday, February 9, 2026

 



Warm-blooded arms 
By Olivia Gwyn

Olivia,
don’t be afraid

I know your father sometimes
warned you what other men
would think about you

And it made you wonder,
worry what he thought of you

Don’t worry

Here’s the house where you
stepped on a yellow jackets’ nest 
and filled your mouth with water
cold from the hose

You walk down the steps
and bask in the jasmine scent,
the lizards warming their 
cold-blooded bodies 

Jump down from the porch,
trust your ankles to carry your weight

I promise, you no longer
bang your feet up the wooden steps,
cold-blooded with shame
after being told to change

The most beautiful part of
your body is it is safe

Remember to be gentle with yourself,
little one

Olivia, are you listening?

You can hang streamers from the rafters,
make the temple a celebrated-in place

Yes, here’s a room
where the walls
feel like home

The stained glass light 
stretching, bathing you in—
what?

Start to remember the words 
echoing in a different tongue

One from the foyer in the house 
where the hardwood was cast,
like spilled paint,
in warm afternoon light

And you used to lay in it,
like the cold-blooded animal you were,
looking for something outside of yourself

Remember—

Here is the room with the stained glass windows
and the streamers and the open door

I was with you on the hardwood floor
and on the Sunday morning steps
and on your bed when you tried not to think

I brought you safe to a place where you are,
where your daughter
will fling herself, laughing,
from the streamer hung walls 

The colored banners will hold
the weight of all her trust and fears

She will fall into warm-blooded
arms and know that she’s—
—Olivia?



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