Tue. Mar 3rd, 2026

This morning, I caught myself in the bathroom mirror, brushing my teeth with my hair sticking up in every direction. I looked a little wild, a little unbothered, and honestly, I liked it. There was a time when I would’ve rushed to smooth everything down, just in case. Now, I let it be. It’s a quiet thing, but it feels like a small kind of freedom.

Being Black and queer means a lot of things, most of them complicated, but today it just meant I could stand there in my own skin and not flinch. I remember how much I used to edit myself before leaving the house, making sure I didn’t look “too much” of anything. Too soft, too loud, too different. There’s a particular energy to being seen as a Black queer person — sometimes it feels like everyone’s got opinions about your softness, your wildness, your everything.

Lately, I’ve been noticing how gentle I can actually be with myself. It’s not dramatic. It’s not even something I talk about much. I just let myself like what I like, wear what I want, and laugh at my own little jokes, even if nobody else hears them. I let myself rest. That feels big, but also ordinary, which is its own kind of gift.

There’s a sort of hush in my chest when I realize I’m not trying to impress or defend or prove anything. I’m just here, a little sleepy, a little messy, and still whole. I think that’s what growing into my own gentle wild actually looks like — not a transformation, just a slow, quiet shift.

I don’t have a big conclusion. I just feel soft today, in my own way. I hope I remember this feeling tomorrow, even if my hair decides to do its own thing again.

By Kabal Briar

Kabal Briar is a queer Black storyteller, educator, and creator reshaping what it means to take up space with truth and tenderness. Through poetry, essays, and lived experience, he explores identity, joy, body acceptance, and the many ways we learn to love ourselves out loud. His work blends softness with strength, humor with heart, and personal history with universal feeling. Kabal’s mission is simple: to help people feel seen, valued, and brave enough to live in their own TRUTH.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *