Tag: sacred femininity

  • A figure stands with candles in hand, covered in ink and gold. Title card for The Gospel of Softness II by trans poet Rowan Evans.
    The Gospel of Softness II

    Modern Gothic Poetry for Those Told to Harden


    This is the second entry in the “Gospel of Softness” poetic series, written as a benediction for the tender-hearted, the wounded, the wild, and the soft ones who survived the fire without letting it steal their empathy.

    “I was told to man up.
    But I was never a man.
    And even if I had been—
    the fire did not forge me into steel.
    It melted me into gold,
    soft and sacred,
    ready to carry the ache of others.”
    — R.E.


    Prologue

    Prologue: The Lie of Hardness

    I was raised on sermons of rigidity.
    Taught that survival meant silence, that kindness was weakness, that softness would be my undoing.
    “Man up,” they said.
    But I wasn’t a man.
    I was a poem wrapped in wrong pronouns. A girl who bled empathy instead of bravado.

    The world said pain should make me harder. But it didn’t.
    The fire softened me. And in that softening—I became something holy.


    Part I

    Part I: What They Called Weakness

    They mistook my softness for fragility.
    But softness is not the opposite of strength. It’s the witness of it.
    I’ve held the broken pieces of friends, lovers, strangers—
    I’ve held myself in the midnight hush, trembling but still breathing.

    They called me too sensitive. But sensitivity is how I see souls.

    They said, “Don’t cry so much.” But tears are just prayers spoken in liquid.

    They wanted me to be a wall. I chose to be a cathedral.


    Part II

    Part II: Vessel of Fire & Flesh

    Pain made me pliable. Not weak—mystic.
    I bend because I feel.
    I hold others’ sorrow like it’s scripture.
    My softness is carved from suffering, but polished in purpose.

    The world teaches us to survive by becoming sharp.
    But I survived by becoming open. By bleeding in ink instead of rage.

    I write poems instead of manifestos,
    But let no one doubt:
    This pen is a sword.
    My softness is a spell.


    Part III

    Part III: The New Doctrine

    Let this be the doctrine of those made to feel monstrous for being tender:
    We are the new saints.
    Not of purity, but of presence.
    Not of silence, but of sacred screams.

    We are made of candle wax and flame.
    We are roses with teeth.
    We are softness that bites back.

    I do not need to be hard to be holy.
    I do not need to man up to matter.
    I only need to remain soft enough
    to feel the world,
    and fierce enough
    to survive it.


    Benediction

    Benediction

    So here it is: The Gospel of Softness.
    Part II.
    The unwritten verse of every girl who cried too much, felt too deeply, and still dares to open her chest like a temple.

    Let softness be your heresy.
    Let kindness be your rebellion.
    Let poetry be your revenge.

    And if anyone ever tells you to harden—

    Tell them:
    “I was born of fire.
    But I am a vessel.
    Not a weapon.”


    The Gospel of Softness I – Modern Gothic Poetry for Women of All Kinds
    The Gospel of Softness III – Thirteen Psalms for the Tender-Hearted

  • ☽ Poetry by Rowan Evans ☾
    Neo-Gothic Confessional Romanticism


    A woman, a witch, a siren. The Luminous Heretic with the moon shining behind her, candles, flames. Myth, moonlight and stardust. "Creed of the Luminous Heretic" by trans poet Rowan Evans overlayed.
    I was born in the dark, forged jn the fire—

    You are not too much.
    You are the exact amount of holy
    this world was never ready for.

    A Poem for All Women Who’ve Been Told They’re “Too Much”


    This poem is for every woman—trans, cis, and beyond—who has ever been told she was too much. Too loud. Too soft. Too angry. Too gentle. Too queer. Too bold. Too broken. It’s a reclamation of sacred femininity across the binary and beyond it.

    Born from shadows and fire, this piece is a poetic anthem of softness, rage, survival, and sovereignty.
    If you’ve ever bled and bloomed at the same time—
    This is for you.


    ❖ We Were the Fire Before the Flame
    A Poem for All Women Who’ve Been Told They’re “Too Much”
    ☽ Poetry by Rowan Evans ☾

    We were born in the dark—
    not broken, but blooming,
    not soft, but sacred.

    In the marrow of midnight,
    we carved altars out of silence
    and lit them with our names.
    We bled into the soil
    and it grew wildflowers with teeth.

    They called us witch
    when we spoke with clarity,
    whore when we craved without shame,
    sirens when we sang the truth
    too loudly for their liking.

    But we remember—
    how we burned,
    how we danced,
    how we stitched our souls
    from ribbons and ruin.

    Every scar is a scripture.
    Every bruise is a baptism.
    Every ache is a cathedral
    that houses our fury,
    our softness,
    our will to rise again
    with the elegance of thunder.

    We are not porcelain.
    We are obsidian:
    kissed by shadow,
    cut from starfall,
    eternal and unyielding.

    Our femininity is not a cage,
    it’s a crown
    woven from thorns, yes,
    but also from moonlight and myth.

    To the daughters of storm
    and the sisters of silence
    You are seen.
    You are sovereign.
    You are the poem,
    not the apology.

    You are not too much.
    You are the exact amount of holy
    this world was never ready for.


    If this poem resonated with you, share it with a sister, a daughter, a mother, a friend, a lover, or your younger self. Let her know:
    She is sacred. She is sovereign. She is not alone.


    The Gospel of Softness II – The Fire That Softened Me
    The Gospel of Softness III – Thirteen Psalms for the Tender-Hearted