When I was eight years old, sitting in the bathtub in my almost-too-small-because-you’re-growing-faster-than-the-other-girls bathing suit, my mother taught me three things. Shivering beneath her touch, she slid a cheap pink razor up my leg. This was lesson one, Your skin is meant to be smooth. My mouth was hot with a heavy tongue when I asked why, and she taught me lesson two, It’s what women do. I felt a sting, my skin arguing against her with a thin red line that mixed with the shaving cream, turning it pink. My eyes began to well, begging to spill over and heal my deserted, naked, angry skin, but I was brave. In the smallest whisper, she taught me lesson three, Sometimes being a woman hurts. She finished in silence, took a plastic cup from the kitchen, filled it with warm water, washed me with the consequences of becoming. The water turned body into enemy, razor into machete, blood into war paint. In the bathtub, blood sliding down the bare leg of a woman, eyes swimming with the tears of a girl, my mother taught me and I listened.