Tell the water I'm coming Tell the water I'm done with all my running Tell the water I'm ready Wash me clean, wash me clean again Tell the water I'm coming Tell the water I'm done with all my running Tell the water I'm ready Wash me clean, wash me clean again When we were just little girls My older sister almost drowned in my uncle's swimming pool We hadn't yet learned to fear water How it can reach it's claws around Your neck and turn your body against you My father signed us up for swimming lessons To teach us to move into the thick of fear and find our way through it On the first day, The instructor picked me up and Threw me into the deep end without warning With nothing but a rubber tube around my waist I Found a depth to my voice that i hadn't known existed A red scream that stretched itself across the length of the pool Reaching for no one And Every time I called out, gasping, coughing up water Heart hammering against my frail chest He pushed me back again and again for an hour straight By the end of the summer I had learned to swim My father never heard about the cruel instructor And I emerged A new girl who knew how her body Could be both the anchor and life jacket Loving you was a kind of drowning A panicked gasping I was always reaching for something I could never hold Everything I tried to write was stifled breath A mouth filled with water Leaving you Was the kind of chaos that comes with teaching your body a new trick Repeating it aggressively again and again Until either by fatigue or fate You surrender You gather just enough momentum and you move Tell the water I'm coming Tell the water I'm done with all my running Tell the water I'm ready Wash me clean, wash me clean again Tell the water I'm coming Tell the water I'm done with all my running Tell the water I'm ready Wash me clean, wash me clean again