By Anita Parrott

I am every one of the teeth in the mouth that bites the hand that feeds it.

I think that hand is wrong.

I came to know that hand because it gave me a pen. Gave me a space. Gave me the roadmap to trek my way and

escort my soul through the channels of my every pore to elicit change. T o lend the frequencies of my voice to

another being and consecrate a human existence to all suspended there to hear.

But that is not the hand’

s primary function.

The hand’

s function is also to consume. T o acquire. T o shuffle paper and electronic bills around until every

hand like it, every institutional hand, is blanketed under the weight of it and laughing giddy because the pressure

of it calms their anxieties that the teeth won’t bite back. W on

't use tools of expression to strip away their

comfort.

There is no evil in this world without power. There is no power in this world without money.

And while I am fed here.

Fueled here with self-actualization. Lifted up with knowledge and emboldened by the experiences of the teeth

that came before me. The teeth that know the hands well, and know more than anyone that the time for art is

now. The time for artists is now.

There is no expression without inspiration. There is no inspiration without life itself.

And if life is being taken anywhere. If lives are being taken to the magnitude that they are today. Not only in

death but in the seconds, the hours, and the years stolen away from the hopeful majority, all for the pursuit of

another weighted blanket for the big hands of the world…

Then, it is not time for the teeth to get whitened. Or to be polished. Or straightened up. Or filled.

Then it is time for the teeth to remember the food that nourished them, to draw energy from that food, and

then…

It is time to bite.

Anita Parrott is an actor and playwright, born and raised in Southeast Texas. Parrott's plays have been produced in Pittsburgh and in NYC with staged readings of Spew's Little Baby at The Tank and Rind Grind in The Maker's Ensemble Short Play Festival. Their work explores queer interpersonal relationship s in strange circumstances, mortality, future forecasts, and love however it comes. Recent acting credits include Riceland (Columbia University); The Orangery (Columbia University); Big Love (Columbia University); Passion Play (Columbia University); The She-Wolves (14th Street Y); and jamie b. (Caveat). Anita is a rising third-year in Columbia University's MFA Acting Program and holds a BA in Theater Arts from Duquesne University.

Interviewed by Mia Funk - Artist, Writer, Founder of The Creative Process and One Planet Podcast. Listen on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.