Twin Towers

April 30th, 2012

We are reflections of each other

except I’m on the top
and refuse to look down.

We are reflections
except I’m on the bottom
constantly looking up.

We are reflections
but I stand in the sun
which lights the way.

We are reflections of each other
but I stand under the moon
which lights the night.

We are twins
yet I stand tall.
We are twins
yet I crawl.

We are the twins towers
of poverty and privilege
connected
by an umbilical cord
which pumps
only bad blood.

Oh look!

A plane is coming our way.
Come, plane, come!

We are the twin towers
of poverty and privilege
and there is nothing
permanent
that one plane or two
can do to us.

We can be tortured.
The steel that structures us
can be made to scream.
Cities can be blanketed
in the ash
of our destruction.
Thousands upon thousands
can die.

What is that to us?

Once the wind clears
and time has silenced the cries;
once we have sent our own
to kill and be killed
we will be rebuilt
even higher

as a single monument
to the twin towers
of poverty and privilege.

NaPoWriMo #3: Faces & Masks Cento

April 3rd, 2012

Ever since dawn
the ground has been steaming;
pleading for a drink
and the living seek shade
and fan themselves.

Hidalgo spent the night with his eyes
fixed on the ceiling of the cell
saying goodbye:

my father didn’t put me among the rich
or the generals or those who have money
or claim to have it.

my father put me with the poor
because i am poor.

At the edge of the village of Morón
a common grave
swallows the bones of a poet
who until yesterday
had a guitar
and a name.

His unshrouded body
ends up in the earth;
his couplets, also naked,
also plebeian,
abide in the winds.

On the street
someone plucks
lamentations
from a guitar.

Related Links:

Faces & Masks

Eduardo Galeano

Cento

Links to Cento Poems 

Ghostly Sayings

April 2nd, 2012

the blinking
of his eyelids
over the bulb
of his irises
told me
he would not
see

that I hated him

even though
afterward
he planted me
where I most
wanted to be

the rope he
wrapped
around my
neck hung
from
the branches
of the tree
which is now
my grave

I planted that tree
just like my man
rope walked
the fibers
knotted around
my neck
into creation


No Salt in the Bedroom

April 1st, 2012

It’s a metaphor, he says
as he removes the cylinder
from the room
where we made
our first child.

And as he removed
subsequent cylinders:
if you taste it on your lips
it will remain
part of your speech.

Your mouth, he says,
is for eating to live,
not words peppered
and spiced to hurt
the stomach, the heart
anywhere
the blood goes.

The children, he says,
hitting below the belt,
hear you.

~ untitled ~

January 20th, 2012

I tell my students there is such a thing as “writer’s block,” and they should respect it. You shouldn’t write through it.  It’s blocked because it ought to be blocked, because you haven’t got it right now.
                           Toni Morrison

~untitled~

rhythm used to be a dancer
but is now lifeless and still

i walk her around the city
take her to the water
play her the music of my thoughts.
let her know that necrophilia is a negative

and await her re-awakening

2011 Publication Summation

December 12th, 2011

This year I started stepping up my editing of past poems for submission as well as my submission rate. I had four poems accepted for publication (see below for links) and six rejected. It is my goal to improve on my acceptance numbers come 2012.

Published Poems:

Referencing RainLine Zero (print publication)

Wanton WomanWritingRaw.com (0nline publication)

Weaver Woman and The Death of California RevisitedOutward Link (online publication)

Ode on Dictionaries–Barbara Hamby

December 5th, 2011


A-bomb
is how it begins with a big bang on page
            one, a calculator of sorts whose centrifuge
begets bedouin, bamboozle, breakdance, and berserk,
            one of my mother’s favorite words, hard knock
clerk of clichés that she is, at the moment going ape
            the current rave in the fundamentalist landscape
disguised as her brain, a rococo lexicon
            of Deuteronomy, Job, gossip, spritz, and neo-con          
ephemera all wrapped up in a pop burrito
            of movie star shenanigans, like a stray Cheeto
found in your pocket the day after you finish the bag,
            tastier than any oyster and champagne fueled fugue
gastronomique you have been pursuing in France
            for the past four months. This 82-year-old’s rants
have taken their place with the dictionary I bought
            in the fourth grade, with so many gorgeous words I thought
I’d never plumb its depths. Right the first time, little girl,
            yet here I am still at it, trolling for pearls,
Japanese words vying with Bantu in a goulash
            I eat daily, sometimes gagging, sometimes with relish,
kleptomaniac in the candy store of language,
            slipping words in my pockets like a non-smudge
lipstick that smears with the first kiss. I’m the demented
            lady with sixteen cats. Sure, the house stinks, but those damned
   mice have skeedaddled, though I kind of miss them, their cute
            little faces, the whiskers, those adorable grey suits.
No, all beasts are welcome in my menagerie, ark
            of inconsolable barks and meows, sharp-toothed shark,
OED of the deep ocean, sweet compendium
            of candy bars—Butterfingers, Mounds, and M & Ms—
packed next to the tripe and gizzards, trim and tackle
            of butchers and bakers, the painter’s brush and spackle,
quarks and black holes of physicists’ theory. I’m building
            my own book as a mason makes a wall or a gelding
runs round the track—brick by brick, step by step, word by word,
            jonquil by gerrymander, syllabub by greensward,
swordplay by snapdragon, a neverending parade
            with clowns and funambulists in my own mouth, homemade
treasure chest of tongue and teeth, the brain’s roustabout, rough
            unfurler of tents and trapezes, off-the-cuff
unruly troublemaker in the high church museum
            of the world. O mouth—boondoggle, auditorium,
viper, gulag, gumbo pot on a steamy August
            afternoon—what have you not given me? How I must
wear on you, my Samuel Johnson in a frock coat,
            lexicographer of silly thoughts, billy goat,
x-rated pornographic smut factory, scarfer
            of snacks, prissy smirker, late-night barfly,
you are the megaphone by which I bewitch the world
            or don’t as the case may be. O chittering squirrel,
zip-lock sandwich bag, sound off, shut up, gather your words
            into bouquets, folios, flocks of black and flaming birds.

 

Related Links:

Barbara Hamby

2011 Reading Summation

November 30th, 2011

At the beginning of last winter, I made a reading list of books I wanted to read for 2011. Looking over  the list, I see that finished two of them (Wild Seed and Half of a Yellow Sun , read varying amounts of others (Omeros and The Odyssey) and put all the others aside for future reading. Now, don’t make the mistake of thinking I read only two books this year. Two books doesn’t even count as reading in my worldview! Below is a list of books read this year:

February, March & April:

Song of Lawino & Song of OcolOkot p’Bitek (poetry)

(poetry) Nappy Edges – Ntozake Shange:

I haven’t reviewed any of Ms. Shange’s books. For me to review her books is kind of like someone reviewing the Bible. You may not like the Bible. Your review might be full of valid criticism. But, ultimately, what would be the point? The Bible is the Bible and Ntozake Shange is who she is and that is someone whose writing influenced me tremendously during a time in my life when I needed words such as hers like I need water.  And now, she is inside me like water. Who reviews water?

(science fiction) Wild Seed – Octavia Butler:

I’m a member of a Goodreads group called Literary Fiction by People of Color. Every month, members vote on the book that they’ll discuss the following month. I haven’t yet participated aside from reading the comments but what I read during the discussion of Wild Seed in November led me to think that I may revisit and review Wild Seed in 2012.

(children) Mansa Musa: The Lion of Mali – Khephra Burns

This is a book I was reading to my son. We got about a third of the way through.

(fiction) House of Sand and FogAndre Dubus III

July:

(historical fiction) Someone Knows my Name – Lawrence Hill

(nonfiction)Mississippi in Africa – Alan Huffman

October:

(poetry) Buffalo Dance: The Journey of York and When Winter Comes: the Ascension of York – Frank X. Walker

(fiction) Song of Solomon – Toni Morrison

November:

(poetry) Isaac Murphy: I Dedicate this Ride – Frank X. Walker

(nonfiction) Lewis & Clark Through Indian Eyes – ed. Alvin M. Josephy, Jr. (in progress)

I re-committed myself this year to read more poetry and I definitely have. There are poetry books I didn’t include in the above list as I’m as my reading/absorbing of them is still in progress. These books include Prophets by Kwame Dawes, African Sleeping Sickness by Wanda Coleman, Harlem Gallery by Melvin B. Tolson,  Neon Vernacular by Yusef Komunyakaa, Alphabet of Desire by Barbara Hamby, When Light Breaks by Melanie YeYo Carter, Dear Darkness by Kevin Young, the Collected Works of ee cummings, etc.

obituary for rocky

November 16th, 2011

you fly through the air
not quite at superman speed
but still fast enough
to qualify
as a miracle
of intelligent design.

between you and bullwinkle  
you were the quickest.
all this runs through my mind
as i brake
but it is too late.

when i first learned to drive
i used to joke:
how many points would i get
for turning pedestrians
into roadkill
but i never
joked about you.

Boston Latin School

October 14th, 2011

Once you enter these hallowed halls
speak not in your inherited gutter language.
Speak in the patrician language of classical ass-fuckers
or else your utterances will find no echo
in this epitome of excellence.

Ghosts cursed
and slammed hardwood doors
as I attempted to navigate my way
through colonial
and maternal expectations.

In English class, the suited,
aristocratic-toned teacher
informed us
we had to memorize and recite
the Gettysburg address.

Fourscore and seven years ago

Almost seven years old
when I arrived on this continent
where my mother’s accent
mis-branded her an uneducated foreigner
and my birth name, devoid of its context,
drew comparisons to a winner
of the Kentucky Derby.

Our fathers brought forth on this continent

Fourteen years old
and solidified within me already
was a resistance to indoctrination:
Your fathers, maybe. Not mine.
He had nothing to do with it.

a new nation, conceived in liberty

Libertines forcibly transported;
their larceny and lust
immortalized in the death of legions
of indigenous innocents.

and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal

I stared out the window
the whole time
watching leaves
with their riotous color
fall to the ground.

In biology class, I was repelled
by the teacher’s fascination
with brown polyester
and bad dye jobs.

Each afternoon
on the long trip home
I thought only winter
with its paucity of green
looks like these people.

Before winter break, I was called
into the counselor’s office.
Looking like me but possessing
speech patterns as alien as Latin
she showed me the D’s and F’s
littering my school file
and recommended a transfer.

The next semester
I started at a new school
and the first thing of significance
I did
was write a poem about a tree
cause nature is natural and beautiful

like me.

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