Jonah
Running
Running from myself
Not a place
But a work that must be done
Forsaking
Forsaking to see the value
In the battle once the war is won
I climb aboard a boat waiting to sink
With the lost
Knowing they will pay the cost
For my
Running
I see their storms
I see their tossing with every whim
I toss with them as if I'm in
The same place
But I'm not
And the persistence of their storm
Is my doing
Because I'm
running
So the storm won't cease
Until Im in the belly of the beast
The darkness
Alone
With the one who heals
And reveals
And promises to rebuild
My purpose
I must journey to the depths
And arising on the third day
Just to trust and obey
Caz I might as well do what you say
Or the storm won't cease
There is a people waiting
They are praying
They have been promised hope
I must do the work
I must grow
I must swallow pride
I must go
I must obey
I must
I must
I will
I See
I see
I promise to see
The hearts that break
With no ability to
Find the balm
That heals
I see
I promise to see
Those who
Wonder and wonder
Whose shelter to hide under
In the time of the storm
I see
I promise to see
Those who sit in the dark
Just awaiting a spark
From my light
That is now under a bushel
I see
I promise see them
I will stretch out my hand
With your strength I can
Pull them from their pits
That they have fallen into
On pursuit to find you
Help me see
Beyond my desire
Beyond my wants
Open my eyes
To find those that are blind
I will search
Help me find
The lost
Forgive me for
a moment for
Closing my eyes
Putting on a blindfold of pride
For Hiding behind
The thoughts in my mind
Never stopping to find
That mercy of your kind
Should be extended
I see now
I promise to see
Who you bring to me
I promise to be
Who you've called me to be
I promise to see
I see now.
Help Me!
I’ve fallen in love with a lie
its story grips and rips at
the sincerity of my heart
so there’s pretense upon pretense
rather than
precept upon precept
how did I get here
I fell in love with an idea
that sent me rowing down
the sin river
I was entranced
Bewitched by this unicorn of a man
with the answers in his-
hand me a lifeline
I must regain control of my mind
yes one day at a time
but who can wait till tomorrow
I might be drowning in my sorrows
by then
This burden that I bare
is a pain that is shared by many of us
smothered by life’s defeats
falling prey to deciet
feeling too weak
to cry for help
I cried for help
you gave ear to me
in the days of my trouble
you comforted me
Though I’m pressed
and pressed
and pressed
Thanks be to God
I am not destroyed
There is power
redemption
love
hope
joy
happiness
in the name of Jesus
Just cry out
“Help Me!”
#poetry #Religion #faith #Jesus #deep #emotional
Fat’s Chronicles: Fight for Your Rights!
Now listen, I ain’t proud of this one and if you, laugh you just as bad as me.
By this time me and Big John had an apartment at Carver Village in Pascagula, Mississippi. This was in the 1960′s and Dr. King’s mind set and ways had made they way down to Mississippi. People began to see that we wasn’t being treated right and we was tired of it. Soon, marches and rallies started breaking out, which was real dangerous in Mississippi caz they was killing folks who wanted to, you know speak out. But we still kept marching and gathering at the churches. At that time the church was the place to come together and plan. Most of the men in the church would talk about how they would keep the neighborhood safe and everyman would have shifts. People were doing what they could to try to change the way things was. Now in my apartment complex, the land lord heard that some of us was organizing and going to marches. He was a mean old white man. He decided to evict anybody who went to march or protest. I know he had to be payen somebody in that development caz, it seemed like every day, no matter how we snuck, he foud out who was going. We’d come home and see all of people’s stuff all out on the street. That was all most people had caz we ain’t have much, and all they stuff was messed up and some of it got stolen.
I knew I couldn’t do much, but I knew I could do something. I told my friend Sarah to tell that old land lord that me and John had gone to a rally for civil rights. I wanted him to come see me. I had something for him.
I don’t know if you know about those thick wooden closet rods that you hang your clothes on? Well, I got that out the closet, turned out the lights, got in the closet, and waited for him to come. Not to much later I hear the front door crack open. As I waited in the closet, sweat beads gathered on my forehead. I knew I would get in some trouble for what I was bout to do, but something had to be done. I heard him come into the bed room and start moving stuff around. I figured I had to do something to show this man he can’t treat people any old kind of way. I looked down with the little bit of light that came through the crack between the door and the floor. I knew this was it. I lifted the rod. He opened the door. I screamed as loud as I could. “Help!!!!!!! Somebody Help Me!!!! Burglar!! Help me! With every statement screamed I let out a WHOP! upside his head, a BOP! upside his head, a WHAP! upside his head. I beat him like he stole something, or I pretended to think he was going to.
“Mildred! Mildred! What in God’s name do you think your doing women?”
“Oh my Lord, Mr. Smith! Oh my Lord! I’m so sorry! I’m so sorry!”
“What’s gotten into you! You almost killed me!”
“Oh Lord! I thought you was a robber! I’m home all alone while Big John at work. I heard the door open and got scared for my life. Lord! let me get you some ice!”
“Naw, you can’t get me nothing you crazy fool! I ought a throw you out right now for that!”
“Oh please no Mr. Smith! My Big John worked so hard to get us into a nice place like this. What would your poor wife do if somebody was comen in on her, you’d want her to fight right.”
“Yeah, well I ain’t know I needed to knock! You stay away from me, you hear me. I don’t even want you coming to pay the rent. Tell John to bring it.”
“Thank you sir! I’m so, oh my goodness me.”
He walked out in such a tissy, I could barely wait till he closed the door before I bursted into triumphant laughter. I’m sure he gone think twice for he just go bucking up in somebody’s house.
I know, it was a little violent but I had to fight for my rights.
#Social Justice #Black life #History #nonfiction #storytelling
Fat’s Chronicles: Who’s dat Ugly Girl?
Now, its not talken bout folks if they talken bout themself. You just, agreeing with them, right? That being said, Lula told me this story and if you laugh or agree, I ain’t the one who said it, it was her.
Lula was the youngest of three children. The oldest was her brother lil John who looked just like his daddy, almost like a bulldog. He had a tight, scrunched up face, extra skin creating a double chin. He wasn’t big or nothen but the skin on his face was just a bit saggy. Anyway, John was a kind man and very hard working. I guess that’s how he got married to Mrs. Jenkins, he was so kind and considerate he was able to woo her into marrien him. Now Mrs. Jenkins was beautiful. Some would say the most beautiful woman in town. Mrs. Jenkins had long beautiful hair that she wore in a very fashionable updo. She was slim and had chocolate skin as smooth as silk. Kathy, the middle daughter, looked just like her momma, just as pretty, just as slim.
Not only was Mrs. Jenkins beautiful, chiiile she could dress. She made all her own clothes and clothes for her family. The only thing she really had to purchase were her hats. She wore beautiful hats and kept them on the top of her armoire away from the chilren’s sticky fingers. She also kept some change in her hat boxes caz she knew nobody could get to em.
Now Lula knew her mamma kept change in those hat boxes and when it come time for us to run to the Marcel’s Market, Lula would run in the house, grab a chair, climb to the top of the Armoire and reach her hand in to grab some pennies. One day, she decided she wanted to see how much change was in the hat box. So, she grabbed the chair, opened the armoire, and climbed up to the top putting her foot on the top shelf of the armoire to push herself up. She reached the top and saw it was plenni of pennies in the box. upon further inspection she looked and said, “Who’s dat ugly girl outside the window?” Lula had never seen her before, and she grew startled. “Who are you? Why you copying after me? Go home you old ugly girl, Humf, playing at my window.”
Lula ran outside and met Me and Mable at Marcel’s Market. “Why you take so long Lula?” I asked caz she had the money so we all had to wait on her, and Mrs. Marcel was getten suspicious of us. “I had to get this ugly girl out my face!”, “Lulu, what you talken bout”, “No really Fat, dis ugly girl came pass my window and kept copying me and doing everything I was doing!” “Well what you say?” Mable asked genuinely. “I said, Get yo ugly self out my window! Then I walked away and she did too.” Me and Mable ain’t think nothen of it. We just went on bout our bussiness and let Lula pay for the food.
The next day Lula came running outside in tears, She was 3 years younger than us so we always saw her as a big baby anyway. “Lula girl, why you cryen now?” “You wont believe it Fat!” “Well, what is it Lula?” “I was in da house diggin in the hat box and wanted to see if dat ugly girl was gone come back and mess with me..” “Well, did she?” “Oh she came alright and so did my momma.” “Oh no! You got caught?! Now how we gone get snac-” “Fat, let me finish. So in walks my mamma and she said, “What you doing up there?” and caz I’m smart, I said, I’m looking fo this ugly girl who keep mocking me out the window. My momma said, “Chile ain’t no window up there.” I told her yes ma’am it is. I showed her and she just went to laughen.” “Why she do that?” Mable interjected. “Wellllll, she said, “Baby, thats a mirror in my hat box and that little ugly girl you see is you.” No way mama I look like you and John John looks like daddy. That ain’t me! “Yes baby it is. That is a mirror. We can’t afford to have them round the house like other people so I just use the one in my hat box. And anyway, that little girl peeking through the mirror is not ugly, that’s my baby and she beautiful.” “Ha! Now Lula I know yo mama love you but she said you was beautiful?” Me and Mable bursted into laughter. “Why you laughing?” “Caz, you more like butti-ful” We laughed and laughed and like the baby Lula was, she ran home crying to her mama, but she the one said it, not me.
#Social Justice #Black life #History #nonfiction #storytelling
Shaky Foundation
I built my belief on you
The idea that there was good
And that the bad I had
Was strange caz
You were normal
I built my hope on you
My hope of one who was good
In spite of all the bad
I was glad
You were different
You claimed a foundation
Strong
Solid
You told me to lean on
You
A load bearer
But imagine my surprise
When crumbling walls
Began to collide
And you could no longer hide
You were failing
As the ground around you sank
I realized that
Your soil was quick sand
Not a rock on which I could stand
Any longer
Liar
Imposter
Father
Man
Was there ever a chance
I would trust
Again
Self doubt
Self hate
Suicide
Contemplating
The very thing you made me enjoy
Life
But I guess it was my fault
Because yours rubbed together
Earthquaking my idea of
A Father
My dad
My father
My protector
No more
In a way it is good
Now that I no longer lean
On your ever failing arm
I’ve called the one
Who hears
The wiper of
My tears
Run daily
But I know I have help
A comforter
Teacher
Reminder of all things pure
Lovely
Just
And of a good report
Maybe it’s a good thing
If your facade never broke
I would still be in a boat
Waiting to sink
In the lies
I don’t hate you
I’m not angry
I just see clearly
Now the pain is gone
I now build on the rock
That is much higher than
I
Build on the corner stone
On whom I can rely
No more shaky foundations
No more uncertainty
Only peace
Surpassing all understanding
#poetry #faith #religion #deep #emotional
Broken Hearted
He used to sit in his chair
I would run to sit there
just to smell his scent
when he was gone
A child of 6 years old
Having never felt the cold
one November would bring
Tears
Fear
Dispare
Abandoned
How could my world that was perfect
only be so on the surface
Leave me questioning my purpose
was it all a lie
The journey to healing and love
finding comfort from above
always feeling a push no a shove
towards forgiveness
But how could I part
with the emotions that encased this broken heart
so young
so fast
I didn’t know what whole felt like
for pitty and shame
confusion and blame
had called me by name for so long
But then I met him
He saw the depth of my scars
and went right to work
to repair what I didn’t even know was broken
my heart
He began to address
what I commonly undressed
my worth
My value was subpar in my eyes
But the sparkle in his said otherwise
He saw what I did not
He loved what I did not
He wanted what I did not
Me
Others came
spoke like him
immitated his very essence
but always falling shallow
to the depths of his love
They said nice things
but couldn’t master
his tone of forgiveness
His lips rang a melody
that others would cover
but knowing they were imitators
led me to discover
there was none like
Him
The essence of love
true devotion
the fixer of wrong
redeemer of what was once stolen
Jesus
The day I gave you my heart
You heavenly glued
back the pieces
Of this Gorilla Soldiers once shattered
Torn
Bruised
and battered
Heart
Now tears of Joy
No fear
Desparate but not in dispair
Abandoned no more
My sould longs for you
until it has departed
this world
My chest revived
you healed the broken heart
of this girl
#poetry #faith #love #broken heart
Fat’s Chronicles: The Black Whip
Let me start off by saying, no I’m not sorry. Margaret always picking at Mable, just caz she bigger than her. To be honest neither one of em can fight much, it’s just Margaret got a lil mo weight than Mable, really that’s all. I was tired of Mable coming to me crying all the time sad caz Margaret done whoopped up on her again. See Mable was my best friend. She was a kind girl, real timid. I liked sitting by her in school caz she was smart as a whip. I especially like standing near her during chorus class caz the teacher can’t tell which of us singing good. I just move my mouth real wide up and down mouthing the words as if im singing, but really I can’t sing a lick. That’s why I like standen wit Mable, she sings like a bird, always on pich.
I just couldn’t for the life of me understand why Margaret didn’t like her so. I always thought it was caz Mable was pretty. She had nice long thick hair, that she wore in two braids that hit right above her behind. Her skin was a smooth caramel complection, and she had light brown eyes. She was part Choctaw Native American so she also had high cheek bones. She was a real pretty girl, so I figure Margaret was just jealous. Margaret was not a cute girl at all. I mean the family always said she’d grow into herself but she had grown a lot and still wasn’t too cute. She thick as ten dollars in pennies and just never looked kept. clothes were always fallen apart, hair neva fix. She was bout the raggediest 12 year old I knew.
Or maybe she was mad caz Mable was smart. Mable was bout the smartes girl at school. Margaret always struggled with stuff; her work, her chores, and her self. Her daddy would say she dumb as a box of rocks, so maybe she was just jealous of Mable.
Margaret always thought I was gone back her up caz we was cousins, but this time I just couldn’t take it. Mable came running to my house after school, crying her pretty eyes out saying that Margaret had whooped up on her again. I knew that I couldn’t just flat out whoop Margaret so I had to think of a plan. It was getting dark and time for my favorite radio progrem to come on. I sat with my costume I had just got for christmas and listened to the, “The Black Whip” programme on the radio. It was my favorite and mama knew it so she got me a costume so I could be jus like em. The program came on and the action began, the Black Whip helped the helpless people without anybody knowing who did it. It was then that I realized what I needed to do.
I went real quiet, to the back of the house and put on my costume. I waited till I saw Margaret crossing the street coming from Big Mamas house and I screamed out, “I’m the Black Whip!!!” I whooped up on Margaret, with the plastic pistol that came with the costume, until she cried out, “I’m sorry black whip, I’m sorry”. I hopped off of her and ran home. I knew I could out run’ner caz she thick so it take her long to move. By the time she ran to aunt Mary, I was in the house.
“Sissy! Sissy! Get Fat out here!” Aunt Mary hollered from next door. “Mary why you holleren over here? Fat aint did nothing”My mama aint like people accusen her children of doing nothen.
“Margie is up in this house talken bout some, the black whip beat me up. I know it was Fat, now get her out here.”
Before mama could give her a tongue lashing, Margaret ran to her momma and said, “No mama, it wa’ent Fat it was the Black Whip.
All I could do was laugh and think, Margaret daddy was right.
Fat’s Chronicles: Hey Sarah?!
Bobby went on and got himself married. Sarah was a nice gal but she was truly a city gal. She ain’t like gulfport too much. But she loved herself some Bobby. I remember meeting Sarah for the first time. She and Bobby came to Rel’s house where all us cousins go to lay back and cut up. She laughed at everything we laughed at, got up an did the mashed potato just as good as Karren Jean. Sarah really was a nice girl. But she and Bobby didn’t last too long. The love ran dry, I guess. We all knew that Sarah was too good to be true for Bobby. I mean, he worked but he was lazy as all get out and I promise you he was dumb as a box of rocks. We all wondered why a nice girl like Sarah would get with Bobby. Not to mention he moved so slow, he was slow as molasses on a 30 degree day. So we weren’t surprised when Sarah went back to Chicago with her family, but I was a little sad. I missed her company, I had kinda got used to her. She would come dressed clean as the board of health. I even started getten Fannie to make me some upidity close like Sarah’s. But she gone now. One day I came home from school to a room full a soggy faces, which is not common round these parts. I mean, we some hard folks in dis here house. A real fancy looking black detective was in the house trying to see if we knew anything about where Sarah might be caz her folks cain’t find her. Big ma went to prayen and hollering and carriyng on so, I missed what the fine fellow said about when she was last seen. We hadn’t seen her in about fo weeks. So we couldn’t help him. Isa shame tho, caz Sarah really was a nice girl. I just remeber her bright smile and fine fancy hoses she wore on her legs like the white folks. Time went on and we got a newspaper clipping telling us Sarah had been found dead in a back alley. We were so sad, we ain’t have the heart to tell Bobby, so we just let him be, he wasn’t much happy no way, why makem even mo sad. Walking home from school acrros the railroad tracks I thought about Sarah’s nice yellow jacket. It had penny sized buttons in the shape of ship yard anchors. The buttons were a sort of light copper and the jacket was always pressed and straight. After wiping dirt off my shoe, caz Big Ma would call me a dirty heathen, I stood up and saw a lady walking to me. I thought, “She look real crazy walking on the train tracks with those high heel shoes on.” I got closer to her and dropped everything in my hands. She looked surprised. “Hey Fat, ain’t you glad I’m back” I promised God I would never fall asleep in church again an den I said, “He- Hey Sarah?”.